Matter of Utica Nat. Brewing Co.

48 N.E. 521, 154 N.Y. 268, 8 E.H. Smith 268, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 564
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 48 N.E. 521 (Matter of Utica Nat. Brewing Co.) 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
Matter of Utica Nat. Brewing Co., 48 N.E. 521, 154 N.Y. 268, 8 E.H. Smith 268, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 564 (N.Y. 1897).

Opinion

Gray, J.

Upon the final accounting of .the receiver of the Utica N ational Brewing Company, it was referred to a referee to report as to certain disputed claims, among other things, and this appeal brings up for our review the correctness of his report as to the claims presented by the First National Bank of Utica and by the estate of William C. Willcox, deceased. The first of these claims was allowed by the referee; but the other he disallowed and his disposition of both has been approved by the courts below. The executrix of William C. Willcox now appeals to this court from the disposition so made.

The Utica National Brewing Company was formed in May, 1893, by the consolidation of two corporations, known as the National Brewing Company and. the Utica Brewing Company. At the time of this consolidation, these companies were indebted to the First National Bank of Utica upon several promissory notes, payable to the order of William 0. Willcox and indorsed by him, aggregating in amount the sum of $47,962. These notes severally matured subsequent to the consolidation; but they were renewed, some two and some three times, by the giving of new notes for the same amount and of like tenor. These renewal notes were held by the bank at the time when this proceeding for the voluntary dissolution of the new company was commenced. Subsequently, the bank recovered judgments against each of the two companies upon the notes it held and it has assigned its claim against the estate in the hands of the receiver of the new company to William F. Welch, respondent here.

The objection was made to the claim of the bank, as presented to the receiver, that the taking of the renewal notes, *272 after the consolidation was effected, and the incidental transactions connected therewith, and the reduction to judgment against the consolidating companies of their liability upon the notes constituted, in legal effect, a discharge of the consolidated company from its statutory liability for the payment of the debts of those companies. It was claimed that the notes which were outstanding against the constituent companies, at the time of their consolidation, were in fact paid.

Whether the taking of the renewal notes was in payment, or in discharge, of the obligation represented by the previous notes was a question to be answered by ascertaining the intention of the parties, as manifested by the facts and circumstances attending their transactions, and we have an explicit finding of fact by the referee upon the subject. He found that there was no intention on the part of the makers or indorsers of said notes, or on the part of the bank, to pay the former notes, or that the taking of said new notes was to have the effect of such payment; but that, on the contrary, it was the intention of all the parties to extend the time of payment of said notes by renewals thereof. His finding is supported by the evidence and, with the unanimous affirmance by the Appellate Division, now becomes conclusive upon the question. It destroys whatever presumption of payment might arise from the taking of the renewal notes. (National Bank of Newburgh v. Bigler, 83 N. Y. 51.) The operation of the renewal notes was. to further extend the time of payment of the obligation and to evidence its continued existence. The evidence must be regarded as having negatived the idea of any agreement that the new promises to pay should be equivalent to payment. (Jagger Iron Co. v. Walker, 76 N. Y. 521.) The Phœnix Insurance Co.’s Case (81 N. Y. 218), does not deny the general rule. In the opinion it is observed, but only in passing, that by common understanding and usage the transaction of discounting a note, to take up a prior note held by the bank, and the crediting of the avails to the party, might be regarded as an extinguishment of the prior note. There is no such element of usage here.

*273 Nor did the recovery of the judgments upon the notes affect the creditor’s rights against the new company. Their effect was, simply, to effect a change in the form of its liability to its creditor. It was open to the creditor, under the provisions of the statute, pursuant to which the consolidation of the companies was effected, (Chap. 691, Laws of 1892), to enforce the liability, either against the corporation whose debt it was, or against the new corporation whose debt it became under the' statute, which made it liable to pay and discharge all the liabilities of each of the corporations consolidated. (See. 12.) The very purpose of this statute, while permitting companies to consolidate themselves into a single corporation, was to preserve to the creditor all his rights, unimpaired by what was-done, and its operation is to furnish to him remedies, necessarily, concurrent in their nature. The creditor’s pursuit of a remedy against ins original debtor presents no legal obstacle to his effort to collect his debt from the new company.

It is argued, however, in effect, that by the terms of the consolidation agreement the new corporation was freed from the debts and liabilities of the corporations merging into it. If we might assume that such was intended as a result of consolidation under the agreement, nevertheless, it would be wholly inoperative to accomplish any such thing as to creditors who were not parties to the agreement. Such creditors were not bound by any of its provisions. The statute protected them and consolidation pursuant to its permission and provisions, whatever it may mean for the stockholders because of their agreement, leaves the creditors precisely in the situation which the statute defines. If they have not done anything to impair or to release their rights, it is not, and could not be, within the purview of the statute that those rights may be impaired through the action of members of the consolidating corporations.

The suggestion that the bank here was chargeable with knowledge as to what the arrangement was for the consolidation of the companies, and, therefore, that it could not, in good *274 faith, assert its claim against the new company, is without any force or reason, in our judgment, and needs no discussion.

The claim presented by the executrix of William G. Willcox against the estate in the hands of the receiver, so far as this appeal is concerned, is founded upon a promissory note, made by the National Brewing Company in June, 1893, to the order of William 0. Willcox for $6,000 and interest. Objection was made to this claim, and it is argued that, as a debt of one of the constituent companies of which Willcox was president and a stockholder and a director, it was discharged by virtue of that clause of the consolidation agreement which provided, among other things, that the property and stock of the constituent companies should be transferred to the new company and be owned by it, “ free and clear from all incumbrances, equities or debts, and that the said consolidated corporation should at its inception owe no debts for or on account of any of the business or property of the said constituent companies.” The operation of this provision, it was argued, was that the stockholders who signed the agreement of consolidation became personally answerable to indemnify the consolidated company against the liabilities of the constituent companies.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.E. 521, 154 N.Y. 268, 8 E.H. Smith 268, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-utica-nat-brewing-co-ny-1897.