Rubinstein v. Kasprzak

2 N.J. Misc. 323, 1923 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 32
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 30, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 2 N.J. Misc. 323 (Rubinstein v. Kasprzak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rubinstein v. Kasprzak, 2 N.J. Misc. 323, 1923 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 32 (N.J. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Eieldeb, V. C.

Complainant claims to be the owner of forty shares of the Stanley Silk Dyeing Co. by purchase from former owners thereof, which stock he presented to the proper officers of the company for transfer to his name, and transfer was refused. He filed his bill against the company- and its officers (who are the only other stockholders), praying that the secretary be directed to transfer said shares to his name on the company’s books, and that pending this suit the stockholders and directors bé restrained from holding meetings. The defense is that the shares in question were purchased by the company and retired, and that the certificates of «tock are held by complainant as custodian for the company.

This is a close corporation, all stock issued being “held by Stanley Krasprzak, who is treasurer; William Krasprzak, who is secretary : Veronica Kasprzak and complainant, who is president. Stanley and William Kasprzak and complain[324]*324ant constitute the present board of directors. If the shares in question belong to complainant and are added to other shares he owns, he has a majority of the capital stock, but if the shares were purchased by the company and should be retired, the Kasprzak family has the stock control, so that the Kasprzaks ar.e the persons really interested in resisting complainant’s claim.

The admitted facts are that prior to August, 1918, the forty shares in question were owned by Albert Walzak, John Lingelbach, Stanley Olterzcwski and John Harsche; that such shares were purchased-from the owners and paid for by the company’s cheeks and notes dated August 5th, 1918, to the order of the owners', for a total of $7,200; that the certificates were assigned by the owners thereof and delivered to complainant, who held them in his possession until August, 1922, when he presented them to the company’s officers with the request that they be transferred on the company’s books to his name as owner, and a new certificate delivered to him, which request was refused on the ground that the shares belonged to the company. As to practically everything else of importance in the case alleged by the one side, there is a flat denial by the other, and it -is difficult to determine where the truth lies, but relying largely on the minutes of the company and on its books of account, all being records kept at a time when the relations between the parties were harmonious and when it does not seem probable that complainant was laying a foundation for a claim which he waited four years to assert, I have reached the conclusion that the complainant’s story of the transaction is the true one and that he is entitled to the relief he seeks.

. The company was incorporated October, 1916, Rubinstein, the complainant,, Stanley Kasprzak, Harsche, Lingelbach, Walzak and William Kasprzak were on its first board of directors,* which was completed by the election of Olterzcwski, December; 1916. Rubinstein was elected president and Stanley. Kasprzak treasurer, and by-agreement with the company Kasprzak was employed as superintendent and manager of the business, and Rubinstein was employed as its soliciting [325]*325agent. As early as April, 1917, the other stockholders and directors were complaining o£ the management of Kasprzak and Rubinstein, and at a meeting of the board, held April 30th, 1917, four dissatisfied stockholders expressed a desire to dispose of their shares and were informed that the company would not buy because it did not have the money. At five directors’ meetings prior to June 24th, 1918, the subject of the sale of this stock to the company was discussed and it was reiterated that the company had not the money and would not buy. From the minutes of six other directors’ meetings, during the same period, it appears that the company’s business was poor; that many repairs to, and replacements of, machinery were required, and that because of lack of funds a frequently discussed dividend could not be paid. At the meeting of June 24th, 1918, William Kasprzak informed the board that he had sold his shares to Rubinstein, and the secretary asked why he had sold his shares without notice to the company. Rubinstein replied that the company had not the money and that because certain shareholders had stated they proposed to buy he, Rubinstein, had bought the shares from William Kasprzak. For some undisclosed reason this sale of stock did not go through. About this time the four dissatisfied stockholders took their troubles to Attorney Benson, who, after' several interviews with Rubinstein, arranged with Rubinstein for a sale of the stock. In the minutes of a directors’ meeting, hold July 29th, 1918, it is recorded that Rubinstein, upon being asked about these stockholders, stated that he had been called to Benson’s office July 20th with Olterzcwski, Walzak and Stanley Kasprzak had made arrangements to purchase the stock. Rubinstein testified that after his first meeting with Benson, he consulted Stanley Kasprzak, who told him that the company could not take the stock, and that he then asked Kasprzak if ho, Kasprzak, would buy, and Kasprzak said he would not, and told Rubinstein to purchase it; that Rubinstein then asked Kasprzak if he could borrow the necessary money from the company, and that Kasprzak consented, and thereupon Rubinstein informed Benson that he would buy. This is denied [326]*326by Kasprzak, but because at the directors’ meetings it had been uniformly officially decided that the company -was not in funds and could not buy, and because of other circumstances to which I shall refer, I feel that Eubinstein’s story is corroborated.

The sale was consummated August 5th, 1918, at Benson’s office. Harsche, one of the stockholders who sold, had previously signed the form of transfer endorsed on his certificate and had given his certificate to Walzak to deliver for him, and was not present at the transfer. Walzak, Lingelbach and Olterzcwski, who were at Benson’s office when the sale was closed, testified that they signed the assignments of their certificates in blank and delivered the certificates to Benson in exchange for their checks and notes. Benson had not known Eubinstein prior to this transaction and he was acting in the matter for Walzak, Lingelbach, Olterzcwski and Harsche. He is a disinterested witness and he testified that the body of each assignment, including Eubinstein’s name as assignee, is in his (Benson’s) handwriting, and that he is quite sure that the assignments were filled in as they now appear, before the assignors signed. Eubinstein’s testimony is to the same effect. Whether Benson filled in the assignments before or after the assignors signed, it is apparent from his testimony that his understanding of the transaction was that Eubinstein was purchasing the stock, and hence he named Eubinstein as the assignee in the assignments, and this in spite of the fact that the checks and notes which were delivered at his office in payment for the stock were made by the company. The certificates of stock were then delivered to Eubinstein, who has had them ever since.

The checks and notes which paid for the stock were prepared by Veronica Kasprzak, daughter of Stanley Kasprzak, who was then the company’s bookkeeper. These disbursements of company’s funds were entered in the cash book by Veronica Kasprzak under date of August 5th, 1918, as payments to the respective stockholders who sold, with the amount paid each opposite his name, the total being $7,200, and the four entries were bracketed by her, and outside the [327]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 N.J. Misc. 323, 1923 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rubinstein-v-kasprzak-njch-1923.