Huylar v. Cragin Cattle Co.

40 N.J. Eq. 392
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 N.J. Eq. 392 (Huylar v. Cragin Cattle 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
Huylar v. Cragin Cattle Co., 40 N.J. Eq. 392 (N.J. Ct. App. 1885).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

This is an application by petition for an order that the books of the Cragin Cattle Co., which, it is alleged in the petition, are kept out of this state, and in the city of Philadelphia, in Pennsylvania, be brought into this state. The company is a corporation created under the general law. The application is made [393]*393under the fiftieth section of the act concerning corporations,” (Rev. p. 186), which provides that in all cases where it is not otherwise provided by law, the meeting of the stockholders of all corporations of this state shall be held at the principal office •or place of business of the company in this state; that the directors may hold their meetings and have an office and keep the books of the company (except the stock and transfer-books) outside of this state if the by-laws so provide; provided, however, that the company shall always maintain a principal office or place of business in this state and have an agent of the company in charge thereof, wherein shall be kept the stock and transfer-books of the company for the inspection of all who are authorized to see the same and for the transfer of stock j and provided, further, that the chancellor or the supreme court, or any justice thereof, may, upon proper cause shown, summarily order that •any or all of the books of the company be forthwith brought within this state and kept therein at such place as may be designated, for such time as such chancellor, court or judge may deem proper, and that, upon failure of any company to comply with such order, its charter may be declared forfeited by the chancellor or the supreme court, and it shall therefrom cease to be a corporation, and all the directors and officers of the company shall be liable to be punished as for contempt of court for disobedience of such order. The amount of the capital stock of the company is $300,-000, divided into three hundred shares of the par value of $1,000 each, Of those shares the petitioner Mrs. Huylar owns sixty, Mr. Huylar, five and Mr. Ridder, two — sixty-seven in all — for which they paid (including premium) $85,500 in cash. The grounds of the application are that the officers of the company refuse to permit the petitioners to inspect those of the books which are out of the state. The petitioners state that the value of the capital stock has greatly declined, and that a still further depreciation is threatened; that since the petitioners bought their .stock the company has expended large sums of money, amounting to at least $64,000, in the purchase of a certain ranch in the Indian Territory, and in the purchase of cattle and other prop•erty necessary to its business, and that after it acquired that [394]*394ranch and had put its cattle upon it, the president of the company put upon it about twelve hundred head of cattle, the larger part of which belonged to himself and none of them to the comjoany; that the facts concerning the number of cattle put there by the president cannot be ascertained except from an inspection of the books of the company; that the petitioners have reason, to believe that the books will show that more cattle have been purchased by the company than have been accounted for by the-officers, except by a general statement as to the death of cattle,' and that, though an inspection of the books has been duly demanded by the petitioners, it has been refused by the officers of' the company.

The petition states that on the 6th of October last one of the-petitioners, Mr. Ridder, on behalf of all of them, called at the-office of the company in Philadelphia and demanded of the president and treasurer permission to inspect the books at a proper time, and that those officers refused to permit such inspection of any of the books except the stock-book, and that on the 10th of November last, at a meeting of the .stockholders held in Camden,, in this state, at which were present the owners of one hundred and forty-five shares of stock other than those held by the petitioners, Mr. Ridder, speaking for himself and Mr. and Mrs.. Huylar, asked permission to examine the books, stating that the president had refused to permit him to do so, and that the petitioners having invested $85,500 in the stock of the company were desirous of knowing something about its affairs; that Mr. Woodman, one of the stockholders, then said that he understood that Mr. Huylar had vilified the company, and the officers had determined that he should not see the books without the order of the court. The petition states, also, that although Mr. Huylar then denied that he had vilified the company, and challenged the production of any evidence that he had done so, an inspection of the books was denied by a formal vote. The petition alleges,, also, that by the by-laws no one can dispose of his or her stock to any one not already a stockholder of the company, without the-consent of the' board of directors. It further states that no financial report other than a mere statement of receipts and expendi[395]*395tures has ever been made to the stockholders, and that the petitioners believe that it is the intention of the president and his-confederates to so operate the company as to compel the petitioners to sell their stock to them at a great loss. The respondents, who. are the company, and Charles I. Cragin, president, and Thomas J. Curtis, treasurer, by their answer admit that the petitioners are the owners of stock as alleged in the petition, and that the books, except the stock-ledger and transfer-book, have-been and are kept in Philadelphia, in pursuance of a provision of the by-laws, although the principal office of the company is in Camden, and that they are in the possession of the officers in the former place. It admits that the value of the capital stock has-greatly declined, but alleges that the decline is entirely due to the losses sustained by the death of cattle from the severity of the last winter. It admits that the cattle of the president have been pastured upon the ranch, as stated in the petition, and alleges that that matter was a legitimate transaction, and that the books contain a true ■ account of it, and that they contain a true account of the company’s cattle and the disposition thereof, and the losses sustained by the death thereof. It denies that the petitioner Ridder demanded an inspection of the books on the 6th of October last, and it was refused, but alleges that what he demanded was an opportunity to copy and transcribe the books,, and that that was denied. While it states that at the meeting-of the stockholders mentioned in the petition, Mr. Ridder stated that the petitioners had been prevented from inspecting and making transcripts from the books, it does not deny that at the meeting it was voted, as stated in the petition, that the petitioners should be denied an inspection of the books. It should be stated that Mr. Woodman, in his affidavit annexed to the answer, denies that he said that Mr. Huyler should not see the books without the order of the court, and he denies, also, that he said anything to that effect, and says that he heard no other stockholder say so. By the answer the respondents insist, as did their counsel upon the argument, that the petitioners have no right to an inspection of the boobs except when it may be necessary in a pending suit to which they may be parties, or in [396]*396reference to some pending specific dispute or question in which they may be interested.

The respondents’ counsel argues that the chancellor has no jurisdiction to make the order for which application is made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 N.J. Eq. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huylar-v-cragin-cattle-co-njch-1885.