Mayer v. Oxidation Products Co., Inc.

159 A. 377, 110 N.J. Eq. 141
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 5, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 159 A. 377 (Mayer v. Oxidation Products Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayer v. Oxidation Products Co., Inc., 159 A. 377, 110 N.J. Eq. 141 (N.J. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Bigelow, V. C.

Complainant is a stockholder of the Oxidation Products 'Company and the Industrial Oxidation Corporation, both incorporated in Delaware. The two companies have the same stockholders, directors and officers, and are operated *142 as a single enterprise. Complainant alleges that three of the-stockholders, namely, Fischer, Bibb and Yan Pelt, have received large sums belonging to the corporations and he asks-an accounting and restoration to the companies. Similarly, he asserts that moneys of the companies have been improperly paid to a third corporation, Grant Manufacturing Company, controlled by Fischer and Yan Pelt, and prays accounting and restoration from it. He also alleges that the-oxidation companies have agreed to purchase from Yan Pelt his holdings in their stock, at an excessive price, and that the purchase will impair their capital. He prays that the contract be canceled. Fischer, Bibb and Yan Pelt held a. large majority of the stock of the companies and were a majority of the boards of directors when the agreement to-buy Yan Pelt’s stock was made. Yan Pelt then resigned but the other two continued on the boards and dominate the companies’ affairs. Other statements in the bill and prayers for relief need not now be recited. The case is before the court on an order to show cause why any payments by the companies to the three individual defendants should not be restrained pendente lite.

At the outset, complainant is met with the contention that the litigation is beyond the jurisdiction of this court, because it relates to the internal affairs of foreign corporations and because it calls for an exercise of visitorial powers. Yisitorial powers is a term often used with no attempt to define its meaning. The student will find much information on visitation in MacKenzie v. Trustees of the Presbytery of Jersey City, 67 N. J. Eq. 652, 678; Philips v. Bury, 2 T. R. 346; 100 Eng. Rep. 186; Green v. Rutherforth, 1 Ves. 462; 27 Eng. Rep. 1144; King v. Bishop of Ely, 1 Bl. R. 71; 96 Eng. Rep. 39; Harkness v. Guthrie (Utah), 75 Pac. Rep. 624; 107 A. S. R. 664; 199 U. S. 148, 157; Murdock’s Case, 24 Mass. 303; Sanderson v. White, 35 Mass. 328; the opinion of Mr. Justice Story in the Dartmouth College Case, 17 U. S. 518, 673; Attorney-General v. Utica Insurance Co., 2 Johns. Ch. 371; Com. Dig. tit. “Visitor;” 1 Bl. Com. 480; 7 R. C. L. 610; 7 Am. & Eng. Encycl. L. 857; 14a C. J. 341. *143 Forms of visitors’ commissions and instructions may be found in Burnet’s History of the Reformation.

The concept of visitorial (or visitatorial) power was derived from the canon law and was extensively applied in the eighteenth century as a part of the common law, to charitable corporations, and especially to colleges. As so applied, visi-tf torial power may be defined as the exclusive right of the founder of' a corporation, his heirs or _nominees, to make by-laws for the corporation and to adjudge disputes arising thereunder. The original endower of the corporation was considered to be the founder. If the king endowed, he was the founder and had the right of visitation, which he exercised through the chancellor as his visitor. But this authority of the chancellor was not a part of the jurisdiction which he exercised in the court of chancery; it was one of his ministerial powers. 3 Bl. Com. 47; Attorney-General v. Earl of Clarendon, 17 Ves. Jr. 491; 34 Eng. Rep. 190. The visitor was not the proper judge in all disputes among members of the corporation or relating to its internal affairs, but only in cases arising under its by-laws; controversies under the general law of the land were adjudicated in the public courts. Thus in King v. St. John’s College, 4 Mod. 233; 87 Eng. Rep. 366, mandamus issued out of the king’s bench to compel the master of the college to take the oath of the fellows. In Attorney-General v. Corporation of Bedford, 2 Ves. 505; 28 Eng. Rep. 323. Lord Hardwieke made the master of the school account for school funds, although he declined to remove him, since removal came within the power of the visitor. In the early days when a charity was created, the beneficiaries usually composed the corporation, for example the master and fellows of a college; but during the last two centuries the custom has arisen of incorporating trustees, who do not personally share in the revenue. In such case, by implication, the trustees are the visitors. Now, I much doubt if any of this doctrine has ever been the law in our country. The private endower of an incorporated charity has no visitorial power; the state seems to have the same power in respect to corporations endowed privately and *144 those endowed by the state, except as its power in respect to the former may be restricted by the doctrine of the Darlmoulh College Case. The authority of trustees is determined by the charter of the corporation or by the law of trusts and not by any rule concerning visitors.

Blackstone says that corporations other than charitable, namely, municipalities, trading companies, &c., were subject to the visitation of the king in the court of king’s bench according to the rules of the common law. And in our country it has been laid down that the legislature is visitor of all corporations. I confess that this has, for me, little meaning; I have found no decision of which I could say that it was a case of the exercise of visitorial power over a civil corporation. Of course, the king’s bench and, in New Jersey, the supreme court, by the prerogative writs compel the performance of corporate duties, decide disputes over offices, and review ordinances. But these writs do not depend on a visitation; they issue pursuant to the court’s jurisdiction over franchises, subordinate tribunals and public officers. Similarly, the legislature enacts statutes concerning corporations, but of what act can it be said that the authority of the legislature to pass it depended on visitorial power? Fow, I realize that the power of the legislature to enact a given statute may fall under more than one heading. While all our statutes can stand, I believe, without recourse to visitorial power, still it may be that some of them have added authority from that source. Possibly the sections of the Corporation act relating to reeciverships of domestic corporations (Comp. Stat. p. 16JfO) find sanction in visitorial power. If so, then the jurisdiction of chancery bestowed by those sections may depend on that right of visitation which inheres in the founder of a corporation. But outside such, or similar statutory authority, the court of chancery has no visitorial power over any corporation. Such power (if any there be) is in the supreme court.

Stockholders’ suits in equity have been so common of late years that the court ordinarily finds no need to state the basis of jurisdiction. But an examination of the cases, *145

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Bluebook (online)
159 A. 377, 110 N.J. Eq. 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-v-oxidation-products-co-inc-njch-1932.