Nauss v. Nauss Bros.

195 A.D. 318, 187 N.Y.S. 158, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4740
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 4, 1921
DocketMotion No. 1
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 195 A.D. 318 (Nauss v. Nauss Bros.) 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
Nauss v. Nauss Bros., 195 A.D. 318, 187 N.Y.S. 158, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4740 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

This is a suit in equity by a stockholder of the defendant Nauss Brothers Company for a decree requiring the company to declare and distribute dividends from its surplus assets, enjoining its directors and officers from further acting and for their removal, for an accounting of all the acts and doings of the company from its incorporation and directing that the surplus shown on such accounting be distributed among the stockholders, and for the appointment of a receiver of the property of the company pendente lite with authority to carry on its business.

The complaint having been framed for equitable relief, the point presented for decision on appellant’s motion was not [320]*320merely whether a cause of action for any relief against her as executrix is stated but whether the complaint sufficiently shows a cause of action for any of the equitable relief demanded and whether she in her representative capacity is a necessary or a proper party to the determination of the issues upon which plaintiff’s right thereto depends. (Travis v. Knox Terpezone Co., 165 App. Div. 156; affd., 215 N. Y. 259; Trotter v. Lisman, 209 id. 174.) The complaint shows that the company was incorporated in 1894 under the laws of New York with a capital stock of 1,000 shares of the par value of $100 each, for the purpose of buying, selling and trading in meats and domestic supplies incidental thereto; that its principal place of business was in the county of New York; that since 1894 plaintiff has been the owner of record of 88 shares of the capital stock; that Wendolin J. Nauss was the president and a director of the company down to the year 1907, when he made his son, Charles E. Nauss, president, but that, although not president, he remained in control of the corporation until his death in 1918; that the appellant became his executrix and his said son executor of his estate and they qualified and entered upon the discharge of their duties, as such and are still so acting; that the plaintiff was the treasurer of the company; which had been doing a large and profitable business, but paid no dividends for twenty-one years prior to the death of Nauss, excepting possibly in the year 1910, although dividends could have been paid continuously each year if the decedent had so desired; that after the death of Nauss his executors collusively ” began an action in the Supreme Court, New York county, against the company on various notes which they claimed were outstanding, valid, legal obligations against it and conducted the action to a point where a judgment might have been taken against the company for upwards of $56,000, but that the judgment has not been entered; that as part of said arrangement ” (no arrangement, however, having been thereinbefore referred to) the prospective judgment was purchased by the defendants Henry J. Hildebrand and Frederick Nauss for the sole purpose of taking control ” of the company " and doing with it what they saw fit, and at all times threatening and menacing the said corporation with the fact that .if this plaintiff or any [321]*321other stockholder of the said corporation demanded his rights that said judgment would be put' into execution and the corporation wiped out;” that “in the collusive arrangements that were made to take a judgment ” against the company, the attorneys for the plaintiffs in that action sent this plaintiff, who was then the treasurer of the company, to a firm of attorneys designated by them, who had never represented the company and were unknown to him, saying: “ These are the attorneys who will take charge of this friendly suit and will only charge $250 for it.” The complaint does not show that the plaintiff employed said firm of attorneys to represent the company or to what extent the proceedings in that action progressed, excepting as may be inferred from the allegation that judgment may be entered therein against the company; and although the plaintiff was treasurer of the company and in a position to know the facts with respect to the notes, he neither alleges that they were or were not valid obligations of the company. He next alleges, evidently referring to the action on the notes, that the “ proceedings were fictitious, collusive and not good in law ” and that the existence “ of the alleged obligations ” against the company renders its financial status to be that of insolvency, while in truth and in fact it is a prosperous going concern and the plaintiff and the other stockholders should be receiving their profits by way of dividends and not be deprived of their rights “ by the above and other acts illegal and unwarranted ” by the true facts and circumstances; that if it can be proved “ by the present holders thereof that the said alleged judgment is a good, valid and legal obligation ” against the company, it should be paid or a settlement should be made and it should not be held as a menace “ to continuously defeat the rights of this plaintiff and the other stockholders; that if the company is unable to pay the judgment, then it is insolvent and has committed an act of bankruptcy and a receiver should be appointed, and if the judgment is not a good, valid and existing claim against the company, the officers and directors should have it set aside and declared null and void; that said Henry J. Hildebrand controls about 476 shares of the capital stock and he and the defendant Frederick Nauss, who [322]*322is the president of the company, manage and control the corporation and that the defendants who are sued in their individual capacities are the other directors, and are hired clerks or journeymen butchers, employed in the business; that in 1907 when plaintiff was treasurer of the company, it was made clear at a meeting of the board of directors that the company was financially well able to pay a dividend and the matter was brought up at a meeting of the stockholders but that the decedent prevented the declaration of a dividend; that the business was continually increased to such an extent that one branch of it was enlarged from a single to a double store by the purchase by the decedent of an adjoining house and improving the same at a total cost of more than $45,000; that during the past ten years repeated demands were made on the decedent and on the company by stockholders, including plaintiff, for an inspection of the books of the company, but the demands were refused and the plaintiff was obliged to apply for a writ of mandamus and the proceeding is still pending, and the plaintiff fears that unless the holders of the judgment are enjoined they will make use of the judgment before the mandamus proceeding for an inspection. of the books by the plaintiff shall be terminated; that the plaintiff, in addition to being a stockholder and treasurer of the company, was employed by it on a “ weekly stipend,” until after the death of the decedent as a journeyman butcher and a buyer, and that it was definitely understood by an agreement with the decedent that he was to share in the profits of the business by dividends or interest on his stock, but that instead of this, decedent took most of the earnings for improvements, and when he died left an estate of upwards of $1,800,000, “ most of which money was accumulated by him directly and indirectly from the defendant company, in which he was but an officer and stockholder, the same as this plaintiff; ” that after the death of Nauss, defendants Frederick Nauss and Henry J.

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Bluebook (online)
195 A.D. 318, 187 N.Y.S. 158, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nauss-v-nauss-bros-nyappdiv-1921.