Mayer v. Metropolitan Traction Co.

165 A.D. 497, 150 N.Y.S. 1026, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8623
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 31, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 165 A.D. 497 (Mayer v. Metropolitan Traction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayer v. Metropolitan Traction Co., 165 A.D. 497, 150 N.Y.S. 1026, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8623 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Scott, J.:

The two judgments appealed from, which by consent of counsel and for the sake of convenience have been heard together upon a single record, both rest upon a ruling at Special Term that the complaint is insufficient in that it fails to state a cause of action. In one case the judgment overrules plaintiff’s demurrer to the separate defenses contained in the answer of the defendant Vreeland. In the other case the judgment follows upon an order granting the motion of the defendant Widener for judgment on the pleadings.

The defendants, other than the Metropolitan Traction Company, were directors of that company at the time of its dissolution in 1897, when, as such directors, they distributed the assets of said company among its shareholders, and they are sought to be held liable as liquidating trustees of that company. (Gen. Corp. Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 23; Laws of 1909, chap. 28], § 35; re-enacting Gen. Corp. Law [Gen. Laws, chap. 35; Laws of 1892, chap. 687], § 30.)

Plaintiff is a - temporary receiver appointed in an action [499]*499brought by the Attorney-General of the State of New York to dissolve the Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Streets Crosstown Railroad Company, a domestic street railroad corporation.

The purpose of the action is to compel the defendants to account for the proceeds or the value of mortgage bonds of said railroad company which were delivered to said traction company and disposed of by it.

The allegations of the complaint reduced to narrative form state the facts as follows: Prior to April, 1896, the Metropolitan Traction Company (hereafter for brevity called the Traction Company) and the individual defendants, with one Elkins, not a defendant, as directors, officers and agents of said Traction Company, caused a railroad company known as the Metropolitan Street Railway Company to be organized under the laws of the State of New York for the purpose of consolidat- . ing into a single uniform system of railroads various of the street surface railroads in the city of New York, and caused to be elected as directors of said Metropolitan Street Railway Company representatives and employees of said Traction Company. On April 10, 1896, there existed a duly organized corporation known as the Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Streets Railroad Company, which was insolvent but which owned franchises to operate a street surface railroad over certain streets in the city of New York and the tracks laid by it in said streets. It is alleged at some length that the Traction Company and its directors conceived a plan to' acquire possession and control of the franchises and property of said Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Streets Railroad Company and to issue or cause to be issued a mortgage upon its property for $1,500,000, and to cause the directors of the new or reorganized company “ to deliver $1,100,000 of the bonds of such new or reorganized company to the said defendant Metropolitan Traction Company, without said new or reorganized company receiving any moneys or . actual consideration therefor.” At the date mentioned one Edward Lauterbach represented the owners of practically all of the outstanding stock and bonds of the said Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Streets Railroad Company, and said Lauterbach' agreed to sell to one Ralph L. Anderton, Jr., said stock and bonds for $250,000, in addition [500]*500to which said Anderton agreed to pay to said Lauterbach a further sum of $475,000, of which $75,000 was to be paid in cash and the balance in first mortgage bonds of a new corporation to be formed, which said bonds were to be guaranteed by the Metropolitan Street Railway Company at any time within two years upon the accomplishment of certain results by said Lauterbach, all .of which were subsequently accomplished. As a part of the plan conceived by the defendants and above referred to, an outstanding mortgage constituting a lien upon the franchises and property of the Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Streets Railroad Company was foreclosed, and the said franchises and property were purchased at the foreclosure by one Charles W. Truslow for the sum of $25,000. Having received a referee’s deed of said franchises and property, the said Truslow on September 30, 1896, executed and filed a certificate pursuant to section 3 of the then Stock Corporation Law of the State of New York, and also caused said certificate to be executed by other persons acting for the Traction Company, and the directors thereof, certifying that said Truslow had associated himself with such other persons executing the said certificate as a company for the purpose of operating the franchises and other property of the Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Streets Railroad Company purchased by Truslow. The name selected for the new corporation thus formed was the Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Streets Crosstown Railroad Company (hereafter for brevity called the Crosstown Company).

It is alleged in the complaint, and admitted by the respondents, that Anderton, Truslow and the persons who executed the certificate of incorporation of the Crosstown Company, as well as the directors of that company, acted in all things as the agents and representatives of the Traction Company, so that the case is to be considered precisely as if the Traction Company, in its own name, had agreed with Lauterbach for the purchase of the stock and bonds of the Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Streets Railroad Company; had purchased the franchises and property of that company at the foreclosure sale, and had organized a corporation to operate said franchises and property. By an agreement dated September 29, 1896 (one day before the incor[501]*501poration of the Orosstown Company), but not acknowledged until December 21, 1897, the said Orosstown Company leased to the Metropolitan Street Railway Company the right to use the railroad tracks of said Orosstown Company to operate cars thereon, in return for which the Metropolitan Street Railway Company agreed to run cars over said tracks; to pay the principal and interest of first mortgage five per cent gold bonds to be issued by the said Crosstown Company to the amount of $1,500,000; to pay all taxes of, every kind and nature which might become due and payable by said Orosstown Company and to maintain the railroad in good condition and repair. At the time the agreement was made the stock of the Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Streets Railroad Company, purchased through Anderton from Lauterbach, and the stock of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company were owned by the Traction Company, the said stock and bonds of the Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth Streets Company having been assigned by Anderton to said Traction Company, and an agreement had been made for the assignment of said last-mentioned stock and bonds by the Traction Company to the Metropolitan Street Railway Company for shares of the capital stock of the said last-mentioned company. While the affairs of the several companies were in this somewhat complicated situation, and after Truslow and his associates had organized the Orosstown Company by the filing of the certificate hereinbefore referred to, Truslow at the instigation of the Traction Company and the defendants, its directors, on or about October 1, 1896, offered to sell to the Crosstown Company the franchises and property purchased by him at the foreclosure sale aforesaid for the sum of $3,000,000 to be paid as follows: $1,492,000 in capital stock of the said Orosstown Company, $8,000 in cash and $1,500,000 in bonds of said Crosstown Company secured by a mortgage upon its franchises and property, guaranteed as to principal and interest by the Metropolitan Street Railway Company.

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251 A.D. 543 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 A.D. 497, 150 N.Y.S. 1026, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-v-metropolitan-traction-co-nyappdiv-1914.