New Lamp Chimney Co. v. Ansonia Brass & Copper Co.

91 U.S. 656, 23 L. Ed. 336, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1421
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 10, 1876
Docket85
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 91 U.S. 656 (New Lamp Chimney Co. v. Ansonia Brass & Copper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Lamp Chimney Co. v. Ansonia Brass & Copper Co., 91 U.S. 656, 23 L. Ed. 336, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1421 (1876).

Opinion

*657 Mr. Justice Clieeobe

delivered the opinion of the court.

Corporations, whether moneyed, business, or commercial, and joint-stock companies, are subject to the provisions of the Bankrupt Act; and the thirty-seventh section of the act provides to the effect, that upon the petition of any officer of any such corporation or company, duly authorized by a vote of a majority of the corporators at any legal meeting called for the' purpose, or upon the petition of any creditor or creditors of the same, made and presented in the manner provided in respect to other debtors, the like proceedings shall be had and taken as are required in other cases of voluntary or involuntary bankruptcy; but the same section provides that no allowance or discharge shall be granted to any corporation or joint-stock company, or to any person or officer or member thereof. 14 Stat. 535.

Nine overdue promissory notes executed by the corporation defendants were held by the corporation plaintiffs, amounting to the sum of $5,266.94; and they instituted the present suit in the Supreme Court of the State to recover the amount.

Service being made, the defendants appeared, and set up as a defence in their answer, that they, the defendants, had on their own application been declared bankrupt, and that the plaintiffs had proved the claim in suit in the bankrupt proceedings, and had been paid a dividend on the same, and that they were thereby prevented under the Bankrupt Act from recovering the claim or any part of the same, in a subsequent action.

Issue being joined, the parties went 'to trial; and, the bankrupt proceedings having been introduced in evidence, the defendants moved. the court to dismiss the suit, insisting that the plaintiffs, having proved the claim in the bankrupt proceedings and received a dividend on the same, had waived the cause of' action; but the presiding justice denied the motion, and directed the jury to render a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for the balance due on the notes. Exceptions were duly filed by the defendants, and they appealed to the general term, where .the judgment was affirmed; the court holding that the bankrupt court had.no jurisdiction to adjudge the defendant corporation bankrupt, and that the proceedings in bankruptcy were void. Brass and Copper Company v. Lamp Chimney Company, 64 Barb. 436.

*658 Still dissatisfied, the defendants appealed to the Court of Appeals of the State, where the parties were again fully heard; and the Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment rendered by the court ’ sitting in general term, holding that the decree of the Bankrupt Court adjudging the defendant corporation bankrupt, .-and the subsequent proceedings in pursuance of the same, did not have the'effect to discharge the corporation from the claim' in suit beyond the amount páid to the plaintiffs as dividends, even though the claim was proved by the plaintiffs in the bankrupt proceedings. Same v. Same, 58 N.Y. 124.

Sufficient appears to show that the defendants are a manufacturing corporation organized under the law of the State, which authorizes three persons to .form such a corporation, and' requires that the trr ¡tees shall be stockholders of the company. Sess. Laws (1848), ch. 40, p. 54.

Nothing being alleged- to the contrary, it must be assumed that the corporati <n was duly organized.' It appears that a meeting of the tri itees was duly called and notified to inquire into the conditio. I of the affairs of the corporation; that the meeting was regularly held, and, it having been ascertained to the satisfaction of the meeting that the corporation was insolvent, it was votfed and resolved, by a majority of the .trustees present, that the .president of' the company be required to file a petition in the District Court, that the corporation may be adjudged bankrupt. Such a petition was accordingly filed; and, if -the president of the company was duly authorized to sign and file" it, the plaintiffs do not deny that the bankrupt proceédings were regular.

. Two objections are taken to the jurisdiction o"f the Bankrupt Court, . which, in point of -fact, involve the v^ame considerations. They are, that the majority of the stockholders did not sign the-petition filed in the District Court, and that the president gf'the corporation was not authorised to sign' it; which is a mere inference from-the fact that the meeting, when the vote ánd -resolution .were', adopted, was - a regular meeting' of' the trustees: but-inasmuch as the statute of. the State requires that the trustees shall be stockholders, and no objection is made-to -the organization of the company, it may well be presumed that the trustees were stockholders as required by law.

*659 As before.remarked, three pérsons may form such a corporation. The record shows that a majority of the trustees present adopted the vote and resolution,' which necessarily implies that a minority did not cóncur; and if not, then certainly there must have.been three or more present. The record does not show that the whole capital stock of the company is not owned by three persons.

Viewed in the light of these suggestions, it follows that the want of jurisdiction in the Bankrupt Court is not clearly shown, and that the case is plainly one where every presumption should be that the action of the court was rightful.

Due notice, it is conceded, was given to all concerned, and that the defendants appeared in the Bankrupt Court, and that they never made any objection to the jurisdiction of the court; and, in view of these circumstances, the rule is that every presumption is in favor of the legal character of the proceedings. Voorhees v. Bank, 10 Pet. 473.

.Concede that, still it is said that courts created by statute cannot have jurisdiction beyond what the statute confers; which is true: but no such question arises in the case before the court, as all concede that the District Court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and that the defendants, appeared, and claimed and exercised every right which the Bankrupt Act confers. They are, therefore, estopped to deny the jurisdiction of the court; nor are the plaintiffs in any better condition, unless it appears that the bankrupt proceedings are actually void. Void proceedings, of course, bind no .one not estopped to set up the objection; and, in order to establish the theory that the proceedings in this case are void, the plaintiffs, deny that the president of the corporation was authorized to make and file the petition in the District Court. McCormick v. Pickering, 4 Comst. 279.

. Such a petition might properly .be made hy. the president of the company, and be by him presented to the District .Court, if he was thereto duly authorized at a legal meeting called for the purpose by a vote of a majority of the corporators; and whéther he was so authorized or not was a question of fact to be dete mined by. the District Court to' which the petition was presented; and the rule in such cases is, that if there be a total *660 defect of evidence to prove the essential fact, and the court find it without proof, the action of the court is void; b,ut when the proof exhibited has.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 U.S. 656, 23 L. Ed. 336, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-lamp-chimney-co-v-ansonia-brass-copper-co-scotus-1876.