Jackson v. Hooper

27 L.R.A.N.S. 658, 75 A. 568, 76 N.J. Eq. 592, 1910 N.J. LEXIS 251
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 28, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 27 L.R.A.N.S. 658 (Jackson v. Hooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Hooper, 27 L.R.A.N.S. 658, 75 A. 568, 76 N.J. Eq. 592, 1910 N.J. LEXIS 251 (N.J. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dill, J.

The bill and injunction in this ease rest upon the theory that the complainant, who united with the defendant Horace E. Hooper in acquiring in equal shares all the stock of two foreign corporations, pursuant to an agreement claimed to create a partnership or joint adventure, is entitled to treat the two corporations, organized under foreign laws, as mere agencies or instrumentalities in the conduct of the joint business and to subject not only the stock owned by both parties, but all the corporate property to the control of the court of chancery according to the principles of the law of partnership.

The vice-chancellor held that “the complainant and the defendant Horace E. Hooper were engaged as principals in a joint undertaking;” that “the English and Illinois corporations were respectively agencies by which they accomplished their results,” and that, as the rules governing partnerships applied, a preliminary injunction should be granted. From the injunction order the defendants appeal.

We are constrained to differ radically from the learned vice-chancellor in his views of the power and scope of the court of chancery, in dealing with corporate property, and we reach the conclusion that neither the bill nor the injunction can be sustained.

As we place our decision on broad grounds, which are disposi *594 live of the whole case, we treat the allegations of fact in the bill as favorably as upon a demurrer and without reference to the denials, contained in the answer and affidavits submitted by the defendants.

The record in this case is voluminous, covering over six hundred pages, but the salient facts are as follows:

Prior to 1900 the compJaiuant and the defendant Horace E. Hooper had been associated in London, England, in the business of publishing and selling subscription books, “through the agency of. a company known as ‘The Clarke Company, Ltd./ ” an English corporation. In 1900 they acquired in equal portions all the stock of that company under an agreement that

“upon the acquisition of the Clarke interests and so long as they might be associated together in business, their general policy in respect of their .ioint undertakings should be determined by mutual assent, each to have and exercise the authority and control of equal partners.”

In 1902, to avoid the English tax law, the business transacted in England was separated from that conducted elsewhere. The Clarke Company, Ltd., was dissolved, and its assets and all the business carried on by the parties in interest were conveyed to two corporations, one “Hooper & Jackson, Ltd.,” of England, to carry on the business in the United Kingdom; the other, a New ■York corporation, “The Encyclopaedia Brittanica Company,” to operate elsewhere. The stock and securities of these corporations were issued to the two parties equally in payment for the property thus acquired by the corporations from these parties. The bill alleges that both these corporations were “intended to become merely instrumentalities or agencies for carrying out certain partnership purposes,” and to be subject to the original agreement.

In 1903, for reasons of their own, the parties dissolved the New York corporation and transferred its assets to an Illinois corporation of the same name and under the same general understanding that the business should be carried on as a partnership, with'five directors, of whom the complainant and Hooper were two, the other three being “nominal” directors.

*595 As to the “nominal” directors the bill alleges in the plainest language that they were mere dummies, both in the New York company and its successor, the Illinois corporation, and says:

“It was clearly understood that the election of particular persons to these three positions was not intended to, and did not, confer upon them any authority or control or the management of the business of the plaintiff and Hooper, but that at all times such persons, employes or others, should have no right or authority whatever in corporate matters other than to vote as directed by Hooper and the plaintiff acting' jointly.”

From 1902 to 1908 the business in which the companies were engaged, including the publication of the Encyclopaedia Brittannica, extended all over the civilized world and ran up into millions, the accounts receivable alone, at the time of the filing of the bill, amounting t"o over $2,000,000. During all this time, according to the bill, the business was conducted in the names of corporations but always in accordance with the original agreement as to equal ownership, interest, authority and control, the three nominal directors being mere employes and automatons of the parties, and the existence of the corporations being always disregarded “except as agencies and instrumentalities created by them for carrying out certain of their co-partnership purposes.”

In 1908 the complainant and Hooper quarreled as to the business policy, and their differences having become irreconcilable the theretofore dummy directors voted with Hooper and against the complainant. This, as the bill puts it, constituted a breach of the so-called partnership agreement that Jackson and Hooper should have equal control and equal voice in the management of the companies and that the other three directors should be and remain dummies.

The charge of the bill is that Hooper and the three nominal directors passed corporate resolutions and amended by-laws which changed the complainant’s alleged partnership control, contrary to his wish, or, in other words, that the three dummy directors, assisting Hooper, practically ousted the complainant from his alleged partnership control over the corporation. This was done by the passage of resolutions, as, for example, requiring checks to be signed by two officers, thus putting it out of the *596 complainant's control to draw on the assets of the company, as a partner would, whenever he saw fit and by his own cheek.

The relief asked for is that the court appoint a receiver of all file assets and joint property of the complainant and the defend-mt Horace E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 L.R.A.N.S. 658, 75 A. 568, 76 N.J. Eq. 592, 1910 N.J. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-hooper-nj-1910.