In re the Election of Directors of Utica Fire Alarm Telegraph Co.

115 A.D. 821, 101 N.Y.S. 109, 51 Misc. 663, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3074
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 14, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 115 A.D. 821 (In re the Election of Directors of Utica Fire Alarm Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Election of Directors of Utica Fire Alarm Telegraph Co., 115 A.D. 821, 101 N.Y.S. 109, 51 Misc. 663, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3074 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Kruse, J.:

The Cresset Electric Company, the petitioner in this proceeding, was organized under the laws of this State as a stock corporation in November, 1902, the authorized capital being $30,000, and its business as stated in the certificate of incorporation being a general electric business, including the manufacture, sale and supply of all kinds of electric and telephone and telegraph apparatus, and to have the power to hold the stock and securities of other corporations.

The Utica Fire Alarm Telegraph Company is an older corporation, also organized under the laws of this State. Its business is about the same as that which the Cresset Company proposed to do. The Cresset Company was organized by workmen who had been employed by the fire alarm company, and had- gone out on a strike.

Soon after the Cresset Company was organized and its stock was being subscribed for, two of the stockholders of the fire alarm company, owning 275 shares of the stock, made a proposition to the directors of the new company, the Cresset Company, to sell their stock in the fire alarm company, and the proposition was regarded favorably by those interested in the new company, It was found, however, that the Cresset Company shareholders had not paid in sufficient funds to pay for all of the 275 shares, of stock, and it was proposed by the directors of the Cresset Company that the two stockholders who had made the offer to sell the stock sell 200 shares of their stock. But they declined to sell any of it unless they could dispose of all their holdings, which were the 275 shares. It was then proposed that the directors of the Cresset Company themselves take over the 75 shares and give their notes therefor, the stock to be held by the sellers as security for the payment of the note.

One of the directors refused the offer; but finally the remaining four accepted the proposition, and thereupon, and on the 27th day of January, 1903, the negotiations culminated in the sale of such stock, 200 shares thereof being reissued in the name of the Cresset ■Electric Company, and being paid for with money which had been paid in by subscribers of the stock of the Cresset Company, the payment being made by a check of the Cresset Company for [824]*824. $1U,000. For the remaining 75 shares the remaining four directors gave their individual joint note of $3*750, payable on demand. The. 75-shares of stock were reissued in a certificate to the four directors individually, except that .two shares were reissued, one to Sheffield and the other to Kellogg, these being the sellers of the . stock. But within a few days" thereafter, on the 5th day of February, 1903, these two shares were reissued to the' four directors individually, and the 75 shares so issued to them were turned over to secure'the payment of the note. Ultimately, and on February 21, 1905, and after or about the time the note was paid, 72 shares of the stock seem to have been reissued, 18 shares to each'of the four makers of the note.

It appears that Mr. Sheffield was liable upon a $10,000 note of the fire alarm company, and it was arranged that -lie also retained the 200 shares to secure him against liability thereon. This note-was afterwards paid.

It is these 275 shares of stock which the Cresset Company, the petitioner* claims to own and have the right to vote upon!' And it is. necessary for it to establish that fact to enable it to succeed in setting aside the election of directors".

■ There were 289 shares of stock voted. FTo question is'raised as to 235 shares so voted, so that even if the. 54 shares were improperly, voted it would.not affect the result unless the Cresset Company had the right to vote not only the 200 shares but also the 54 shares, or at least a sufficient number of the 54 shares so that with the 200 shares the number would exceed the 235 shares concerning which there is no. question. -

The right of the Cresset Company to vote upon the 200 shares Which stand in its name does not seem to have been questioned. At all events the shares were so voted in 1903, 1904 aiid 1905. bfo offer was.made on its behalf to vote the 200 shares in 19.06,. but it was sought to "vote the 275 shares at that meeting. Neither'was the right of the four persons denied .or questioned to vote the shares '■standing in their name and voted by them until the'annual meeting in 1906.

Some 'time before the annual meeting in 1906 a disagreement seems to have arisen among the four men who held the 75 shares of stock, Campbell, one of the four, being upon one side and evi[825]*825dently favorable to the claim that the entire 275 shares belonged to the Cresset Company, and Eichmeyer, Potter and Pryor, the other three, being on the- opposite side.

After the annual meeting in 1905, and early in February, an attempt seems to have been made to allot the 200 shares of stock to the stockholders of the Cresset Company, according to their holdings in the Cresset Company, at the rate of sixty-five dollars a share. Certificates were filled out for the Cresset stockholders by Campbell, who was at that time a director and secretary of the fire alarm company, but were never signed by the officers or distributed. Campbell contends that he was opposed to this, but that the other three favored it.

Much evidence was taken for and against the claim that it was originally intended to distribute the stock among the Cresset stockholders instead of to the company, but it seems unnecessary to discuss it in detail. The referee found, and, as we think, correctly, that the Cresset Company owned and was entitled to vote upon the two hundred shares. The seventy-five shares of stock issued to these four men, as has been stated, were never in the name of - the Cresset Company. On February 21, 1905, seventy-two shares thereof were reissued in four certificates for eighteen shares each, one to Campbell, one to Eichmeyer, one to Potter and one to Pryor, being the persons t-o whom thé seventy-five shares were transferred by Sheffield and Kellogg. The last three men voted upon their-fifty-four shares of stock, eacli voting his eighteen shares, at the January, 1906, election, which is in dispute. Campbell did not attempt to vote upon his eighteen shares at that election, but contended that it belonged to the Cresset Company, and insisted that the shares standing in his name, together with the rest of the seventy-five shares, should be voted by the Cresset Company in connection with the two hundred shares, and a-ballot was prepared to be voted on behalf of the Cresset Company on the .two hundred and seventy-five shares. This ballot the inspectors refused to receive. Campbell’s name was upon this ballot as one of the directors,- but was not upon any other of the ballots which were voted, and he was not elected at this election. Up to 1906, Campbell, Potter, Eichmeyer and Pryor seem to have been directors of both corporations.

[826]*826The claim that the 75 shares of stock belong to the Cresset Company is based, not only upon what is claimed to have been the original understanding, that the entire 275 shares should be acquired by the Cresset Company, thus giving the Cresset Company the controlling interest in the fire alarm, company, but the further fact that a larger part of the money which paid the note given for the stock was money belonging to the Cresset Company. It appears that the whole amount paid for principal and interest on the note was $4,020.94, of which amount Campbell, .Eiclnneyer, Potter and Pryor, the makers of the note, paid from their wages and other personal funds the sum of $1,110.94.

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115 A.D. 821, 101 N.Y.S. 109, 51 Misc. 663, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-election-of-directors-of-utica-fire-alarm-telegraph-co-nyappdiv-1906.