Levine v. Behn

174 Misc. 988, 21 N.Y.S.2d 805, 1940 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2007
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 174 Misc. 988 (Levine v. Behn) 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
Levine v. Behn, 174 Misc. 988, 21 N.Y.S.2d 805, 1940 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2007 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1940).

Opinion

Walter, J.

Three individuals owning a total of thirty-three shares of stock of the National City Bank of New York here seek to compel certain of its directors to repay to it $725,000, which they caused it to pay in discharge of a claim asserted against it and its president. Summary judgment was granted (169 Misc. 601; affd., 257 App. Div. 156) but afterwards reversed (282 N. Y. 120). In view of the reversal I understand that I not only may but also am required to exercise my own independent judgment and form my own conclusions with respect to the facts (Gugel v. Hiscox, 216 N. Y. 145), but that does not mean that I must disregard the argument that a justice of this court and three justices of the Appellate Division have expressed the view that upon the showing made upon the motion for summary judgment the suit is without merit, whereas all that the Court of Appeals and the dissenting justices of the Appellate Division have said is that the case presents issues which should be tried. (Gugel v. Hiscox, supra, p. 152.)

In December, 1933, a suit against the twenty banks of New York city who were members of the New York Clearing House Association was brought by the Comptroller of the Currency of the United States and the receiver and the president of the Harriman National Bank and Trust Company to compel performance of an alleged [990]*990agreement by said banks to pay such amount as might be required to pay in full the depositors of the Harriman Bank. The suit also asserted, as an alternative cause of action, that if the banks uever authorized or ratified the alleged agreement, then certain of their executive officers should be held liable upon the theory of a breach of warranty of their authority to make the same on behalf of their respective banks. The sum demanded was not specified, the amount required to pay the depositors of the Harriman Bank not being then determined. It was alleged, however, that such amount should be prorated in accordance with the percentages customarily used by the Clearing House Association in assessing its members for the expenses and charges thereof. In June, 1934, nine of the banks so sued, after having interposed answers denying liability and setting up affirmative defenses, paid a total of $2,848,950 in discharge of the claim as against them and their executive officers, and in July, 1934, a tenth bank paid $18,993 in discharge of the claim as against it. The agreement under which the payments by the nine banks were made states that the amount for which judgment was sought was uncertain but was believed to be substantially in excess of $6,331,000, and the payments made by those ten banks were of such computed percentages of $6,331,000. In April, 1936, just as the suit was about to be tried, the National City Bank paid $725,000, which was its so computed percentage of $5,000,000. The suit was then tried as against the remaining nine banks and two executive officers, and it resulted in a judgment dismissing the complaint. (O’Connor v. Bankers Trust Co., 159 Misc. 920; affd., 253 App. Div. 714; affd., 278 N. Y. 649.)

Defendants here concededly believed and were advised by counsel that the agreement alleged in the O’Connor suit never was made or ratified by National City Bank and if made it was not valid or enforoible, but the contrary was asserted vigorously and in good faith by high and responsible officials who were prosecuting the suit by able and eminent counsel, and the suit was far from being palpably unfounded, and if defendant directors voted to compromise the claim by paying a sum less than the possible recovery it is clear that, in the absence of fraud or collusion, which are not here alleged or proved, such compromise could not be attacked by minority stockholders.

It is here contended that defendant directors did not compromise, that they actually paid in full a legally unenforcible claim, and that they thus in effect made a gift of the bank’s money. I do not think the facts warrant such a characterization. It is true that there never was any dispute that upon the basis of proration asserted in the O’Connor complaint the National City’s proportion was [991]*991fourteen and five-tenths per cent of the amount required to pay the Harriman depositors, and it is true that defendant directors voted to pay that percentage of what the plaintiffs in that suit then estimated as the amount required for that purpose. It also is true that upon the trial of that suit that amount was found to be less than previously estimated, viz., $4,862,801.70. (See O’Connor v. Bankers Trust Co., supra, p. 924.) But while the amount paid by the National City is thus somewhat greater than the amount at which its liability would have been fixed if it had been found liable in that suit, it also is smaller than what was claimed by the plaintiffs in that suit when the other ten banks settled in 1934, and there is nothing to show that there ever was any certainty, prior to the trial of the O’Connor suit, that the award required to pay the Harriman depositors would not exceed $5,000,000. In short, when the National City made its payment the amount of its liability, if any, was uncertain and unknown, and, therefore, it cannot accurately be said that the payment made was payment in full rather than a payment by way of compromise. It also is to be noted in this connection that the payment was made under terms which secured to the bank a right to receive something back in case it turned out that the whole was not required to pay the Harriman depositors in full.

Assuming however, that the payment voted was payment in full, it still does not follow that the payment was in effect a gift. The right of directors to compromise a disputed claim rests upon their right to manage the affairs of their corporation according to their honest and informed judgment and discretion as to what is for the best interests of the corporation, and that right to consider the best interests of the corporation is equally applicable to and equally may support a payment in full of a claim even though they themselves believe, and it subsequently is judicially determined, that the claim is not legally enforcible. The principal if not the sole difference between compromising and paying in full is that in the case of a compromise the saving of the difference between the amount paid and the possible liability generally supplies an obvious reason for the compromise, whereas in the case of payment in full the reasons for paying in full rather than awaiting the outcome of a litigation are not so obvious. The test in each case, however, is the same, viz., whether or not the directors acted honestly and diligently and with a view to the promotion of the interests of the corporation. Of course, neither actual good faith nor advice of counsel will save directors if the facts afford no reasonable basis for a belief that a payment is for the best interests of the corporation. Honest belief without any basis in fact must be attributable to [992]*992negligence. But if directors reasonably believe that they are promoting the interests of the corporation, a payment in full cannot be attacked any more than a compromise.

In the case at bar it is not claimed that the directors acted fraudulently. Neither is it claimed that they acted negligently in the sense that they failed to give the matter full and careful attention.

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Related

Gilbert v. Curtiss-Wright Corp.
179 Misc. 641 (New York Supreme Court, 1942)
Levine v. Behn
262 A.D. 729 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
174 Misc. 988, 21 N.Y.S.2d 805, 1940 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levine-v-behn-nysupct-1940.