McQuade v. Stoneham

230 A.D. 57, 242 N.Y.S. 548, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8545
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 29, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 230 A.D. 57 (McQuade v. Stoneham) 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
McQuade v. Stoneham, 230 A.D. 57, 242 N.Y.S. 548, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8545 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

Mastín, J.

The plaintiff by this equity action seeks to enforce the terms of a written agreement which it is alleged the defendant Stoneham repudiated after receiving valuable rights thereunder.

The defendant Stoneham became the owner of 1,306 shares of stock prior to February 21, 1919, which constituted a majority of the capital stock of the National Exhibition Company, a New Jersey corporation, which has its offices for the regular transaction of business in the city of New York and where its entire business is conducted.

The plaintiff and the defendant McGraw each purchased from the defendant Stoneham seventy shares of his stock. For his seventy shares of stock the plaintiff paid to Stoneham $50,338.10 and entered into an agreement reciting that “ by understanding and arrangement between the parties hereto,, the parties of the second and third parts [plaintiff and McGraw] were to be associated with the party of the first part, and become owners through said arrangement of part of the stock so acquired by the party of the first part [Stoneham].” The agreement also provided for the transfer of the seventy shares to McGraw and payment therefor; for the transfer of seventy shares to the plaintiff and payment therefor; for the exercise of power over such transferred stock by Stoneham until he acquired a majority in his own right; for the purchase by the survivors of the stock of any of the parties deceased; for continuing all of the parties as directors and officers of the cor[59]*59poration, the provision which is the basis of this action; for limiting the salaries of the parties as officers and directors and for preventing changes in the by-laws or capitalization, without the consent of all; for the offer to the others of the shares of any of the parties desiring to sell his stock; for the shares of stock to be indorsed as subject to the agreement; for the continuance of the agreement so long as the parties remained such stockholders, and other matters not now of importance; and that the agreement was to be binding as to all other provisions if any covenant or condition be declared illegal.

In December, 1922, the capital stock was increased from 2,500 to 12,500 shares and a 400 per cent stock dividend was declared. Additional stock was issued to the parties according to their holdings, each receiving four additional shares for each share he then owned, and a second agreement was entered into by the parties providing that the agreement of February 21, 1919, should apply to such additional shares, with “ the same force and effect as if the agreement of February 21, 1919, between the parties hereto had been made to include not only the aforesaid 1306 shares, but also said additional 5224 shares of stock thereafter issued.”

Clause VIII of the agreement of February 21, 1919, the provision that has been made the subject of this action, provides as follows: “ The parties hereto will use their best endeavors for the purpose of .continuing as directors of said Company and as officers thereof the following: Directors: Charles A. Stoneham, John J. McGraw, Francis X. McQuade, with the right to the party of the first part to name all additional directors, as he sees fit: Officers: Charles A. Stoneham, President, John J. McGraw, Vice-President, Francis X. McQuade, Treasurer.”

The defendants have accepted all the benefits given by the agreement. In accordance therewith Stoneham has been and is the president, and McGraw has been and is the vice-president of the corporation. There seems to have been omitted from the complaint the direct allegation that the plaintiff was the treasurer, but the fair inferences from the facts alleged supply this omission, for it is stated that the plaintiff “ continued to act as such treasurer until said May 2, 1928,” and that he continued as holdover treasurer ” from December, 1925, until May, 1928, and that thereafter the plaintiff demanded that the defendants reinstate ” him as director and treasurer, to which the defendants replied that they would consider the matter. The omission is a mere technical defect which could be supplied by amendment.

All the parties were elected directors. The board of directors consisted of seven members. The other four were selected by [60]*60Stoneham, and the facts stated indicate clearly that he has complete control and that they are completely dominated by him.

It appears that from July, 1921, until January, 1925, Stoneham caused substantial “ loans ” to be made out of the corporation’s funds to himself, directly and through the medium of other persons and of other companies which he owned and controlled, whereupon the plaintiff requested ” that the payment thereof be secured, and thereupon Stoneham indorsed and executed notes for these loans to a total of $280,035, and deposited with the corporation 2,164 shares of its stock as security for the payment thereof.

Stoneham was thus compelled by the plaintiff to acknowledge this large indebtedness and to secure its repayment. The next meeting for the election of officers was held in December, 1925. At that meeting Stoneham caused his personal attorney, Leo J. Bondy, to be nominated in opposition to the plaintiff for the office of treasurer. • The plaintiff demanded that the defendants use their best endeavors to cause the election of the plaintiff. There were seven members on the board. One of them, Ferguson, was absent; all the others were present. f/Bondy, Robertson and Stoneham’s brother, by and at the direction of the'defendant Stoneham, voted for the election of Bondy. The other three directors were the plaintiff and the defendants. If they had voted for the plaintiff, he would have been continued in office. The plaintiff and McGraw voted for the election of the plaintiff, but Stoneham refused to vote, thereby creating a majority vote in favor of Bondy, and Bondy “ was declared elected treasurer, his term not to commence, however, before January 11, 1926, and not thereafter until he qualified.” Bondy, however, did not qualify and the plaintiff continued to act as such treasurer. It is also alleged that such continuance of the plaintiff as holdover treasurer was in effect an implied threat to remove plaintiff as treasurer unless he assented to the improper use by the defendants of the funids and property of the said National Exhibition Company and submitted to the will of the defendant Stoneham.

Subsequently the plaintiff demanded that Stoneham pay to the corporation interest upon the loans made as aforesaid. Stoneham called a special meeting of the board of directors for May 2, 1928, and on that day, in accordance with the plaintiff’s demand, Stone-ham paid $13,975.44 as interest. All the directors were present. One moved for the election of a treasurer, and thereupon Stone-ham’s brother nominated Bondy. The plaintiff placed himself in nomination and demanded that the defendants use their best endeavors to cause plaintiff’s election as treasurer. The defendants, however, refused to do so. Stoneham’s brother and Bondy, [61]*61Robertson and Ferguson voted for Bondy. That constituted a majority of the board. The defendant refused to vote.

Thereupon Stoneham declared Bondy elected treasurer. Bondy qualified and has ever since been acting as treasurer. Bondy was re-elected treasurer in November, 1928, and again in 1929.

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Related

Samuelson v. Starr
28 Misc. 2d 479 (New York Supreme Court, 1961)
McQuade v. Stoneham
142 Misc. 842 (New York Supreme Court, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
230 A.D. 57, 242 N.Y.S. 548, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcquade-v-stoneham-nyappdiv-1930.