Hastings v. Byllesby Co. (Haystone)

57 N.E.2d 733, 293 N.Y. 404, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1294
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 12, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 57 N.E.2d 733 (Hastings v. Byllesby Co. (Haystone)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hastings v. Byllesby Co. (Haystone), 57 N.E.2d 733, 293 N.Y. 404, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1294 (N.Y. 1944).

Opinion

Lehman, Ch. J.

In September 1935, Standard Gas and Electric Company filed a petition in bankruptcy seeking reorganization under section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act (48 U. S. Stat. 912). The plaintiff was appointed “ Special Trustee ” of the debtor corporation and was authorized- to bring suit upon causes of action belonging to the debtor corporation and referred to in the order appointing the trustee. As special trustee he commenced an action to recover moneys and property of the debtor corporation which, it is alleged in the complaint, the defendants wasted, disposed of or took unlawfully and fraudulently, and to recover profits which, it is alleged, the defendants wrongfully appropriated. The capacity of the plaintiff to sue was challenged by motion to dismiss but was sustained by this court upon a previous appeal from a judgment dismissing the complaint on that ground. (Hastings v. Byllesly & Co., 286 N. Y. 468.) Thereafter the defendant, Haystone Securities Corporation, moved to dismiss the complaint against it on11 the ground that the cause or causes of action alleged in said complaint against the defendant Haystone Securities Corporation did not accrue within the time limited by law for the commencement of an action thereon.” An order denying the motion was unanimously reversed by the Appellate Division and the motion granted. The plaintiff now appeals from the judgment of dismissal.

*408 The separately-stated caiises of action charge wrongs to the corporation in different transactions. These separate causes of action are connected in the complaint by an introductory allegation applicable to all, that in each of the transactions hereinafter described the defendants therein acted in pursuance of corrupt conspiracies entered into by them to waste the assets of Standard and to secure to themselves unlawful and fraudulent profits; and each such transaction was undertaken unlawfully and without authority and in fraud of Standard and without its knowledge or consent; and in each of such transactions the officers and directors of Standard acted in violation of their duty and trust to Standard, and the acts and conduct of the defendants herein complained of were and are unlawful taking and disposition by defendants herein of property and property rights lawfully belonging to and property of Standard and unlawful waste and dissipation thereof, and causing loss and damage to Standard in a total amount which plaintiff, without accounting by defendants, is unable precisely to state. ’ ’ The defendant "Haystone Securities Corporation is named only in the sixteenth cause of action stated in the complaint. Upon this appeal we are concerned only with that cause of action. Haystone Securities- Corporation is not charged with any part in a corrupt conspiracy in connection with any transaction described in other causes of action.

The sixteenth cause of action alleges that the firm of Laden-burg, Thalmann & Co., together with other defendants including Haystone Securities Corporation, who in the complaint are referred to “ jointly and severally as ' defendant Ladénburg ’,” entered into “ a corrupt and fraudulent conspiracy ” in June, 1925, with the defendant Byllesby ” to obtain large profits and substantial personal benefits at the expense of the debtor corporation. The objects of the conspiracy were, it is alleged, successfully carried out by “ defendants Byllesby and Ladenburg ” by means of several transactions, each being a “ step in said conspiracy.” On or before March 26, 1926, these defendants had received from the debtor valuable stock in subsidiary corporations and large sums of money in exchange for stock which had cost Ladenburg and Byllesby much less, and in January 1930, the defendant Ladenburg sold some of the stock thus received for $25,000,000. The Appellate Pivi *409 sion has held that the last act alleged in the complaint, relevant to a cause of action against Haystone Securities Corporation for a wrong done to the debtor corporation, took place in March, 1926; that the six-year Statute of Limitations applies to that cause of action and began to run from that date, and that the cause of action was barred when the petition in bankruptcy was filed in 1935. The plaintiff challenges these conclusions but contends that even if the cause of action in favor of the debtor was barred by the Statute of Limitations at the time when the bankruptcy proceedings were initiated, a new cause of action in behalf of creditors accrued to the trustee upon his appointment, and was not barred in 1939 when the action was commenced.

The plaintiff relies heavily upon our decision in Buttles v. Smith (281 N. Y. 226). In that case we held that no cause of action to set aside transfers of corporate property made in violation of section 15 of the Stock Corporation Law or of subdivision 5 of section 60 of the General Corporation Law accrues to a creditor until the creditor has obtained a judgment and execution has been returned unsatisfied. The Statute of Limitations, we there said, does not commence to run against such a cause of action, asserted by a receiver appointed in a suit brought by a judgment creditor in aid of execution, until the cause of action accrues to the creditor. The gist of the creditor’s cause, of action, asserted in that case by a receiver appointed in an action brought by the judgment creditor for the sequestration of the property of a corporate debtor, was the illegal transfer of corporate assets which other-wise would have been available for the satisfaction of a judgment obtained by the creditor. No wrong is done by such a transfer to a creditor whose debt can be satisfied out of other assets of the debtor, and ordinarily a creditor may appeal to the courts to set aside an illegal transfer of the debtor only after he has obtained a judgment which he has been unable to enforce by execution. The wrong to the creditor by such a transfer of corporate assets is independent and distinct from any wrong to the corporate debtor, and in Buttles v. Smith (supra), the receiver, suing in behalf of a creditor, sought a remedy solely for the wrong done to the creditor. No wrong to the debtor was alleged in the complaint.

*410 The cause of action asserted in the instant case by the trustee in bankruptcy against Haystone Securities Corporation and the other defendants named in the complaint is based upon a wrong done to the corporate debtor. When the capacity of the trustee to sue upon that cause of action was challenged upon the earlier appeal this court pointed out that the cause of action existed “ in favor of the debtor ” and that upon the bankruptcy of the debtor, title to the cause of action, as part of the debtor’s property, vested in the trustee. The General Corporation Law provides in section 60 that “ an action may be brought against one or more of the directors or officers of a corporation to, procure judgment for the following relief or any part thereof: 1. To compel the defendants to account for their official conduct, including any neglect of or failure to perform their duties, in the management and disposition of the funds and property, committed to their charge. 2.

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Bluebook (online)
57 N.E.2d 733, 293 N.Y. 404, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hastings-v-byllesby-co-haystone-ny-1944.