People v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States

51 Misc. 339, 101 N.Y.S. 354, 51 Misc. 358
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 51 Misc. 339 (People v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States) 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
People v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of United States, 51 Misc. 339, 101 N.Y.S. 354, 51 Misc. 358 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Bischoff, J.

This is an action brought by the Attorney-General, in behalf of the people, under sections 1781 and 1782 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to compel an accounting by certain officers and directors of the defendant Equitable Life Assurance Society, “ for their official conduct in the management and disposition of the funds and property, [341]*341committed to their charge” (Code Oiv. Pro., § 1781, suhd. 1), and to procure a judgment “ Compelling them to pay to the corporation, which they represent, or to its creditors, any money, and the value of any property, which they have acquired to themselves, or transferred to others, or lost, or wasted, by a violation of their duties.” Id., suhd. 2.

The complaint sets forth at length the facts relating to the incorporation of the company, its organization and the personnel of its officers and directors, and alleges, generally, that “the individual defendants herein, disregarding their said duty to said defendant society and in violation thereof, for a number of years preceding the commencement of this action, have negligently, improperly and improvidently performed such duties, and habitually and continuously done, or caused or suffered to be done, wrongful, illegal and improper acts (some of which are hereinafter set forth in detail), by reason whereof the defendant society has suffered great loss and damage, and its funds, assets and property have been wasted and lost, and much money and property to which it has been and is entitled has been withheld from it (all to its great damage), and the individual defendants have acquired to themselves, or caused or permitted to be transferred to others, in violation of their duties, money, property and the value of property belonging to said defendant society.”

This general characterization of the acts of the individual defendants would not, of course, be of service, standing alone, to .tender an issue of fact, and, while it may be read in connection with each specification of alleged misfeasance or malfeasance elsewhere presented by the pleading, the existence of a cause of action must depend upon the facts set forth, not upon the pleader’s description of their import.

Eleven paragraphs of the complaint are devoted to a statement of facts concerning transactions of these defendants, in their capacity as officers or directors of the corporation, and, assuming the truth of what is alleged, it is apparent that substantial sums were lost by the corporation in the withholding of profits or advantages which it would have enjoyed had its affairs been conducted, in particular instances, with [342]*342reasonable care by the officers or directors who had those affairs in charge. In soine of the instances detailed by the complaint it is alleged, and the fact is fortified by reasonable inference, that some of these defendants profited by the company’s loss, but, in the main, the pleading is to be read as proceeding for misfeasance rather than for malfeasance, and as based upon losses sustained by the company through official neglect rather than through official corruption. If, to support such an action as this, in behalf of the people, the loss to the corporation must be shown to have resulted from an active fraud of its officers, the complaint before me must needs be deemed insufficient as to all but a few of the demurring parties, and the substantial question in the case is whether an action may be maintained by the Attorney-General under sections 1781 and 1782 of the Code where the purpose of the action is to charge negligent officers and directors with a loss sustained by the corporation through their misfeasance.

Ooncededly the action is in equity. The people have no direct pecuniary interest in the result which may be measured by a judgment for a sum of money for the plaintiff, and the judgment sought is one which shall direct the parties who may be chargeable to pay that with which théy are charged, not to the plaintiff, but to the corporation. They are asked to account, however, not for what they have received, but for what the corporation has lost, that is, for the damages which have resulted to the corporation from their negligence; and it is the contention of the defendants that an action for this purpose is not within the scope of the statute which alone affords authority to the Attorney-General to bring them into court.

At.the outset, it may be noted that the statute makes no distinction between an accounting for the fruits of fraud and for damages arising from the loss of funds through official neglect, and either class of cases is equally within the ordinary meaning of the words employed. Subdivision 2 of section 1781 authorizes the action against officers and directors for the purpose of compelling them to pay to the corporation the value of any property “ which they have [343]*343acquired to themselves,” or which they have lost or wasted ” by a violation of their duties; and, unless the court is to find some reason for an interpretation sensibly affecting the apparent meaning of the words used in the statute, the distinction between fraud and negligence is not of moment for the purposes of the present case.

The general scope of sections 1781 and 1782 of the Code, in so far as they purport to invest the Attorney-General with authority to call corporate officers to account, has been, however, the subject of much judicial discussion. These sections are a re-enactment of earlier statutory provisions (2 R. S. §§ 33, 35), adopted to remedy a defect in the jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery, deemed to have been pointed out by Chancellor Kent in Attorney-General v. Utica Ins. Co., 2 Johns. Ch. 371, and, according to the reviser’s note, “ to give the Court of Chancery in this State the same power that is exercised by that court in England in cases of charitable corporations, and in other cases.”

In People v. Lowe, 117 N. Y. 175, the view was expressed that, regard being had to the origin of the statute in question, the Attorney-General was not thereby given authority to bring an accounting suit against directors of a corporation unless the corporation were eleemosynary in character or the public interests were substantially involved. The point was not actually decided because of a division among the judges, and "the court was again divided upon the question in People v. Ballard, 134 N. Y. 272, note, but, upon a reargument (134 N. Y. 269) it was finally held that these sections of the Code were intended to confer authority upon the Attorney-General to institute an action against officers and directors of any business corporation for an accounting, in the interests of the corporation, and that the question of the advisability of the litigation was a matter exclusively for the Attorney-General to determine, free from any control of the court. Code Civ. Pro., § 1808.

It is to be observed that in the exhaustive discussion of the application of this statute in the cases referred to, there is no word to suggest that, so far as an action is authorized at all, the statute does not mean what it says when includ[344]*344ing a right to an accounting for property lost or wasted ” with an accounting for property which the officers or directors have “ acquired to themselves.”

The purpose of the statute, as pointed out by Judge Yann in People v.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Misc. 339, 101 N.Y.S. 354, 51 Misc. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-equitable-life-assurance-society-of-united-states-nysupct-1906.