President, Directors & Co. of Mechanics' Bank v. New-York & New Haven Railroad

13 N.Y. 599
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 13 N.Y. 599 (President, Directors & Co. of Mechanics' Bank v. New-York & New Haven Railroad) 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
President, Directors & Co. of Mechanics' Bank v. New-York & New Haven Railroad, 13 N.Y. 599 (N.Y. 1856).

Opinions

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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 610 This is an action for damages founded on a certificate for eighty-five shares of stock in the defendant's corporation, issued to Alexander Kyle, upon the security of which the plaintiffs loaned to that person a sum of money; and the first inquiry naturally is, what was the force and effect of the certificate in his hands? The mode of presenting this inquiry most favorable to the plaintiffs is to consider it as free from the difficulty that there was no power in the corporation, its board of directors, or any of its agents, to create the shares of stock in question. Assuming that the corporation had stock at its own disposal, and that Robert Schuyler, as agent, had full power to sell it in market and issue the proper certificates therefor, it is clear that any person dealing with him in good faith, and paying value, would become entitled to all the rights and privileges of a stockholder, although the agent, by a secret fraud, intended the transaction to be for his own benefit, and used the funds which he received for his own private purposes. In such a case, the acts of the agent being such as the corporation was competent to perform, and strictly within the powers delegated to him, upon principles entirely familiar, the law would not permit third persons to suffer by a secret abuse of the trust.

But it is equally clear that no rights would be acquired by a party not dealing with the agent in good faith, and receiving a certificate of stock without paying any value therefor. To say that the original holder of such a certificate could not be admitted to a participation with the genuine and bona fide stockholders in the property, franchises and revenues of the corporation, is a proposition so plain that it needs only to be stated. Such was the situation of Alexander Kyle, the original holder of the certificate now in question. To what extent he was implicated in the frauds of Schuyler is not material. The certificate is admitted to have been issued fraudulently and he paid nothing for it. On this ground it was in his hands spurious and void *Page 612 and this is a conclusion which is reached without calling in question the power of the corporation to create the stock, or of Schuyler as agent to issue the proper evidence thereof to a purchaser in good faith.

The certificate in the hands of Kyle was also void for the additional reasons which will now be mentioned.

1. Schuyler, as the agent of the company, had no power to issue a certificate for shares of stock, except upon the conditions precedent of a transfer on the books by some previous owner, and the surrender of that owner's certificate. He was the transfer agent merely, and his powers were expressly limited to that department of the business of the corporation. He had no general certifying power, nor any power at all to certify, except as incidental to a transfer of stock by its owner to some one else, and as an incidental power it could only be exercised upon the conditions named.

2. Neither the board of directors by whom Schuyler was appointed agent, nor the whole body of the corporation had power to create the stock which the certificate issued to Kyle professed to represent; and if the stock itself could not be brought into existence by the whole power of the corporation, the certificate issued as the evidence of its existence and the right of the holder thereto was necessarily void. Upon the premises last stated the conclusion would be the same, even if Kyle had paid to the transfer agent the full value of the stock. He could purchase stock of any person who owned it, but he could not under any conditions obtain it from the corporation or its agents, because there was none to be had, and none could be created.

Thus far I do not understand that my conclusions differ essentially from the views of the counsel who have argued the cause for the plaintiffs; and if I was not mistaken in regard to the general scope of their argument, they conceded the further result, that the plaintiffs, holding the certificate by transfer from Kyle, have no rights as stockholders merely, for the particular reason that the stock cannot exist under *Page 613 the charter; the essential ground of the action, in the view of the counsel, being the injury sustained by dealing upon the faith of the false representation of stock which the certificate contains. The opinions however of the judges in the court below are before us for examination, as well as those of eminent lawyers who have not appeared upon the argument, and I think it proper to refer to these opinions for the purpose of bringing into view all the theories upon which it has been supposed the plaintiffs' rights depend.

Mr. Justice Hoffman, in the opinion pronounced by him, holds that the certificate was not void as transcending the powers of the corporation in the creation of stock and issuing certificates therefor, or those delegated to Schuyler as the transfer agent. He, therefore, considers the obligation to be one which the defendant can perform and ought to perform, according to its terms. He admits that the effect of an over issue is to increase the number of shares, but not the actual capital; and, according to his view, the spurious certificates are to be made good by a reduction in the actual value of those that are genuine. He holds, therefore, that the defendant was bound to admit the plaintiffs as stockholders, and to register their shares on the books accordingly, and that this suit depends purely and simply on the non-performance of that duty after being requested to perform it. "Without a demand," he says, "and refusal to transfer, there would be no ground of action whatever."

Directly opposed to these views are those of Chief Justice Oakley.

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Bluebook (online)
13 N.Y. 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/president-directors-co-of-mechanics-bank-v-new-york-new-haven-ny-1856.