Marr v. Marr

70 A. 375, 73 N.J. Eq. 643, 1908 N.J. LEXIS 256
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 70 A. 375 (Marr v. Marr) 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
Marr v. Marr, 70 A. 375, 73 N.J. Eq. 643, 1908 N.J. LEXIS 256 (N.J. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Pitney, Chancellor.

The bill of complaint herein is in form a bill filed by the complainant as a stockholder of the Beacon Land Company, in behalf of himself and other stockholders, for the purpose of either setting aside certain sheriff’s sales of the real estate and personal property of the company made to the defendant William A. Marr under executions issued upon a judgment held by the latter against the company, or else to impress a trust upon his title in favor of the complainant and other stockholders. William A. Marr and the Beacon Land Company were named as defendants. It appears, however, by the averments of the bill, [645]*645that in the year 1902, and long prior to the commencement of this suit, the charter of the company was forfeited by reason of its failure to pay the state taxes assessed against it. P. L. W02 p. &36. This fact was admitted at the hearing. It further appears from the answer of William A. Marr that there is no acting board of directors of the land company, and that from the time of the sheriff's sales in question, which took place in November and December, 1898, the organization of the company has been abandoned. Therefore the bill is in effect filed for the benefit of the complainant and other stockholders as upon a liquidation of the company.

It is argued that since, under sections 53 and 54 of the General Corporation act (P. L. 1\8&6 p. 29\5), a corporation, when dissolved, is continued for the purpose of winding up its affairs and dividing its capital, and the directors are made trustees for the purposes of the winding up, it was incumbent upon the complainant to notify the board of directors of his claim and request them to take action in the matter. No such application having been made, it is insisted, upon the authority of Siegman v. Maloney, 65 N. J. Eq. (20 Dick.) 372, that his action cannot be maintained. If this objection had been interposed by demurrer to the bill (as was done in Siegman v. Maloney), or otherwise before the hearing of tlie cause upon -its merits, it might have required consideration. Since the case, however, has been fully heard upon the merits, no good purpose would now be accomplished by turning the complainant about and requiring him to ask the board of directors to do for him that which he has been able to do for himself, viz., produce the evidence necessary for a determination of his case upon the merits. It should be observed, also, that the point that the board of directors ought to be entrusted with control of the litigation is not raised by or in behalf of the corporation.

The bill was dismissed on the- ground that the complainant had no equity. We will, therefore, upon this appeal, pass upon the merits.

The facts that give rise to the controversy are briefly as follows: The Beacon Land Company was incorporated in the year 1892 for the purpose of acquiring and operating a seaside [646]*646hotel at Point Pleasant, in Ocean county. The company was a sort of “close corporation,” the principal stockholders being at the outset James H. Marr (father of the complainant), and his brothers, William A. Marr and George A. Marr, together with a personal friend of theirs, a physician by profession, named McWilliams. The outstanding capital stock (all of which was fully paid, so far as appears), amounted to $24,000 in par value, divided into forty-eight shares of $500 each, of which James H. Marr held twenty-one, William A. Marr ten, George A. Marr three, Dr. McWilliams ten, J. W. Felty three, Charles Lewis one and Mrs. Helen M. Crawford (a sister of the Marrs) one share. The directors at the beginning were William A. Marr, J ames H. Marr, George A. Marr and Dr. McWilliams (all residents of Pennsylvania), and Mr. Lewis, who resided at Asbury Park, in this state. William A. Marr was, from the beginning and at all times, the president. James H. Marr (father of the complainant) died in the year 1895, whereupon his sister, Mrs. Crawford, was elected a director in his stead. Upon the settlement of his estate, fourteen of his shares passed to a Philadelphia trust company, as guardian of the complainant, the latter being then but eleven years of age, and seven shares passed to Rebecca G. Marr, widow of the deceased and mother of the complainant. Except as mentioned, there appears to have been no change at any time in the stockholding interest, nor in the personnel of the board of directors.

At the death of James H. Marr the company was somewhat in debt, and during the next two years the indebtedness was considerably increased, either because the operations of the hotel were unprofitable or because the profits were expended in improvements upon the property. Both before and after the death of James H. Marr, the defendant William A. Marr had advanced to the company considerable sums of money from time to time, and by the close of the year 1897 he had become its sole creditor. In the year 1896 Rebecca G. Marr sued the company in the supreme court of this state and recovered a judgment for $2,057 and costs, and, upon her pressing for payment, William A. Marr paid to her the amount of the judgment and costs and took an assignment thereof in January, 1897. At the same time [647]*647the company owed him other moneys, aggregating upwards of $8,500, besides interest. In the month of September, 1898, he brought action against the company in the supreme court upon this claim, and recovered judgment a month later for $10,287.90, besides costs. Upon execution issued upon this judgment he caused the entire visible assets of the company (and the whole assets, so far as appears), to be sold by the sheriff and became himself the purchaser. The real estate was struck off to him at the price of $3,000 and the personal property at the price $850. There was no advertisement beyond such as is required by the statute, and there were no bidders in attendance at either sale besides William A. Marr. So far as the amount of the purchase price is concerned, we agree with the learned vice-chancellor that, since the corporation had no other assets, the bids are to be deemed, as between William A. Marr and the company, as in effect equivalent to the aggregate amount due upon the two judgments held by him, which, with interest, amounted to approximately $12,500.

It was deliberately admitted at the hearing, and is therefore bejrond controversy upon this appeal, that the property, real and personal, at the time of the sheriff’s sales, was fairly worth $25,000.

The complainant and appellant claims that, under the circumstances existing at the time of the sale, William A. Marr was a trustee for the stockholders of the company, and obliged either to protect their interest by preventing a sale, or to give them fair notice that the execution sale was in contemplation, so that they might take measures for their own protection; and that since such notice was not given, and since William A. Marr bought in the property at much less than its value, he must be deemed to have purchased, as a trustee, for his stockholders. The learned vice-chancellor entertained the view that the complainant was not entitled to relief, because, although no notice of the sale was given to the several stockholders other than the statutory notice, it would have been futile to give such notice, and that since defendant Marr had at a previous time earnestly tried to get the stockholders to interest themselves in raising the money due to him, and had found this impossible, he [648]

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Bluebook (online)
70 A. 375, 73 N.J. Eq. 643, 1908 N.J. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marr-v-marr-nj-1908.