Ludington v. . Thompson

47 N.E. 903, 153 N.Y. 499, 7 E.H. Smith 499, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 723
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 5, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 47 N.E. 903 (Ludington v. . Thompson) 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
Ludington v. . Thompson, 47 N.E. 903, 153 N.Y. 499, 7 E.H. Smith 499, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 723 (N.Y. 1897).

Opinion

Andrews, Oh. J.

The principal question on this appeal arises upon the defense of the Statute of Limitations.

The defendant is the receiver of Augustus Bans & Co., a manufacturing corporation, appointed by an order or decree of the court made February 29, 1888, in proceedings under the statute for the voluntary dissolution of corporations. The complaint avers that the corporation has been dissolved and the averment is not denied in the answer. Construing this averment in connection with the statute under which the proceedings were instituted, which only provides for the appointment of a receiver as a part of the judgment for dissolution, it sufficiently appears that the defendant was appointed receiver on the final dissolution. (2 Rev. St. 468, § 65.) The powers of such a receiver are defined in the statute. By the 67th section such receivers are vested with all the estate, real and personal, of the corporation and they are declared to be “ trustees of such estate for the benefit of the creditors of such corpora *503 tion and of its stockholders.” By the 68th section they are declared to possess all the power and authority conferred by law upon trustees to whom an assignment of the estate of insolvent debtors may be made pursuant to the provisions of the fifth chapter of the second part of the Revised Statutes.

The right of action on the notes was not barred on February 29, 1888, the date of the dissolution of the corporation and of the appointment of the receiver. The notes matured between September, 1887, and March, 1888. This action was not commenced until June 5, 1895, more than six years after the last note became due. The lapse of time would have barred an action' on the notes against the corporation, if the corporation had continued in existence, and it is insisted that the receiver stands in the place of the corporation and is entitled to interpose the bar of the statute as a defense to the action, to the same extent that the corporation might have done if it had not been dissolved, and it had been sued upon the notes.

It is important to notice the real nature of the action. It is in form an action upon the notes, and judgment has been rendered thereon against the defendant in his representative-character. In fact it is an action to ascertain and establish the status of the plaintiff as a creditor of the corporation, and as such entitled to share in the distribution of its assets in the hands of the receiver. The action wras brought by permission of the court. There could be no pretense that the defendant was the debtor of the plaintiff or was personally liable upon the notes. The statute authorizing proceedings for the voluntary dissolution of corporations prescribes a method for ascertaining the claims of creditors and for a reference in case claims-are disputed. But this method is not, we conceive, exclusive. The court may, nevertheless, when in its judgment it is proper so to do, authorize an action to be brought against the receiver who disputes the validity of a claim, so that the matter may be more deliberately examined and determined than in the summary method authorized by the statute. But whether the validity of a claim is ascertained by a summary *504 reference or by action, the purpose of each proceeding is the same, to procure an adjudication for the guidance of the receiver in administering the estate of the corporation.

If the six years’ Statute of Limitations would not have barred the allowance of the claim in a proceeding under the statute, it is not a bar to an action brought against the receiverfor the same purpose. The action, we repeat, is not in a proper sense an action brought on obligations evidenced by the notes, but to ascertain whether the plaintiff was a creditor by reason thereof, entitled to share in the distribution of the estate of the corporation. It is undisputed that on the 29th of February, 1888, the date of the dissolution of the corporation, the notes were valid, subsisting, enforceable claims against the corporation. By the ancient common law, on the civil death of a corporation, its debts were extinguished and its property reverted to its grantor or was vested in the king, to the exclusion of creditors. (Angelí & Ames on Corp. § 779.) This rigoi'ous and inequitable doctrine came, in time, under the benign influence of courts of equity, to yield to the juster view that, upon the dissolution of a corporation, its property became a trust fund for the payment of creditors and stockholders. This principle is incorporated into the statute for the voluntary dissolution of corporations in section 67, to which reference has been made. The estate is’vested in the receiver for the “ benefit of the creditors of such corporation and of its stockholders.” The plaintiff was included in this class, and upon the appointment of the receiver he held the property of the corporation upon an express trust declared in the statute itself, for the common benefit of the plaintiff and other creditors. It was not a trust for the then ascertained creditors, but for all who should establish their status as creditors in the due course of the administration of the trust. The receiver did not hold the estate of the corporation adversely to the creditors or any of them. It was not a trust imposed upon the receiver by reason of misconduct. It was voluntarily assumed by him as the officer of the court which appointed him. His sole interest and duty was to administer the fund and property for the *505 benefit of all existing creditors in obedience to the prescriptions of the statute and subject to the supervisory jurisdiction of the court.

The limitation of six years applicable to actions on contract is not an answer to the claim of the jfiaintiff in this proceeding. It is not set up by the debtor. The dissolution of the corporation made a suit and judgment against the corporation impossible. (Hardman v. Sage, 124 N. Y. 25 ; United Glass Co. v. Vary, 152 id. 124.) The defendant, as we have said, is a trustee appointed by the court for the administration of the property of the corporation for the benefit of all its •creditors, including the plaintiff, and the authorities are decisive that the statute does not run in favor of the trustee .against claims not barred at the time of the appointment so long as the trust is open and continuing and has not been repudiated or denied. (Lammer v. Stoddard, 103 N. Y. 672; Zebley v. F. L. & T. Co., 139 id. 461.) The rule is different in case of implied or constructive trusts forced upon the conscience of a party as a means of preventing the consummation of a wrong. (Lammer v. Stoddard, supra ; In re Leiman, 32 Md. 225.) In the case of express and admitted trusts the possession of the trustee is not hostile or adverse to the claim of the cestui que trust and is consistent with the continuing recognition of the trust relation until that relation is distinctly disclaimed.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.E. 903, 153 N.Y. 499, 7 E.H. Smith 499, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ludington-v-thompson-ny-1897.