Pagel, Horton & Co. v. Harmon Paper Co.

236 A.D. 47, 258 N.Y.S. 168, 1932 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5883
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 29, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 236 A.D. 47 (Pagel, Horton & Co. v. Harmon Paper Co.) 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
Pagel, Horton & Co. v. Harmon Paper Co., 236 A.D. 47, 258 N.Y.S. 168, 1932 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5883 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Edgcomb, J.

This controversy comes to us upon an agreed statement of facts.

In July and August, 1929, the plaintiff sold and delivered to the Warren Parchment Company, a corporation organized under and by virtue of the laws of the State of New York, a quantity of bleached sulphite, at the agreed price of $3,684.60. Plaintiff seeks to recover the balance due upon the purchase price of this material, not from the parchment company to whom the goods were sold and delivered, but from the Harmon Paper Company, an entirely separate and distinct corporation, upon the theory that the parchment company is nothing more than a mere agent, subdivision department or instrumentality of the Harmon Paper Company, and that the latter corporation in reality is the real party in interest.

While a corporation will ordinarily be regarded as a legal entity, quite separate and apart from its stockholders, officers or directors, or from other corporations with which it is connected, the law will not permit this fiction to be carried to such an extent as to become a cloak for fraud or illegality. (Jenkins v. Moyse, 254 N. Y. 319, 324; Imar Mortgage Corp. v. Ticoli Realty Corp., 232 App. Div. 635, 640; affd., 257 N. Y. 594; McCaskill Co. v. United States, 216 U. S. 504, 514, 515; Pittsburgh & Buffalo Co. v. Duncan, 232 Fed. 584; New York Trust Co. v. Carpenter, 250 id. 668; United States v. Milwaukee R. T. Co., 142 id. 247; Commonwealth v. Monongahela Co., 216 Penn. St. 108; 12 Columbia Law Rev. 496; 13 Cal. Law Rev. 235, 237.)

The courts will also look beyond the fiction of corporate entity, and hold two corporations, in legal contemplation, to be but one unit, where one is so organized, related to or controlled by the [49]*49other as to be its mere agent, instrumentality or alter ego. (Matter of Muncie Pulp Co., 139 Fed. 546; Interstate Tel. Co. v. B. & O. Tel. Co., 51 id. 49; affd., 54 id. 50; New York Trust Co. v. Carpenter, 250 id. 668, 673; Industrial Research Corp. v. General Motors Corp., 29 F. [2d] 623.)

Much has been written of late by juristic writers upon the inherent nature of a corporation. The subject has also been extensively dealt with in the opinions of various courts. An interesting and exhaustive examination of this subject will be found in an article written by Prof. Wormser, entitled Piercing the Veil of Corporate Entity,” in 12 Columbia Law Review, page 496. Attention should also be called to a most instructive and comprehensive discussion of the matter by Judge Bijur in his most excellent opinion in Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. Pierson (130 Misc. 110).

In deciding the practical problem which is presented to us for solution, viz., whether, under the conceded facts, the law of this State will permit the plaintiff to brush aside and disregard the independent corporate existence of the Warren Parchment Company, and hold this defendant, an entirely separate, distinct and different being, liable for merchandise sold to the parchment company, it is unnecessary to enter into any philosophical or scholastic discussion of the subject of corporate personality. Whether the conception of separate corporate existence is correctly designated as a legal fiction, or whether that phrase is nothing more than a metaphor which is used to convey the idea that the rights and liabilities of a corporation are to be kept separate and apart from those of its individual shareholders, officers, directors and other corporations with which it is associated, is of but little moment. Mr. Justice Holmes, in Klein v. Board of Supervisors (282 U. S. 19, 24), suggests that it leads nowhere to call a corporation a fiction ; that if it is a fiction it is one which is created by law with intent that it should be acted upon as true.

An examination of the various authorities relating to this subject reveals the fact that the line of demarcation between the cases in which the corporate entity is observed, and those where it is disregarded, is very ragged and hazy. Each case must be regarded as sui generis. It is said in Riley v. Pierce Oil Corp. (245 N. Y. 152, 154) that “ slight shading of the facts creates possible distinctions.”

This brings us to a brief statement of the conceded facts concerning these two corporations, and their relations to each other.

The Warren Parchment Company is a domestic corporation. From the date of its organization in September, 1911, until after the sale of the sulphite in question, it was engaged in the manu[50]*50facture of grease proof and glassine paper, at its mill in Dexter, Jefferson county, N. Y. The defendant Harmon Paper Company • was incorporated in 1910, and operated a mill for the manufacture of wall paper, colored paper specialities, and box covers at Brown-ville, Jefferson county, N. Y., some five or six miles from the village of Dexter. In 1926 the defendant acquired all the outstanding stock of the Warren Parchment Company, but no merger of the two corporations has ever been effected. Each maintained its separate organization, although in recent years the officers and directors of the two corporations have been the same, with but one exception. After the defendant acquired the stock of the Warren Parchment Company, each corporation operated its own plant, maintained its own real property, and kept separate and distinct books and bank accounts; each paid its own taxes, insurance, payroll, repairs, maintenance and other debts out of its own treasury, and by its own checks and notes; each made its own contracts in its own name; each sold its products to entirely different people; and each made a different type of paper, and used a different kind of sulphite in the manufacture of its product. The two corporations made consolidated tax returns to the Internal Revenue Bureau, and each advanced money and extended credit to the other, separate accounts of such loans being kept,- and actual payments being made back and forth between the two. The funds of the two were never mingled. For several years prior to the transactions which form the basis of this controversy the plaintiff sold to the parchment company large quantities of bleached sulphite. On May 21, 1928, more than a year prior to the sale in question, plaintiff wrote the parchment company demanding payment of two invoices which were then past due. Defendant replied as follows: “ The Warren Parchment Company is now controlled by this Company and we are going through the process of merging the two Companies. This being so, it isn’t convenient at this writing to send you our check for this account so we trust you will accept our one month’s note enclosed and a check for the interest.” Instead of inclosing its own note and check, however, defendant sent and plaintiff accepted the note and check of the Warren Parchment Company. The contemplated merger or consolidation of the two companies has never taken place. Several months later the defendant again wrote the plaintiff, stating that it was inclosing its check and note in payment of certain indebtedness of the parchment company, but again the check and note inclosed were instruments of the parchment company and not of the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
236 A.D. 47, 258 N.Y.S. 168, 1932 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pagel-horton-co-v-harmon-paper-co-nyappdiv-1932.