Myer v. Myer

271 A.D.2d 465

This text of 271 A.D.2d 465 (Myer v. Myer) 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
Myer v. Myer, 271 A.D.2d 465 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

Callahau, J.

For some years prior to April 21, 1942, Julius Myer, the father of the plaintiffs, owned 50% of the capital stock of Myer 1890 Bottling Co., Inc. His sons, defendants Abraham Myer and Israel Myer, each owned and continue to own 25% of said stock. On April 21, 1942, Julius Myer conveyed his stock in Myer 1890 Bottling Co., Inc., to three other sons, the plaintiffs herein, as trustees, by an agreement creating an inter vivos trust, under which the trustees are to pay over to the settlor all dividends declared during his lifetime. Upon the death of Julius Myer the trust is to terminate and the stock is to go to the plaintiffs free of the trust.

On April 5, 1945, Julius Myer was declared an incompetent, and defendant Louis-J. Lefkowitz was appointed committee of his property.

This derivative stockholder’s action was commenced April 18, 1946. Plaintiffs complain of numerous transactions, some of which date back to 1933, whereby their father and- their two brothers are alleged to have caused Myer 1890 Bottling Co., Inc., of which they were officers and directors, to lose large sums of money by breach of their fiduciary duties. The stock of the corporate defendants, Abeisral Holding Corporation and 18-20 Broome Street Corporation, like that of the represented corporation, was owned by the individual defendants, and it is claimed, in effect, that said two corporations were used to siphon off assets of the represented corporation.

The defendant committee and the remaining defendants moved separately but upon identical grounds to dismiss various portions of the complaint. These motions were granted in part, but were denied as to two of the main grounds urged for dismissal, which we will discuss in the following order: (1) that the plaintiffs were without legal capacity to sue as to any transactions prior to April 21, 1942, and (2) that certain claims set forth in the complaint were barred by a three-year Statute of Limitations. Defendants appeal from such denial.

[470]*470All defendants moved to dismiss the complaint as to those transactions which are alleged to have occurred prior to April 21, 1942, the date upon which plaintiffs accepted their interest in the stock of the Myer 1890 Bottling Co., Inc. Defendants contend, in substance, that plaintiffs are without legal capacity to sue with respect to such transactions because of the requirements of section 61 of the General Corporation Law.

By chapter 667 of the Laws of 1944 (eff. April 9, 1944), a new sentence was added to section 61 of the General Corporation Law, reading as follows: “ In any action brought by a shareholder in the right of a foreign or domestic corporation it must be made to appear that the plaintiff was a stockholder at the time of the transaction of which he complains or that his stock thereafter devolved upon him by operation of law.”

From the facts recited, it appears that the plaintiffs, as trustees, acquired the stock of Julius Myer in the represented corporation after many of the activities complained of in the complaint had occurred, but before the 1944 amendment to section 61 of the General Corporation Law above referred to.

Special Term, in denying the motion to dismiss upon the ground of lack of legal capacity to sue, held that plaintiffs, as trustees, might complain of transactions occurring before they acquired their stock, on behalf of their father who owned stock of the represented corporation during the times referred to. Special Term further held that plaintiffs had acquired their stock by operation of law, and thus were within the exception found in section 61. We disagree with both of these conclusions.

To say that the plaintiffs are suing here as trustees to enforce rights held by their father is to ignore the realities of the situation presented in this lawsuit. The transactions complained of are all alleged to have been participated in by their father, or he is claimed to have been the recipient of moneys diverted. Under such circumstances the father could hardly have complained of any of these matters. The committee of his property is opposing the maintenance of this representative action, and is being sued as a defendant. One of the essential purposes of the action is to compel the committee to restore moneys to Myer 1890 Bottling Co., Inc. Recovery of any money by such corporation could bring no financial advantage to the estate of the incompetent, for quite patently it would have to pay to the corporation a sum equal to, or greater than, any return which might come to it by way of dividends based on any funds obtained as a result of this action. Clearly, therefore, this action is not one for the benefit of, or to enforce any rights [471]*471of, the father, but solely for whatever advantage it may bring to the remainder interests of plaintiffs.

The additional ground upon which Special Term held that section 61 is not applicable to the present case, to wit, that the plaintiffs acquired their stock “ by operation of law,” likewise seems to be without support in fact or in law.' Plaintiffs as trustees acquired title to their father’s stock, not by operation of law but by the affirmative act of their father who, in executing the trust agreement, made a voluntary gift to plaintiffs in trust, coupled with a remainder interest. The plaintiffs’ title came, therefore, by contract with their father, and not by the intervention of any court or legal forum, or under circumstances that might be considered a transfer by operation of law.

Finally the plaintiffs claim that it would impair rights guaranteed them by the Federal and New York State Constitutions to construe section 61, as amended, to apply to transfers made prior to the enactment of the statute or to causes of action which had already accrued. Among the constitutional provisions -which plaintiffs cite to us as being infringed upon are article I, sections 6 and 11 of the New York State Constitution; article I, section 10, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. We will discuss only those provisions relating to securing equal protection of the laws, and deprivation of property without due process of law.

Before discussing these constitutional questions, it might be well to consider whether the language of section 61 lends itself to the construction contended for by plaintiffs. We find that the section expressly provides that it is to apply to any action “ brought ” by a shareholder. In view of this explicit language there seems to be no basis for any construction excluding the present action, which was brought after the amendment took effect, from the requirements imposed by the section. Further, the statute clearly provides that in “ any ” action brought by a shareholder it must be made to appear that the plaintiff was a stockholder at the time of the activities complained of. Here again, in view of the broad and all inclusive language used, we find no room for construction excluding from the statute those who acquired their stock prior to the enactment of the law, or causes of action which had already accrued, as suggested by ■plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs rely largely on the decision of the Court of Appeals in Shielcrawt v. Moffett (294 N. Y. 180) to support their suggestion for construction limiting the section as aforesaid. We do not find that case controlling. There the principal question [472]*472presented was whether section 61-b of the General Corporation Law was applicable to actions pending at the time of its adoption.

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271 A.D.2d 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myer-v-myer-nyappdiv-1946.