Insurance Press v. Montauk Fire Detecting Wire Co.

103 A.D. 472, 93 N.Y.S. 134
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 103 A.D. 472 (Insurance Press v. Montauk Fire Detecting Wire 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
Insurance Press v. Montauk Fire Detecting Wire Co., 103 A.D. 472, 93 N.Y.S. 134 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The plaintiff brings this action as a stockholder of the defendant corporation to enforce a claim of that corporation against the individual defendants. The complaint alleges that the defendant corporation was organized under the laws of the State of West Virginia ; that the defendant Gould is its president and the defendant [473]*473Hanson its treasurer; that the defendant corporation was originally organized in May, 1897, with a capital stock of $100,000, which was in the month of May, 1897, increased to the sum of $3,000,000, divided into 300,000 shares of the par value of $10 per share; that at the time of the organization of the company the defendants Gould and Hanson owned or controlled certain patents relating to the detecting of fire by means of a certain arrangement of wires, “the value of which patents did not, to the knowledge of said John D. Gould and Charles A. Hanson, exceed in value the sum of $10,000; ” that in the month of May, 1897, the defendants Gould and Hanson, being directors of the said corporation, “ with the intent to deprive said company of its right to obtain money or property by the issuance of said capital stock to bona fide subscribers at par, and with the intent to acquire said capital stock for their own use by paying therefor less than one per cent of its par value, entered into an agreement with the other directors of said company whereby said John D. Gould and Charles A. Hanson caused to be assigned to said Montauk Fire Detecting Wire Company the patents aforesaid, well knowing same to be worth not exceeding $10,000, and thereupon, without any further consideration passing to said company, the directors of the latter caused to be issued to said John D. Gould and Charles A. Hanson the entire capital stock of said Montauk Fire Detecting Wire Company in the proportion of $2,000,000 to said John D. Gould and $1,000,000 to said Charles A. Hanson ; ” that subsequently Gould transferred to said company $500,000 of the stock so issued to him as aforesaid and said Charles A. Hanson immediately transferred to said company $250,000 of the stock so issued to him as aforesaid, the said aggregate of $750,000 being entered on the books of said company as treasury stock; that subsequently Gould sold of the said stock so issued to him stock of the par value of $423,980, for which he has received more than $10,000 in cash, and said Gould now holds the sum of about $1,076,020 of said stock for which the defendant Gould has not paid or said corporation received any value whatever; that the defendant Hanson has transferred stock of the company received by him in a sum exceeding $10,000, and has subsequently acquired additional stock, so that he now holds about $816,310 of said stock, of which $750,000 represented the original issue so received by him; that at [474]*474the time of the organization of the defendant corporation and the issuance of its capital stock to the defendants Gould and Hanson in Hay, 1897, as aforesaid, the statute law of the State of W est Virginia provided “ that in no case should the stock of a corporation organized under the laws of the State of West Virginia, except a mining or railroad corporation, be sold or disposed of by the corporation at less than par;” that subsequent to Hay 1,1900, the plaintiff, being ignorant of'the acts of the defendants Gould and Hanson heretofore alleged, and believing that all of the capital stock of said corporation was full paid and had been issued for full value, purchased from the said corporation 400 shares of its capital stock, paying therefor the sum of $2,000, for which plaintiff received certificates of stock, which on their face purported to be full paid; that the defendant corporation is now under the control of said Gould and Hanson, who held a majority of its stock, “ and for that reason it is impracticable that said company should bring this action against them.” And the complaint demands judgment that the stock, amounting to $1,076,020, now held by the defendant Gould as aforesaid, be declared illegal and void because of the fraudulent acts alleged, and that he be directed to deliver the same to the defendant corporation for cancellation ; and that of the stock held by the defendant Hanson the sum of $750,000 be declared illegal and void because of the fraudulent acts hereinbefore alleged, and that he be directed to deliver the same to the corporation for cancellation.

Although the allegation as to the value of these patents at the time they were assigned to the defendant corporation and the stock issued therefor is subject to criticism in that the complaint does not directly allege that the value" of those patents did not exceed the sum of $10,000, the allegation being that it did not to the knowledge of Gould and Hanson exceed that sum; and a further allegation that Gould and Hanson caused to be assigned to the wire company the patents aforesaid, they knowing the same to be worth not exceeding $10,000, is only an allegation as to' Gould and Hanson’s knowledge, and not of the fact, still in disposing of this case. we may assume that the pleader intended to allege that the patents, were worth a sum not to exceed $10,000, and that the defendants Gould and Hanson had knowledge of such value.

[475]*475Upon a former appeal to this court from a judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint, which did not allege that the issue of this stock was illegal by the laws of the State of West Virginia, under which this corporation was organized, it was held that there was no cause of action (83 App. Div. 259). In the complaint in this action it is alleged that the statute law of the State of West Virginia provides that in no case should the stock of a corporation organized under the laws of that State, except a mining or railroad corporation, be sold or disposed of by the corporation at less than par. We have, therefore, a case in which a corporation, organized under the laws of a State which provide that its stock shall not be sold or disposed of by the corporation at less than par, has issued its stock of the par value of -$3,000,000 for the purchase of property worth $10,000. The question is, what remedy has the corporation against the persons to whom the stock was issued in the purchase of property, the value of which was much less than the par value of the stock issued ?

The complaint alleges that the corporation has received a transfer of the patents, and that for the patents the corporation has issued its stock in an amount that was agreed upon, as between the owners of the patents and the corporation, as the consideration for the transfer. I suppose that there is no species of property the value of which is more uncertain than letters patent which secure to the patentee the exclusive right to manufacture the patented article. From the nature of the property, the real value of patents can only be determined after the invention is introduced and in use. Owning property of this description, the individual defendants and the directors of the company made an agreement as to its value, and for that value the patents were transferred to the company and the individual defendants received the agreed compensation. Considering the relations that existed between this company and the defendantr, such gross overvaluation would undoubtedly give to the corporation a right to disaffirm that contract, and would also give to any stockholder, if any were in existence before the stock was issued, a right to apply to a court of equity to prevent the consummation of such a transaction. The complaint, however, alleges that all of the stock- of the corporation was issued to the individual defendants for the patents.

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Bluebook (online)
103 A.D. 472, 93 N.Y.S. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-press-v-montauk-fire-detecting-wire-co-nyappdiv-1905.