Marine Trust Co. v. Tralles

147 Misc. 426, 263 N.Y.S. 750, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1079
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 Misc. 426 (Marine Trust Co. v. Tralles) 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
Marine Trust Co. v. Tralles, 147 Misc. 426, 263 N.Y.S. 750, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1079 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Harris, J.

This is an action brought by the plaintiff on its own behalf and on behalf of other creditors of the Buffalo Manu[427]*427facturing Company, a domestic stock corporation (dissolved by a voluntary proceeding pursuant to section 105 of the Stock Corporation Law) and the relief sought is- a decree holding that the defendants herein on such dissolution received certain funds of such corporation and that they are holding the same as trustees, and requiring them to account for such funds for the benefit of the said creditors.

The Buffalo Manufacturing Company was a domestic stock corporation which began business on its formation in 1898. The industry in which the company was engaged was that of manufacturing metalware.

On August 1, 1928, the Buffalo Manufacturing Company executed and delivered its bond to the Marine Trust Company, for the sum of $25,000, which bond was secured by a mortgage on the real property of the corporation at Buffalo, N. Y. This indebtedness to the plaintiff became due and payable August 1, 1929, and on the refusal of the Buffalo Manufacturing Company to pay the same, the mortgage was foreclosed in an action instituted by the filing of a lis pendens August 11, 1931. The real property at sale did not bring an amount sufficient to pay the indebtedness and on May 27, 1932, a deficiency judgment was entered against the corporation for the sum of $23,364.53. Execution was returned unsatisfied and the said judgment remains wholly unpaid.

So far as appears in this action, the only outstanding indebtedness of the corporation at the time of its dissolution (in addition to the claims of the defendants Kogler, Tralles and Mast herein, as hereinafter described) was the indebtedness on the bond and mortgage above referred to.

During the later years of the fife of the corporation, the defendants Tralles, Kogler and Mast and Bullet were directors of the corporation and at all times up to August 13, 1931, the defendants Tralles, Kogler and Mast, in addition to being directors of. the corporation, were actively engaged in manual labor about the plant of the corporation. Up to about the summer of 1929 each of these three men was receiving compensation at the rate of forty dollars a week for such manual labor. The defendant Kogler worked in the electric plating department, the defendant Tralles worked as a metal spinner and the defendant Mast worked as a spinner and crated and packed goods. During that summer it was decided that the corporation should, at some time in the more or less near future, wind up its business. This decision was due to lack of trade. These three defendants also agreed, evidently with each other and without the formality of a meeting of stockholders or of directors, that from that time on until the business [428]*428was finally disposed of, each one should draw twenty-six dollars and sixty-seven cents each week to apply on his forty dollars a week, but that the compensation of each for wages should still continue at forty dollars per week. For about a year thereafter these three defendants all worked at th§ir usual occupations in the plant.

Toward the fall of 1930 these men again agreed, without any action of the board of directors or of the stockholders, that during the remainder of the time necessary to close up the affairs of the Buffalo Manufacturing Company each one would draw one dollar a week to apply upon the forty dollars a week. Their idea was to complete unfinished work and to market the same and then to be paid the remaining amount of their wages from the proceeds of such marketing. In this manner, at the time the bond and mortgage became due, there was owing to each one of the defendants Kogler, Tralles and Mast approximately $3,500, This debt was entirely for their services in labor as above described, to wit, pohshing, spinning, crating and packing about the plant and in the employ of the Buffalo Manufacturing Company.

Prior to the foreclosure of the mortgage above described and on or about July 1, 1931, the defendants Tralles and Mast informed the Marine Trust Company that the Buffalo Manufacturing Company would be unable to pay the bond and mortgage.

During the period from the summer of 1929 to July 28, 1931, there accumulated in the bank account of the Buffalo Manufacturing Company kept at the Marine Trust Company of Buffalo, $6,720.40, this representing the amount of receipts from time to time for the marketing of goods by the Buffalo Manufacturing Company. On July 28, 1931, the Buffalo Manufacturing Company drew this amount from the Marine Trust Company and deposited the same in the Liberty Bank of Buffalo on the same day as it was withdrawn from the Marine Trust Company. On August 13, 1931, the amount of $6,720.40 was withdrawn by the check of the Buffalo Manufacturing Company from the Liberty Bank of Buffalo. Five hundred dollars of this amount was paid to the late Hamilton Ward, Esq., for legal counsel to the Buffalo Manufacturing Company. No question is raised as to the propriety of this payment. The remaining sum of $6,220.40 was divided into three equal parts and one of such equal parts was taken by the defendant Tralles, the second by the defendant Kogler and the third by the defendant Mast. Each of these men claims that he received this money in part payment of wages which had accumulated in the manner above described, and the court is satisfied that this is the truth. All of this took place without any action or resolution of the stock[429]*429holders or of the directors in formal meeting and there is no doubt that there was no formal meeting of either stockholders or directors for many years before the dissolution of the company.

Some time after these moneys were so disbursed, the defendant Bullet, who had been a stockholder in the corporation, and representatives of one Mr. Volk who had been a stockholder and who had died in 19.27, in some way became informed of the fact that the defendants Kogler, Tralles and Mast had withdrawn the funds, Evidently the defendant Bullet and the representatives of Mr. Volk felt that they were entitled to some return on the stock investments made by the defendant Bullet and Mr. Volk, and threatened litigation. As a result of their inquiry, the defendants Kogler, Tralles and Mast each contributed enough money from what each one had drawn from the fund above mentioned to make some compensation to the defendant Bullet and to the representatives of the late Mr. Volk for their stock investments. The court is asked by the plaintiff to find that this really was a division of the entire fund to stockholders in preference to creditors, but the court is of the opinion that the original distribution of the money among the three defendants mentioned was honestly a payment of wages and that the latter payment to defendant Bullet and the representatives of the late Mr. Volk was a voluntary payment, without necessity of law, to avoid litigation.

It is undoubtedly the law that on the dissolution of the corporation the defendants became trustees for the benefit of creditors of the corporation. (Gen, Corp. Law, § 29; Stock Gorp.

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Bluebook (online)
147 Misc. 426, 263 N.Y.S. 750, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marine-trust-co-v-tralles-nysupct-1933.