Lorillard v. . Clyde

37 N.E. 489, 142 N.Y. 456, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 781, 97 Sickels 456, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 776
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 37 N.E. 489 (Lorillard v. . Clyde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lorillard v. . Clyde, 37 N.E. 489, 142 N.Y. 456, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 781, 97 Sickels 456, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 776 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

Andrews, Ch. J.

The validity of the contract upon which the action is brought was adjudicated in the case reported in 86 If. Y. 384. The divisible character of the obligation of the defendants, and the right of the plaintiff to maintain separate actions for successive payments on the guaranty as they fell due has also been settled. (122 N. Y. 41.) The plaintiff in the actions heretofore brought has recovered under the contract dividends or the equivalent of dividends on his stock at the rate of seven per cent per annum from July 1,1874, to July 1,1879, a period of five years antecedent to the dissolution of the corporation. The present action is to recover such dividends for the two succeeding years, which complete the term of seven years specified in the guaranty.

The effect of the dissolution of the corporation upon the contract of guaranty as to payments subsequently accruing *459 thereon presents the new question involved in the present litigation. Its solution rests primarily upon an interpretation oi the contract. The object of the contract, as stated therein, was the consolidation of the interests of the respective parties in the business of water transportation between Hew York and Philadelphia. They were competitors in the business. The plaintiff owned and ran steamships between these ports by the outside route, and the defendants conducted their business between the same ports by means of tugs and barges running upon the canals and inside water routes. The outside business could be carried on during the whole year. ' The business by the inside routes was of necessity suspended during the time the canals were closed by frost. The plan of combination was to organize a corporation to which each of the interests would contribute an equal amount of capital in the jxroperties then employed by each in the business of transportation, at an agreed valuation, any difference in value to be equalized by payment by the one party to the other. The written contract embodied the scheme. It provided for the organization of a corporation under the law of Hew York, with a capital of $300,000 ; designated the vessels to be contributed by each interest and fixed their value; provided for the payment by the Clydes to the plaintiff of $20,000 for equality of interest. Among other provisions is the following: “William P. Clyde & Co. to have the management of said corporation and business, and in consideration thereof to guarantee to Jacob Lorillard a dividend of not less than seven per cent per annum for seven years, and to receive for such management the usual commission of two and one-half per cent in and five per cent out at each end, of the freights earned.” The corporation ivas organized; a board of five directors was designated in the certificate of incorporation ; one-half of the stock, being fifteen hundred shares, was issued to the plaintiff, and the other half to W. P. Clyde & Co., except that th'ee shares of the* par value of $100 each were, by the direction of the Clydes, taken from their one-lialf and certificates issued to three clerks who were named as directors, in order to qualify *460 them under the statute. The business of the corporation was •carried on under the management of W. P. Clyde & Co. until April, 1879. when a suit was brought in the name of the People by the attorney-general to dissolve the corporation and a temporary receiver appointed. The case was tried and resulted in. a judgment dissolving the corporation and the appointing of a permanent receiver. It is unnecessary to enter into greater detail at this time of the facts disclosed by the record. Other facts will be hereafter referred to.

The question whether the obligation of the defendants under their guaranty continued in force as to the part of the •seven years, unexpired at the time of the dissolution of the •corporation, in the absence of any responsible agency of either party for the causes .which led to the dissolution, must be •determined by the intention of the parties as ascertained from the language of the contract, and, if ambiguous, from such language and the surrounding circumstances. The contract contains no explicit statement on the subject. It assumed that the corporation would be in existence during the whole period over which the guaranty extended. The guaranty was not for the yearly payment of a sum equal to seven per cent •on the capital of the plaintiff in the corporation, or on the nominal amount of his stock. It was, that the dividends of the corporation should annually for seven years equal that sum. The plaintiff would under the coeéract and by virtue ■of his right as a stockholder be entitled to dividends declared by the company, whether they should be more or less than seven per cent per annum, and if dividends less than that •amount should be made, the liability of the defendant's on their guaranty would be limited to a sum sufficient to make up the deficit. In case the dividends equalled or exceeded seven per cent there would be no liability, and in case no ■dividends were declared then the guaranty would stand in the lieu of dividends. The contract provided that “accounts shall be made up and dividends when earned shall be declared and paid quarterly,” and it was also provided that during the seven years neither party should be interested “ in any com *461 peting steam water line between ¡New York and Philadelphia without the consent of the other party in writing.” The fact that guaranty was of “ dividends,” which implies the existence of the corporation during the time specified capable of earning and declaring dividends, and the prohibition against either party becoming interested in competing lines during the same period, inserted for the protection of the corporate business, plainly indicate that the parties were dealing upon the assumption of corporate existence during the period covered by the. guaranty. But this becomes much more plain when the. nature of the transaction in which the parties were engaged and the consideration upon which the guaranty rested are-, considered. The real purpose of the parties was to combine their properties and conduct the transportation business; between ¡New York and Philadelphia as a joint business, each, contributing the same amount of capital and being equally interested in the vessels. The arrangement was substantially a partnership with a corporate organization. The consolidation would prevent competition and presumably benefit both interests. The management of the business was by the contract to be vested in W. P. Clyde & Co., and “in consideration thereof ” and óf their right to receive the usual commissions on inward and outward bound freight which was given them, they agreed to guarantee to the plaintiff dividends at the rate and for the time specified.

It is incontrovertible that the right to manage the business of the corporation and to earn and to receive the Commissions on freight were the considerations upon which the guaranty rested. The plaintiff conceded these rights to the Clydes for this equivalent. The defendants could receive the benefits of the contract only in case the corporation should continue in being during the running of the guaranty. The death of the corporation would terminate their management; prevent then- earning commissions ; the business would end, and the court, in administering the assets, would return to each party his proportion of the capital remaining for distribution.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.E. 489, 142 N.Y. 456, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 781, 97 Sickels 456, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorillard-v-clyde-ny-1894.