People v. . Granite State Provident Assn.

55 N.E. 1053, 161 N.Y. 492, 15 E.H. Smith 492, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1453
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 9, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 55 N.E. 1053 (People v. . Granite State Provident Assn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. . Granite State Provident Assn., 55 N.E. 1053, 161 N.Y. 492, 15 E.H. Smith 492, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1453 (N.Y. 1900).

Opinions

*494 O’Brien, J.

The only question in this case is oue concerning the distribution of a fund now under the control of the courts of this state, which is owned by a foreign corporation. The defendant corporation was created by the laws of Hew-Hampshire as a building and loan association, and was permitted to transact business in this state. In January, 1896, the authorities of the state where this corporation is domiciled took proceedings in the courts of that state to restrain it from any further prosecution of its business. In this proceeding an assignee or trustee was appointed to take charge of the property, as provided by the local law. Subsequently, this action was brought in the courts of this state by the attorney-general in behalf of the People, under the provisions of the Code, for the sequestration and preservation of the assets and property of the corporation in this state, and for an equitable distribution of the same among the persons entitled thereto. In order to carry out the objects of the action a receiver was also appointed, in this state. The Hew Hampshire assignee upon his own application was made a party to the action, and so is bound by the judgment.

It appears from the record that the corporation transacted business in several other states. The stockholders, at the time of the appointment of the receiver in this state, exceeded in number twenty thousand, of whom nearly one-sixth were residents of this state, and about one-fourth of the assets was located here; or, at leást, the situation was such that they could not be collected or distributed except through the action of the courts of this state. The fund in controversy may be divided into two parts. About $69,000 represents assets of the corporation collected by the receiver in this action from the foreclosure of mortgages and other obligations due from parties in this state, and the sale of some realty located in this state. The securities thus collected were transmitted to the receiver by the assignee in Hew Hampshire under the direction of the courts of that state. The other part of the fund consists of a special deposit of $100,000, which the corporation was required to make under the Banking Law of this *495 state, in order to acquire the right to transact its business here.

With respect to that part of the fund first mentioned, which is described in the record as the general fund, the court below, by the amendment of the original judgment, directed the receiver in this state, after paying the'expenses of the receivership, to transmit the same to the assignee in Mew Hampshire for general administration, upon receiving from such assignee at the domicile a bond or undertaking in a sum equal to double the amount to be so paid over, with sufficient sureties to be approved by a justice of the court, conditioned for the payment by the assignee of the domicile to each creditor and shareholder resident in this state of the same dividend on his claim that may be awarded other creditors and shareholders throughout' the country, without any deduction on account of any sum the creditor and shareholder of this state might receive from the special fund hereafter mentioned; and that in default of such payment to the domestic creditors and shareholders, that the foreign assignee would return to the receiver in this state, or his successor, the general fund so paid over. The only objection made to this part of the judgment is to the provision which requires the assignee at the domicile to execute the bond before described as a condition of receiving the fund in the hands of the domestic receiver. The general assets of a corporation are to be administered and distributed at the home of the corporation; but in order to accomplish that result, ancillary trustees or assignees must frequently be appointed in other jurisdictions, subject to the control and direction of the local courts. All creditors of a corporation, wherever residing, are entitled, in case of insolvency, to have the general assets distributed among them upon principles of perfect equality.

The courts of one state have no right to favor domestic creditors in the distribution, but it must be made upon the principle that equality is equity. (Blake v. McGlung, 172 U. S. 239.)

In the case at bar the foreign assignee is a party to the *496 action upon his own application; he asks for the transmission to him in another state of the fund now under the control and in the custody of the courts of this state through the receiver. We think that the court below, in directing the transmission of the fund to another jurisdiction, had the power to impose such conditions as are just and reasonable, with a view to the protection of domestic creditors, and that was the only purpose for which the bond or undertaking was required. We do not think it can be said, as matter of law, that the court was bound to direct the transmission of the fund to the administration, at the domicile without exacting any conditions whatever. It doubtless had the power to do so if it was thought to be wise and expedient. But it determined that before sending the fund out of the jurisdiction of the court, it was just and reasonable to require the foreign assignee to give security to the effect that he would distribute the fund upon principles of perfect equality. In other words, the court had power to guard against any discrimination on the part of the foreign assignee against domestic creditors by reason of any trust fund which was held in this state for their benefit. (People v. Remington, 121 N. Y. 328.) We think, therefore, that no rule of law or any absolute legal right of the foreign assignee was violated by that provision of the judgment requiring him to give the security referred to.

The fund' in the hands of the domestic receiver, arising from the conversion of the special deposit in the banking department, stands upon a different ground. The defendant, in order to acquire the right to transact its business in this state, was obliged to make this deposit since the statute .so provides. If this was a deposit as security merely for domestic creditors, we would be inclined to agree with the learned counsel for the defendant, who insists that this fund' should be devoted to the benefit of all creditors equally wherever residing. JBut it is something more than a mere deposit as . security. It is in the nature of a fund held in trust for the ‘benefit of domestic creditors and shareholders of the defendant. The deposit was made in obedience to section fourteen of *497 the Banking Law, as a condition of the defendant’s right to transact business here. By section thirty-three it is provided, in substance, that upon the appointment of the receiver of a corporation in this state the superintendent of the banking department shall pay over to him the funds remaining in his hands, less any charges that he may have against the same, and the receiver shall distribute these funds among the creditors and shareholders of the corporation residing in this state in the manner prescribed by law for the payment of creditors in the case of voluntary dissolution of a corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.E. 1053, 161 N.Y. 492, 15 E.H. Smith 492, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-granite-state-provident-assn-ny-1900.