Harkness v. Manhattan Railway Co.

11 N.Y. St. Rep. 732
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedNovember 21, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 732 (Harkness v. Manhattan Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harkness v. Manhattan Railway Co., 11 N.Y. St. Rep. 732 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

O’Gorman, J.

—In this case the learned judge at special term dismissed the complaint, and plaintiff appealed from the judgment.

No authoritive statement being made on the part of the plaintiff that all the testimony taken at the trial is included in the record, it must be presumed that the findings of fact are supported by competent and sufficient evidence. Porter v. Smith, 35 Hun, 118.

A close and careful consideration of the pleadings, the plaintiff’s request to find, the findings of fact and the conclusions of law therein, have satisfied us that no error has been committed by the court below, and that the plaintiff has not shown himself to be entitled to the judgment or relief demanded in the complaint, or to any judgments in his favor or relief in this action.

The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed with costs, on the opinion of the trial judge.

The following is the opinion of the trial judge, referred to in the above opinion:

Ingraham, J.

—This action is brought by plaintiff as a stockholder of The New York Elevated Railway Company,, on behalf of himself and all other stockholders who may join with him in this action, to enforce an agreement or lease, dated the 20th day of May, 1879, whereby the New York Elevated Railway Company leased its railways and other property rights and franchises of every description to-the defendant, the Manhattan Railway Company. By that lease, the Manhattan Company agreed to pay to the New York Company a certain sum of money as rent, to-pay the principal and interest of certain bonds of the New York Company, and further agreed, as follows:

“Art. 1. The Manhattan Company guarantees to the New York Company an annual dividend of ten per cent on the capital stock of the New York company to the amount of $6,500,000; that is to say, the Manhattan company will each and every year during the term hereby granted, beginning with the 1st day of October, 1879, pajr to the-New York company $650,000, free of all taxes, in equal quarter yearly payments of $162,500 each on the 1st day of January, April, July and October, in each year; the first of said payments to be made on the 1st day of January, 1880. The Manhattan company will from time to time execute in proper form a guarantee to the above effect, printed or engraved upon the certificates of stock of the-New York company.”

In pursuance of this agreement the defendant, the Manhattan company, caused to be printed or engraved on the certificates of plaintiff’s stock as follows:

[735]*735“The Manhattan Railway Company, for value received, has agreed to pay to the New York Elevated Railway Company an amount equal to ten per cent per annum on the capital stock of the whole company, that is on six and a half million dollars, payable quarterly, commencing January 1, 1880.”

The complaint demands judgment that the Manhattan company pay to the New York company dividends at the rate of ten per cent per annum that would accrue since April, 1881; that the defendant pay to plaintiff the dividends due to him upon his stock; that the defendant be restrained from doing anything prejudicial to the rights of the plaintiff, and that plaintiff have such other relief as may be just.

It is clear that this agreement gives a stockholder no cause of action against the Manhattan company to recover the amount to be paid to the New York company. The agreement is to pay a certain sum of money to the corporation, the'New York company.

This sum is fixed as ten per cent of the outstanding stock of the New York company. Nothing was to be paid to the individual stockholders,nor did the Manhattan company in any way agree that the stockholders of the New York company should receive the money it agreed to pay to the New York company, or that such money should be used for the purpose of a dividend on the stock of the New York company.

A payment to the New York company of the quarterly payments would have released the Manhattan company from its obligations under the lease.

The case of Wheat et al. v. Rice (97 N. Y., 296) appears to be conclusive on this point. In that case the plaintiff' agreed “to assume and pay one-quarter of the indebtedness ” of the copartnership. The court held that no promise was made to pay any single one of the creditors or for the benefit of any one of them, and that a creditor of the co-partnership could not maintain an action under the agreement against the plaintiff.

That case is much stronger than the case at bar, as there was in that case an agreement to pay the indebtedness, while in this case there is no agreement to pay any obligation of the New York company to the plaintiff or to its stockholders. It is simply an agreement to pay the corporation.

As soon as the money was paid to the New York company it became property of the corporation, liable for its debts, and the stockholders had no claim to it until by some act of the corporation it had been appropriated to them.

There was no agreement of the New York company that [736]*736the money to be received- should be paid to its stockholders, and there was therefore no obligation on the part of the New York company to its stockholders, which the Manhattan company undertook to discharge.

The principle involved is entirely different from the case of Lawrence v. Fox (20 N. Y., 268), and cases of like character, and this is the view taken of this question by the chief justice of this court when this, action was before him and by Mr. Justice Cullen in the Beveridge Case.

The only relief to which the plaintiff would, under any circumstances, be entitled, would be in a proper case to have the obligation of the Manhattan company to the New York company enforced; but before such relief could be granted it must appear that such an obligation existed.

In October, 1881, an agreement was made between the New York company and the Metropolitan company and the Manhattan company, by which the lease of 1879 was modified so that the sum to be paid to the New York company by the Manhattan company was six per cent upon its capital stock instead of ten per cent, and in other important particulars. This agreement was ratified by the stockholders of the company on January 10, 1882, 26,641 shares of stock being represented and voting at this meeting, and 25,904 shares of stock voted in favor of ratifying the new agreement, and 737 shares voted against such ratification.

That this agreement of October, 1881, was binding upon the New York company after it was ratified by the vote of the stockholders is clear. The directors of both the Manhattan and New York companies being substantially the same, the agreement would, under the decision of Mr. Justice Van Brunt in the case of The Metropolitan Railway Company v. The Manhattan Railway Company, hereafter referred to, have been voidable at the election of either of the corporations; but when ratified by the majority of the stockholders it became binding.

There is no evidence to show that the vote of the stockholders, ratifying the October, 1881, agreement, was induced "by any fraudulent act or representation of the directors, and the large majority by which the agreement was ratified shows that the stockholders" of that company were practically unanimous in ratifying the agreement as being for the best interests of the company.

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Related

Lawrence v. . Fox
20 N.Y. 268 (New York Court of Appeals, 1859)
Wheat v. . Rice
97 N.Y. 296 (New York Court of Appeals, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 N.Y. St. Rep. 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harkness-v-manhattan-railway-co-nysuperctnyc-1887.