Quinn v. . Whitney

97 N.E. 724, 204 N.Y. 363, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 776
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 2, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 97 N.E. 724 (Quinn v. . Whitney) 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
Quinn v. . Whitney, 97 N.E. 724, 204 N.Y. 363, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 776 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.

In 1907 the defendants organized a corporation under the laws of the state of Maine known as the San Gregorio Mining & Railway Company, with a capital stock of $1,000,000 divided into shares of one dollar each. All of the capital stock except 500 shares appears to have been issued to the defendants in consideration of the sale and transfer by them to the corporation of an option which they owned upon certain mining property in Mexico and for a certain railway allied to such property. The defendants set aside 500,000 shares of the stock so issued to them to be sold at such price as the board of directors might determine for the .benefit of the treasury of the corporation. A block of 174,000 shares of the stock thus issued for the option was sold to Arthur Starr Moore for $8,700 which he paid. All these transactions took place pursuant to an agreement in writing between Moore and the defendants Thomas H. *365 Whitney and W. Murdoch Wiley, dated July 23, 1907. That agreement after providing that 500,000 shares of the stock should he issued to a trustee to be sold for the benefit of the corporation further provided that the defendant Thomas H. Whitney should be fiscal agent to conduct the sales; and that upon any sale or sales of said stock the said fiscal agent should sell for and on account of Moore one share for every five shares of the stock set aside for the benefit of the treasury until the net proceeds of the sale for Moore’s account should equal the amount which he had paid for the stock issued to him, to wit, $8,700.

The plaintiff sues as the assignee of Moore, alleging a breach of this provision of the contract of July 23, 1907. The trial court found that pursuant to the terms of the agreement the defendant Whitney was duly appointed fiscal agent of the San Gregorio Mining & Railway Company and that he sold 77,500 shares out of the 500,000 shares of stock set aside to be sold for the benefit of the corporation and received $8,125 therefor. By the terms of the agreement 12,917 shares of Moore’s stock should have been taken and used as part of the 77,500 shares thus sold by the fiscal agent and Moore should have received $1,354.17 out of the $8,125 paid to the fiscal agent on the purchase; but in violation of the agreement, as the trial judge found, none of the stock belonging to Moore was used for the purpose of the transaction and he received no part of the purchase price.

Moore sold 12,500 shares of his stock to the plaintiff and on April 30, 1908, executed to the plaintiff an assignment of all his rights under the contract of July 23, 1907. The plaintiff thereafter notified the defendants of this assignment and demanded payment from them of the sum of $1,354.17, being one-sixth of the amount received upon the sale of the treasury stock, at the same time tendering to the defendants 12,917 shares of the stock formerly belonging to Moore, being one-sixth of the number *366 of shares sold by the fiscal agent. The defendants refused to pay the money or accept the stock, and the plaintiff thereupon sold the stock for their account at public auction for the sum of $165.40. This action was brought to recover the balance with interest, amounting to $1,260.14. The substance of the defense was that Moore by his transactions with the corporation and his participation in the sale of the treasury stock and his dealings with his own stock had precluded himself from claiming any rights under the contract, and waived all rights thereto, and that the assignment by Moore to the plaintiff was made with full knowledge of all of Moore’s acts having this effect. The case was tried before a jury, and at the conclusion of the evidence on both sides both parties moved for the direction of a verdict. The trial judge thereupon took the case under advisement • and subsequently made findings and directed judgment in favor of the plaintiff. This judgment has been reversed by the Appellate Division on the ground, as wé gather from the opinion, that Moore participated in the sale of the treasury stock without insisting upon his rights under the contract, and thereby must be held to have waived those rights.

No rulings upon the admission or exclusion of evidence are assailed, and as the_ case came before the .Appellate Division the only questions of law presented for consideration were (1) whether the findings of fact were sufficient to sustain the conclusions of law and (2) whether there was an utter lack of evidence to sustain any conclusion of fact.

It appears from the findings that the principal sale of treasury stock was made to Mr. Clarkson Clothier of Philadelphia, to whom an option was given which he sub- . sequently exercised to the extent of taking 15,000. shares. At the same time Moore gave Clothier an option upon his own stock to the extent of 161,500 shares.' Clothier, however, did not take any of Moore’s stock under this *367 option, and because Moore as one of the directors of the company aided in putting Olothier in a position thus to take the treasury stock .of the corporation rather than his own the Appellate Division appears to have been of the opinion that he parted with all his rights as against the defendants under the contract. We do not see why any such effect should be given his action in that respect.

The agreement in effect bound the defendants when any stock was sold by the fiscal agent to a stranger to take from Moore one-sixth of such stock and pay him therefor the price paid by the purchaser; and the defendants were bound to continue to do this until the sales for Moore’s account realized $8,700. In other words, the defendants undertook by the agreement with Moore that he should share in the benefit of any sales of stock made by the fiscal agent of the corporation to the extent of one-sixth until he had received back the amount of his investment, Moore being bound, of course, to furnish one-sixth of any stock which should be sold by the fiscal agent.

Moore was a director of the corporation, and as such participated in the transactions which resulted in the sale of the corporate stock to Olothier; indeed, there could not be any sales of treasury stock as contemplated by the contract without his knowledge, as all of that stock was placed in his hands as trustee.

Moore’s relations to the corporation, however, as director were entirely distinct from his relatipns to the defendants under the contract. As a director, having in view the purposes and prosperity of the corporation, he was bound to facilitate the sale of its treasury stock to outsiders. This he did by participating in the transaction with Olothier. He was bound to do all that he did in promoting the sale of the stock, irrespective of the contract between him and the defendants. He was entitled to rely upon the presumption that the defendants would fulfill the con *368 tract on their part, and to expect that in case his stock to the extent of one-sixth was not actually taken and transferred to the purchasers the defendants would, nevertheless, pay him an amount equivalent to one-sixth of the total purchase money received from Clothier and take from him an equivalent proportion of his stock.

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.E. 724, 204 N.Y. 363, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quinn-v-whitney-ny-1912.