Milsom Rendering & Fertilizer Co. v. Baker

44 N.Y.S. 999
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 10, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 44 N.Y.S. 999 (Milsom Rendering & Fertilizer Co. v. Baker) 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
Milsom Rendering & Fertilizer Co. v. Baker, 44 N.Y.S. 999 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

ADAMS, J.

The plaintiff brings this action to recover of the defendant, who is a director of a corporation known as the R. W. Bell Manufacturing Company, the remedy imposed by section 30 of the stock corporation law, for omitting to file the annual report required by that section. The complaint contains appropriate allegations of the incorporation of the company, its indebtedness to the plaintiff, the failure of its directors to file the annual report in the year 1893, and the existence or contraction of the debt in question, after default made in complying with the requirements of the above-mentioned section. The corporation itself is not a party to the action,, and the complaint contains no allegation of its insolvency; neither does it aver that proceedings for its dissolution are pending, nor that any judgment has been recovered upon the plaintiff’s claim. The defendant interposed a demurrer to the complaint, alleging as the grounds thereof (1) that there is a defect of parties, in that the other directors of the R. W. Bell Manufacturing Company besides the defendant, and the said R. W. Bell Manufacturing Company itself, are not parties to the action; (2) that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The issue of law thus raised was decided in favor of the defendant, the equity term sustaining his demurrer,' and holding that the case of Bank v. Dillingham, 147 N. Y. 603, 42 N. E. 338, was decisive of such issue.

We find ourselves unable, even with the aid of the elaborate and forceful argument of the defendant’s counsel, to concur in the conclusion reached by the learned trial court, for reasons which we shall endeavor, in as few words as possible, to make plain. In entering upon this understanding it is obviously of the first importance that we should obtain a clear apprehension of the object which the legislature had in view in conferring upon the creditors of a corporation a right or remedy which was unknown to the common law, and this can be accomplished only by a careful examination of the statute under which the plaintiff seeks to maintain this action, which will be found in chapter 688 of the Laws of 1892. By reference to section 30 of that chapter, it will be discovered that every stock corporation, except moneyed and railroad corporations, is required annually during the month of January, or, if doing business without the United States, before the 1st day of May, to make a report as of the 1st day of January, which shall state (1) the amount of its capital stock, and the proportion thereof actually issued; (2) the amount of its debts, or an amount which they do not then exceed; (3) the amount of its assets, or an amount which its assets at least equal. It is also required that this report shall be signed by a majority of the directors, and verified by the oath of the president, or vice president and treasurer, or secretary of the corporation making the same,. and then filed in the [1001]*1001office of the secretary of state, and also in the office of the clerk of the county where the principal business office of the corporation may be located. For a failure to comply with these requirements it is further provided that all the directors of the corporation shall jointly and severally be liable for all its debts then existing and contracted before said report shall be made. A director may, however, be relieved from the liability thus imposed by filing in the office of the secretary of state within a specified time a verified certificate that he has endeavored to have such report made and filed, but that the officers or a majority of the directors have neglected and refused to make and file the same, and by appending to such certificate a report containing the statements which should have appeared in the annual report, so far as the same are within his knowledge, or are obtainable by him. It will be seen at a glance that the plain intent of this provision, as thus clearly expressed, is to compel every corporation, save those specifically excepted from its operation, to furnish a complete and accurate statement of its financial condition and responsibility at the commencement of each year. It is quite as obvious that this requirement is designed for the benefit and information of the stockholders and officers of the corporation, as well as for its creditors and those with whom contractual relations may thereafter be entered into. And so important was it deemed by the legislature that the same should be faithfully and promptly fulfilled that it imposed as a penalty upon directors who were delinquent in their duty in this respect a personal liability for all the debts of the corporation which exist at the time the report should be filed, or are contracted before the. same is actually filed. Allen v. Clark, 108 N. Y. 269-273, 15 N. E. 387.

If, then, we are correct in our analysis of the scope and object of this statutory provision, it follows that every creditor of a corporation which has failed to file its annual report finds himself provided with a new remedy for the collection of his debt, and one which is not dependent upon any contractual relation, but is imposed by the statute as something in the nature of a penalty for the disobedience of its requirement, the debt being the measure of the delinquent director’s liability. Carr v. Rischer, 119 N. Y. 117, 23 N. E. 296. This remedy, being penal in its character, and the directors being jointly and severally liable therefor, no reason suggests itself why an ordinary action at law against one or more directors cannot be resorted to for its enforcement by any creditor invoking its aid, without first exhausting his remedy against the corporation. At all events, we have recently held, in an action brought under this same section, that the recovery of a judgment and the return of an execution are not conditions precedent to the right of a creditor to pursue the remedy which it affords. Rose v. Chadwick, 9 App. Div. 311, 41 N. Y. Supp. 190. And the conclusion reached in the case referred to is not only supported by ample authority (Green v. Easton, 74 Hun, 329, 26 N. Y. Supp. 553; Miller v. White, 50 N. Y. 137-141; Rorke v. Thomas. 56 N. Y. 559-565; Jones v. Barlow, 62 N. Y. 202; Allen v. Clark, supra); [1002]*1002but it has since been followed by the United States circuit court for the Southern district of New York (see opinion of Wallace, J., delivered in Swancoat v. Remsen, 78 Fed. 592); and we do not, as yet, see any occasion to depart from it. Innumerable cases might also be cited wherein a single creditor has resorted to an action at law to enforce the remedy provided by section 30 of the present law, or by section 12 of the act of 1848, for which section 30 is a substitute, against one or more directors, and we believe none can be found wherein it is even intimated that such an action cannot be maintained. It is now claimed, however, that the principle which supports the rule adopted in the Dillingham Case, viz. that the personal liability of the directors of a corporation is not primary, but secondary, and' can be resorted to only after the usual remedies against the corporation itself have been exhausted, and can then be enforced only by a suit in equity, where all the creditors and the corporation itself are parties, by means of which an accounting can be had, all the facts ascertained, and the equities adjusted, should be applied to this case, and, inferentially, to every case where a penalty is imposed for a violation of some one of the provisions of the stock corporation law. In considering this contention it is to be observed that the case cited as an authority therefor is an adjudication of the remedy afforded by section 24, which reads as follows:

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Related

Milson Rendering & Fertilizing Co. v. Baker
53 N.Y.S. 1109 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)
Thompson v. Nicolai
49 N.Y.S. 422 (New York Supreme Court, 1897)
Milsom Rendering & Fertilizer Co. v. Baker
46 N.Y.S. 1097 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.Y.S. 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milsom-rendering-fertilizer-co-v-baker-nyappdiv-1897.