In re the Petition of Wygant

101 Misc. 509
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 Misc. 509 (In re the Petition of Wygant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Petition of Wygant, 101 Misc. 509 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Rudd, J.

The petition of Ethel B. Wygant asks for an order directing a writ of peremptory mandamus directed to the corporation of Burdick & Son, Bainbridge W. Burdick, president and treasurer, and to its officers and directors, commanding them to exhibit to the petitioner and her attorneys and accountant, or other necessary assistant, all books of account, records and papers of the corporation covering the period from May 14, 1908, to date and permitting the petitioner and her assistants to fully examine the same and to take extracts therefrom.

The petitioner is a stockholder in the corporation of Burdick & Son and has been since the year 1909, holding 302 shares of its capital stock of the par value of $100 each.

The capital stock of the corporation consists, of 2,000 shares.

The petitioner received, under the will of her father, who was formerly president of this corporation, 250 shares of the 302 shares of which she is now the owner and holder.

The number of shares held by each stockholder is as follows: Bainbridge W. Burdick, 1,010; Ralph V. Bur-dick, 500; R. Wallace McKee, 182; estate of Andrew W. Hahn, 6; petitioner, Ethel B, Wygant, 302.

The corporation of Burdick & Son has been engaged in the business of manufacturing certain metal specialties and. articles since the year 1905. The company has in its employ 350 or 400 hands. The business of the company has been large for several years.

R. Wallace McKee is vice-president and manager of [511]*511the concern, and Bainbridge W. Burdick is the president and treasurer. They are the directors of the company and are its officers and have been since 1908. The petitioner has never been a director or officer of the corporation.

The petitioner, as one of the stockholders of the corporation, made, on March 30,1917, a personal request and also a written demand of Bainbridge W. Burdick, president and treasurer of the company, for permission to examine, with the aid of an accountant and an attorney, the books of accounts, vouchers, records and stock books of the concern.

A written instrument, which is a part of the petition herein, was presented by A. Page Smith, attorney for the petitioner, to Bainbridge W. Burdick asking permission, on .behalf of the petitioner, and for her accountant and attorney, to examine the books and records. This request was refused peremptorily. Bainbridge W. Burdick tore the written instrument, setting forth the request of the petitioner, into pieces and stated that he refused such request.

The petitioner avers that she is entirely ignorant of the condition of the business, that no dividend has ever been received by her upon the shares of stock of which she is the owner and holder, that she has no way of obtaining knowledge as to the value of the property represented by her holdings unless she is aided by the process of the court.

Petitioner is a sister of Bainbridge W. Burdick, and their father was the owner, at the time of his death May 14,1908, of 750 shares of the capital stock of this corporation and was president thereof.

The petitioner avers that there has not been a meeting of the stockholders of the. corporation since the death of her father, and that no statement has been rendered to or received by her showing the condition [512]*512of the business or the result of its operations, or any facts relating thereto.

The respondents deny the statement that there has been no meeting of the stockholders and excuse the failure to render a statement by saying that no request has ever been made for one.

The disparity of the allegations with reference to a meeting of the stockholders of the corporation may be explained, possibly, by the fact that certain of the stockholders may have met, of which the petitioner has not been advised, and that because of such meeting those who did thus meet may consider that there has been a meeting of the stockholders of the corporation.

The respondents aver that they will furnish at any time a statement to the petitioner covering the condition of the business. Such statement is not what the petitioner here seeks.

This application asks the court to grant a writ, under and by which there may be had such an examination of the books and records of this corporation as will enable this petitioner accurately to learn and to understand what is the condition of the corporation, as to its transactions, earnings and obligations, from which she will be enabled to form some idea as to what is the value of the shares by her owned, the par value of which is $30,200.

The court has power, without question, to refuse the issuance of a writ where the application is not made in good faith. People ex rel. Hunter v. National Park Bank, 122 App. Div. 640..

There appears in the application no lack of good faith, and therefore the question is whether the plaintiff is entitled to a peremptory writ upon the conceded facts.

The respondents seem to rely somewhat upon a willingness expressed Upon the part of Bainbridge W. [513]*513Burdick, as appears from Ms affidavit herein, that he is willing to allow the petitioner personally.to look at the books and that he is willing to furnish a statement to her.

As before stated, she does not here seek a statement. She seeks an opportunity which will enable her, with the aid of the court, to look at the books and examine them, and to draw therefrom statements and conclusions with the aid of some one competent to do the work necessary to be done, in order that she may learn what the real situation is.

It would avail little for the petitioner, assuming that she is intelligent, to look at the books of this corporation covering the period of its operations and transactions from 1908 to this time.

If she is to be given an opportunity to look at the books of the corporation, of wMch she is a large owner, she can only look at them intelligently through the eyes of one competent to examine books of account and similar records.

' This application, therefore, contemplates an opportunity for her, with the aid of an accountant, and possibly a lawyer, to examine the books, wMch are the property of the corporation and not of these respondents, and in which books the petitioner has a proprietary interest jointly with the respondents. The entries in these books and records which should make up the history of the transactions of tMs corporation are of as much importance and interest to her as to the officers and directors of the corporation.

A domestic manufacturing company owned and controlled by the members of one family is not like a great corporation organized to transact public business which under the law is subject to visitation through public agencies and the reports of its operations are [514]*514set forth in detail in public records to which shareholders and others alike have access.

This is a domestic manufacturing concern. Its financial condition interests only its creditors and those who make up its shareholders.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smilkstein v. J. Smilkstein & Sons, Inc.
32 Misc. 2d 882 (New York Supreme Court, 1961)
State v. Loft, Inc.
156 A. 170 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1931)
Rogers v. American Tobacco Co.
143 Misc. 306 (New York Supreme Court, 1931)
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Pierson
130 Misc. 110 (New York Supreme Court, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 Misc. 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-petition-of-wygant-nysupct-1917.