Harris v. Guarantee Trust Co.

172 A. 209, 115 N.J. Eq. 602, 14 Backes 602, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 112
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 17, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 172 A. 209 (Harris v. Guarantee Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Guarantee Trust Co., 172 A. 209, 115 N.J. Eq. 602, 14 Backes 602, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 112 (N.J. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

The bill seeks to hold the defendant, trustee, liable for the loss of the once market value of two hundred and nine shares of the capital stock of the Island Development Company, due, as alleged, to the trustee's failure and refusal to sell them when the price was high and the time was ripe. The charge is that: "Said trust company neglected so to do and willfully and/or purposely refused or refrained from doing so and thereby occasioned a loss to complainant of $110,000, and has continued said investment not only negligently and not in the exercise of good faith and reasonable discretion but in the exercise of positive bad faith so that a loss of $110,000 has been caused to complainant for which the trustee should be held accountable."

At the outset, it is just to say that there is nothing in the evidence to warrant the charge of bad faith or willful or purposeful refusal to sell; but I apprehend the complainant need not have been so drastic to recover. *Page 603

The whole affair centers in the rise and fall of the development of Brigantine Beach, an island of two thousand seven hundred acres, north and adjacent to Absecon Island upon which Atlantic City, "the playground of the world," was built.

In 1922, a small group of men obtained an option to purchase seventy per cent. of the island, then waste land, for $300,000, upon a payment of $5,000 for the option. (Later, all but about five per cent. of the island was purchased.) They incorporated the Island Development Company, assigned to it the option, took title in its name, gave a purchase-money mortgage in return, and launched a prodigious enterprise — Brigantine City. More than $12,000,000 was spent in building a causeway and bridge connecting Atlantic City, an imposing hotel, a golf course, in dredging and filling in land, in constructing fifty miles of streets, one hundred miles of sidewalks, twenty-five miles of water main, ten miles of sewer, fifteen miles of lighting, a mile and a half of boardwalk, a steel pier and other structures, all from the sale of lots, borrowed money and $100,000 proceeds of capital stock. Brigantine City is a municipality. The lot developments and sales were in sections, the first at the most southerly end of the island, nearest Atlantic City; the second and third adjoin, in their order, and were put on the market consecutively. The three offers of lots were met with quick and hearty response, and all, or nearly all, six thousand, were promptly disposed of at high prices, fifty per cent. in cash installments, the balance upon mortgage; a single day's sales reached over $5,000,000. In 1927, the real estate boom had reached its peak and was on the turn. The public had lost interest in this form of investment, the decline set in, the collapse followed and Brigantine lay prostrate. Fifteen hundred acres of unimproved land remained; unsold lots, the hotel, golf course, the bridge and other creations, in fact, the whole institution stood frozen, with millions of debts outstanding. The assets were turned over to a newly formed corporation for conservation and the protection of creditors. That company is now in the hands of a receiver. *Page 604

Characterization of the enterprise as a bubble is an undeserved stigma. It was undertaken and promoted by men of character and integrity and of responsibility, moral and financial, in good faith, with inviting prospects of profitable accomplishments. They visualized another great seaside resort like its neighboring prototype, whose environs, Ventnor, Margate City and Longport, were not nearly so promising when projected. The time was propitious for the development of Brigantine and the public's reception, displayed in the enormous purchases of lots, at high prices, was substantial assurance that the promotion was opportune. There can be little question that another renowned seashore community would have come into being had normal times continued, nor that when they are restored there will be a spontaneous revival, for the location, its accessibility, the horde of lot owners, its appointments and conveniences, all speak potential values which need only national prosperity for their stimulation.

Edward G. Harris, the complainant's father, was one of the organizers of the Island Development Company. He had five of the ten shares of the subscribed capital stock, par $100, for which he presumably paid $500. He died in 1923 while the first subdivision was in progress. His estate was inventoried and appraised at $45,000, of which the five shares were a part, appraised at $500. By his will he gave his estate to his executor and trustee, Atlantic Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Atlantic City (since merged into the defendant, Guarantee Trust Company) in trust, to divide the residue of his estate equally between his widow and daughter, then an infant, to hold the daughter's share during her infancy, and pay the income to his widow for her support, "with full power and authority on the part of my said executor and trustee to grant and convey any of the said property at such time and for such price and upon such terms as to them shall seem advisable."

Shortly after the Island Development Company was organized, its board of directors, deeming the option, for which the promoters, as the Island Holding Company, had paid $5,000, to be worth $100,000 plus the $5,000, resolved to purchase *Page 605 the option for one thousand and fifty shares of the capital stock of the Island Development Company. Of this, Mr. Harris was entitled to one-tenth, one hundred and five shares, for he had contributed one-tenth of the $5,000, but the division was not made until after his death, and the one hundred and five shares came to the executor. After the third subdivision was launched, the company declared a one hundred per cent. stock dividend in July, 1925, which brought to the estate an additional one hundred and five shares. A second stock dividend of ninety per cent. followed, February 1st, 1926, producing an additional one hundred and ninety-eight shares, a total of four hundred and eighteen shares, all evolved from the $1,000 investment. The shares to the Island Holding Company for the option, later divided, were unearned increments and the stock dividends did not represent earnings, for they were based upon an assumed enhanced value of the enterprise, estimated upon its past performances and favorable prospects. This would appear to be so, because a fifty per cent. dividend of the earnings was declared a month following the second stock dividend, in surplus purchase-money mortgages at seventy-five per cent. of their face value, a total net of $640,000 and a net to the estate of $37,000. The discount, probably, was to allow for anticipated defaults, although the mortgages were nearly all realized, and, perhaps, to meet income tax exactions.

The promotion of Brigantine Beach and its promise of vast fortune to its promoters spread quickly, far and wide. The original stock issue of one thousand and fifty shares attained a market value of $2,000 a share, and many conservative investors purchased at that price, and at that rate for shares of the first and second stock dividends, and anxiously sought them. Wise and careful business and professional men purchased; scores of them are on the roster of stockholders; all felt, no doubt, they were making safe and profitable investments, for Brigantine was off to a fine start, lots were selling at stupendous prices and vast returns to stockholders were imminent to the ken of those well informed and capable of judging. The standard prices prevailed from *Page 606

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Bluebook (online)
172 A. 209, 115 N.J. Eq. 602, 14 Backes 602, 1934 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-guarantee-trust-co-njch-1934.