Nash v. Hall

11 Misc. 468, 32 N.Y.S. 701, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 9
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 11 Misc. 468 (Nash v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nash v. Hall, 11 Misc. 468, 32 N.Y.S. 701, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 9 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Patterson, J.

This is an application to continue, pending suit, an injunction which was issued on the. 2Óth day of November, .1894, -and to the restraining, clause- of which strict attention must be paid in order that the precise qties^ tions of fact which -are to be considered may not be confused with other matters which are contained in the papers submitted on the motion..' The restraint contained in the order is:. '“ That- the defendants be and they hereby are enjoined, until the further order of this court, from giving away or.selling for' inadequate or illegal consideration any of the goods, property or capital stock of the Said company (the' Hall Signal Company), and from wasting any part thereof, and. from transferring any of the capital stock of said company now or at any time held by said defendants^ or by any one in their behalf, which stock has been issued for an inadequate or illegal consideration; and the said défendants and each of them' is also enjoined from disposing of' or paying out any of the said corporate funds by way of gratuities, gifts or in any manner than in the ordinary course of transacting [469]*469the business for which- said corporation was organized.” The defendants in the action are : William P. Hall, who was and is the president of the Hall Signal Company; Frederick P. Mitchell, who seems to have been a special agent for that company; Winfield S. Gilmore, S. Marsh Young, William F. Cochran, Irving Ingraham, Charles E. Parker, John L. Houston, Walsingham A. Miller, W. Seward Webb, Thomas L. James, William J. Arkell, the Hall Signal Company, and other defendants sued by fictitious names. The plaintiffs in the action are stockholders of the Hall Signal Company, the plaintiffs Nash holding 13 shares of the stock and the plaintiff Hlrich holding ,100-shares of the stock; that is to say, the three plaintiffs holding but 113 shares out of 20,000 shares. A preliminary question arises respecting the right of the plaintiffs to maintain .this action under the circumstances set forth in the complaint, and it is suggested that in consequence of the small interest which these plaintiffs represent and the attitude of one Coit, who is the principal affiant for the plaintiffs, to the whole subject-matter of the action, the inference is plain that the suit is not brought in good faith, but for some ulterior purpose best known to Mr. Coit, and that these plaintiffs are merely nominal plaintiffs, who have been induced to bring this suit for some illegitimate object sought to be accomplished by Coit. The comparative smallness of the interest of these plaintiffs as stockholders is not a matter which the court will consider at this time. There is no reason why, if wrong has been done or is likely to be done, the holder of one share should not be as fully protected in his rights as the largest holder, and there is nothing before the court to show, at present, that Coit’s attitude to the subject, as the instigator of the suit, is such as to require on that ground alone a dissolution of the injunction now in force. The technical right of the-plaintiffs to maintain the action for some relief seems to be established. The affairs of the corporation are now being administered by the very persons who are charged with the perpetration of the acts alleged in the complaint to be unlaw^ ful, and although- some of the defendants are directors not [470]*470implicated in any charge of fraud, yet it is clear that the . executive officers of the corporation, who would be the proper persons to institute and carry on suits, coirld scarcely be . expected to take proceedings against- themselves, and the authority for such suits as this is to be found in Kelsey v. Sargeant, 40 Hun, 150, and the many cases cited in the opinion óf, the court in that case,- and to which it is now unnecessary to make further reference. It should be remarked' at the beginning, in. considering the subjects presented by the papers on this motion, that with reference to certain of the defendants- on the -record there is no charge whatever made of fraudulent or unlawful conduct, or participation •in any act mentioned in the complaint as a. ground for the maintenance of the injunction. The defendants Webb, James, Miller and Houston became connected with the company as directors long after every one "of the particular acts complained of was performed, and there is nothing whatever to be imputed to them of wrong in any of the transactions connected with this matter. The-attitude in which they stand to the subject is simply that of directors of the corporation and holders of certain shares of the stock said to have been unlawfully and improperly issued by the officers of the company, and the transfer and voting upon which is sought to bo restrained, and their principal relation to the subject-matter of the suit seems to be at most that of alleged holders of shares the title to which is impeached in their hands in consequence of the issue being alleged to be fraudulent or ineffectual as against the company, and it being claimed they are not holders of those shares for value or in such a way as would estop the company from claiming-the-cancellation or retransfer of those shares. Bút -with regard -to the defendants who were the officers of the company or its directors at the times mentioned in the complaint, there are serious questions which will require at the trial very careful attention and examination. 'It appears from the allegations of the complaint, which contains the only detailed account" of the transactions, that the 'Hall Signal Company is a corporation created under the laws [471]*471of the state of Maine, and had' at the outset capital stock of $1,000,000, divided into 10,000 shares of the par value of $100 each,' 9,000 being common stock and 1,000 being preferred stock; that the company was organized to make, sell and put up railway signals and signal devices under the patents of one Hall; that on the 22d of November, 1889, the board of directors of that company passed a resolution which provided that the preferred stock of the company then in the treasury and unsold should be held at $100 a share; that on the 6th of January, 1890, there belonged to the Hall Signal Company, and was then in its treasury, 1,000 shares of the preferred stock, and at least 4,745 shares of th^ common stock; that in June, 1890, the directors of the company increased their number to seven members, and that at a stockholders’ meeting in that month the defendant Cochran was elected a director, but it does not appear that the full number of seven directors was made up until the year 1894. It is further alleged in the complaint that on or about January 16, 1891, William P. Hall, being president of the company, sold' 270 shares of the' company’s preferred stock to William F. Cochran for eighty-five dollars a share, and 214 shares of the common stock at fifty dollars a share, thus making the sale of the preferred stock at fifteen dollars less than the fixed price, and the common stock at twenty-five dollars a share less than the fix^d price; and that at a meeting of the directors held on that day, at which Hall, Cochran, Gilmore and Ingraham were present, and at which the presence of Hall and Cochran was necessary to make a quorum, a resolution was adopted by tl|e vote of those present to ratify that sale, and it is claimed that Cochran now holds the shares which were sold to him irregularly, as alleged.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Misc. 468, 32 N.Y.S. 701, 66 N.Y. St. Rep. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nash-v-hall-nysupct-1895.