Morse v. Metropolitan Steamship Co.

88 N.J. Eq. 325
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 88 N.J. Eq. 325 (Morse v. Metropolitan Steamship Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morse v. Metropolitan Steamship Co., 88 N.J. Eq. 325 (N.J. 1917).

Opinion

[326]*326The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kalisch, J.

The theory, upon which the complainant originally filed a bill in her own behalf, as a stockholder, and all other stockholders who may come in and join with her, in the court of chancery, against the Metropolitan Steamship Company, was fraudulent conduct of its directors against the interests of the corporation. The prayer of the bill was for the removal of the directors and the appointment of a receiver under the equity powers of the court of chancery, &c.

The bill was filed in 1913. Subsequently on March 29tli, 1913, the complainant filed an amended bill. The prayer of relief of this amended bill asked the court of chancery to annul a certain contract made by the appellant company with the Pacific Navigation Company, and to appoint a receiver to take control of the said Metropolitan Steamship Company, and manage and direct its business and to issue injunctions to enforce the receivership.

The cause was brought on for a hearing on January 2d, 1917.

After all the testimony on both sides had been presented, application was made to the court, on behalf of the complainant, to amend the bill, and thereupon on the 15th day of February, 1917,-the court granted the application, and the amended bill was amended in two important particulars, by setting out therein an averment that the business of the appellant company has been and is being conducted at a great loss and greatly prejudicial to the creditors and stockholders, so that its busihess cannot be conducted with safety to the public and advantage of the stockholders, and that if need be a receiver be appointed, under the act entitled “An act concerning corporations” (Revision of 1896), and the acts amendatory thereto.

The act of 1912, chapter 300, page 535, amends the sixty-fifth section of the Corporation act of the revision of 1896, in that the court of chancery is invested with power to grant similar relief to a certain extent, in a case where it appears that the business of a corporation has been and is being conducted [327]*327at a great loss and greatly prejudicial to the interest of its creditors or stockholders, so that its business cannot be con-, ducted with safety to the public and the advantage to the stockholders, as in a case where the corporation has become insolvent.

Upon the bill as amended and upon the facts as developed on the hearing by the testimony the learned vice-chancellor made six separate orders from each of which the-appellant appeals to this court.

The general grounds upon which the validity of the orders, is attacked is that nothing in the evidence warranted a finding., that the company’s business was being conducted otherwise than in the sole interest of its creditors and stockholders, or in a manner which would not result tp the greatest benefit to them all.

We think there is evidence which amply supports the finding 'of the court below.

Counsel for apjDellant urges that the court below erred in restraining the defendant company from paying its debts or from pursuing through the agency of its directors and stockholders the business for which it was organized, and in appointing a. receiver under the general equity powers of the court.

‘ There were two restraining orders made by the court and an order appointing a receiver under the equity powers of the court.

The court below having found that the transactions of the directors of the defendant company and that the company’s business and financial conditions were such as to bring the defendant company within the operation of section 65 of the Corporation act, by virtue of the same section the court had the power to make the restraining orders, assailed here, as invalid.

The power having been conferred by the legislature upon the court of chancery to grant relief in cases arising under secT tion 65 of the Corporation act, it follows, as a matter of course,, that the inherent power of the court to appoint a receiver for the purpose of pr.eser-ving the property in question and the rights of the parties to the litigation intact, is beyond successful attack.

Counsel for appellant next insists that the order, permitting the intervention of.creditors of the defendant- company whose [328]*328claims were not cine, in a suit brought by its minority stockholders in a representative capacity, is invalid.

' The answer to this is found in the section itself which permits any creditor or stockholder to commence suit, &c.

A person is no less a creditor because the time-for the payment to him of the debt dire him, from his debtor, has not matured.

The two other orders attacked as invalid relate to the original order appointing a statutory receiver, and a later order confirming it.

For the appellant it is insisted that the order appointing a statutory receiver is invalid because the appointment was made without notice to the defendant company.

In Shaw v. Standard Piano Co., 87 N. J. Eq. 350, this court held: “that the appointment of a receiver without affording the defendant an opportunity to be heard upon the application ivas a tailing of its property without due process of law is manifest when it is- considered that section 68 of the Corporation act provides that all the real and personal property of an insolvent corporation wheresoever situated, all its franchises, rights, privileges and effects, shall, upon the appointment of a receiver, forthwith vest in him, and that the corporation shall he divested of all title thereto.”

This court further held that the provision of section 65 of the Corporation act which authorizes the appointment of a statutory receiver without notice is unconstitutional.

The law does not recognize that any necessity, however' great or urgent, can give rise to a legal right extending beyond constitutional limitations.

The argument advanced, by counsel for the respondent, in support of the constitutionality of the provision in section 65 of the act for the appointment of a statutory receiver without notice, with the rights and powers under section 68 of the act is, that, because the defendant was incorporated under that act has only such privileges as the state by the statute gives it, and allowed itself to come into existence under a charter from the state, 'which was expressly subject to the liability that under conditions which come within the purview of the statute, [329]*329application could be made to the court and a receiver appointed, and which terms the defendant accepted by incorporating under the act, therefore, it is not depriving the defendant of any of its rights or due process of law, since the defendant must be considered to have waived its rights when it accepted the charter under a statute containing these provisions.

The unsoundness of this contention is apparent. Persons, whether natural or artificial, will be presumed to have entered into a contract with reference to the valid laws of the state. Only the provisions of the contract which are legally enforceable will control the parties thereto. The fact that the defendant incorporated under an act which contained an unconstitutional provision cannot render tlm provision enforceable, nor can it confer any power on the court to enforce it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 N.J. Eq. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-v-metropolitan-steamship-co-nj-1917.