Miller v. Gourley

55 A. 1083, 65 N.J. Eq. 237, 20 Dickinson 237, 1903 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 63
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 6, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 55 A. 1083 (Miller v. Gourley) 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
Miller v. Gourley, 55 A. 1083, 65 N.J. Eq. 237, 20 Dickinson 237, 1903 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 63 (N.J. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Grey, Y. C.

The bill of complaint in this case challenges the validity of the mortgage for $20,000, held by the defendant, upon several grounds:

First. That though given in the name and under the seal of the mortgagor company and proven bjr the annexed oath of the secretary to have been made “pursuant to resolution of the directors” of that company, there was not, in point of fact, any vote of the board of directors that the mortgage should be given.

Second. The complainant insists that when the mortgage was made, the mortgagor company was either insolvent or certainly in contemplation of its insolvency, and that it is therefore invalid under the section of the Corporation act, which prohibits the officers of a corporation from disposing of its property under such circumstances. P. L. of 1S96 p. 298 § 64-

Third. That the mortgage, so far as it undertakes to be a chattel mortgage, is invalid, because the affidavit of the mortgagee annexed does not truly state the consideration of the chattel mortgage, as required by the Chattel Mortgage act (Gen. Slat. p. 2118 § 4), which was in effect when the mortgage was made, and has been re-enacted in the act concerning chattel mortgages. P. L. of 1902 p. 487.

On the first point, that the defendant’s mortgage was not authorized to be made by any action of the board of directors of the Robert S. Hobbs Company, a short summary of the evidence will show tire status of the company previous to and at the time when that mortgage was given. It was organized in May, 1901, and began preparations for business upon an extended scale shortly after, by the erection of buildings and making of blocks, patterns and purchase of machinery. It had almost no money with which to pay the debts incurred in these preparations for business, its cash subscriptions to the capital stock were not paid into the company’s treasury to any substantial extent, so that from tire very start it was continually in debt for both large and small sums of money, owing for matters which, in the usual course, are paid for in cash. Its business was conducted by borrowing from whomsoever would lend money to it. Sometimes in petty sums for necessary imple[243]*243ments; sometimes in larger sums, to pay for wages and other cash items. Samuel Gourlejr, Jr., who personally conducted the erection of the buildings under the contract with the company, either for himself or for his father, Samuel Gourley, Sr., made 'a number of advances of small sums to pay cash items which were necessary to keep the company going.

This condition of affairs continued from bad to worse, and culminated in November, 1901 (about six months after the company was organized), when it became plainly apparent that unless a large sum of ready cash was obtained for the company’s use it would be unable to complete its works and manufacture wall paper in the usual course of the trade. By the first week in December, 1901, a large number of orders for such goods had been obtained, a small portion of completely manufactured goods had been made and delivered, although the works had not yet been completely finished. The executive committee of the board of directors then passed a resolution authorizing the creating of a $20,000 mortgage upon the company’s property, to place which a commission of ten per cent, was to be allowed. This resolution w^as afterwards, on December 5th, 1901, as appears by the minutes, ratified by the board of directors. This resolution, while it authorizes the making of a mortgage for $20,000, does not in any way refer to the defendant as the intended mortgagee. One of the directors, who is recorded as voting for the resolution, and whose vote was necessary to its passage, declares that there never was any authorization of the making of the mortgage to Samuel Gourley, Sr.

The terms of the resolution (wdien considered in connection with the defendant’s affidavit annexed to his mortgage) make it most improbable that it wras passed to authorize the making of that mortgage, which it is now invoked to support. After authorizing the creation of a mortgage for $20,000 upon all the company’s property, without stating to whom it should be made, the resolution directs the payment of a commission of ten per cent, for the placing .of the mortgage. The defendant’s own affidavit annexed to the mortgage declares that

[244]*244“the true consideration of the said mortgage is as follows, to wit: Twenty Thousand dollars; $2,000 thereof in cash loaned by the mortgagee to the mortgagor, and the balance thereof in work and labor performed by the mortgagee for the mortgagor at its request,” &c.

If it be true that the resolution in the minutes refers to the' mortgage now in dispute, then it authorized the officers of the company to secure the debt of $18,000, which the company owed the defendant for work and labor done, by a mortgage upon all the company’s property, and to pay him $2,000 in commissions for taking the mortgage to secure his own debt!

I find it impossible to believe that the resolution referred to was intended to give any such authority. The company at that time had no money. It was overwhelmingly in debt. It wanted cash to pajr its various creditors, and was willing to submit to the payment of a ten per cent, premium to get it. No particular mortgage was in contemplation when the resolution was passed, and for this reason no mortgagee was named in the resolution. Any mortgagee who would raise the $20,000 in cash would have been acceptable. None could be had. The company’s financial situation was desperate. The defendant, Samuel Gourley, Sr., was the largest creditor. His son, Samuel Gourley, Jr., was in frequent conference with the company’s officers, and knew of its embarrassments, and of the peril to the Gourley claims for erecting the company’s buildings. The defendant, in his answer, admits that he solicited the making of the mortgage now in dispute. Under these circumstances, the officers of the company, without any authority from the board of directors to make a mortgage to the defendant, Samuel Gourley, Sr., executed tó him, for $20,000, the mortgage now challenged. It contains no reference to, or recital of, any resolution of the board of directors of the company authorizing it to be made. As above shown, no resolution of the board did, in fact, authorize it to be made, but the secretary of the company, who favored the securing of Mr. Gourley’s claim, and Mr. Gourley himself, now appeal to the resolution which directed the making of a mortgage for $20,000, obviously intended to raise cash, as authority to make a mortgage for $20,000 to secure (as to $18,000 of it) [245]*245an antecedent debt of the company, and which, in fact, raised but the small sum of $1,631 in cash.

The affidavit of the secretary annexed to the defendant’s mortgage is upon a printed form, which recites that the mortgage was made “pursuant to resolution of the board of directors,” but no resolution has been proven which authorized the giving of that mortgage, and I am satisfied that the board of directors never ordered that mortgage to be made. It was the voluntary act of those officers of the company who desired to secure for Mr. Gourley the payment of his claim against the company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 A. 1083, 65 N.J. Eq. 237, 20 Dickinson 237, 1903 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-gourley-njch-1903.