Schwab v. E. G. Potter Co.

87 N.E. 670, 194 N.Y. 409, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1295
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 87 N.E. 670 (Schwab v. E. G. Potter Co.) 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
Schwab v. E. G. Potter Co., 87 N.E. 670, 194 N.Y. 409, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1295 (N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

Vann, J.

The main question presented by this appeal is whether the proposed transaction is beyond the powers of the defendant corporation, for it is well established that in the *415 absence of fraud or bad faith courts have nothing to do with the internal management of business corporations, provided they keep within their corporate powers. (Gamble v. Queens County Water Co., 123 N. Y. 91; Flynn v. Brooklyn City R. R. Co., 158 N. Y. 493, 507.) Thus we said in the case last cited : Whatever may lawfully be done by the directors or stockholders, acting through majorities prescribed by law, must of necessity be submitted to by the minority, for corporations can be conducted upon no other basis. All questions within the scope of the corporate powers which relate to the policy of administration, to the expediency of proposed measures, or to the consideration of contracts, provided it is not so grossly inadequate as to be evidence of fraud, are beyond the province of the courts. The minority directors or stockholders cannot come into court upon allegations of a want of judgment or lack of efficiency on the part of the majority and change the course of administration. Corporate elections furnish the only remedy for internal dissensions, as the majority must rule so long as it keeps within the powers conferred by the charter.”

The complaint does not disclose the purposes for which the defendant corporation was organized, nor set forth its corporate powers except as it may be inferred from the statement of assets and liabilities that it carries on a manufacturing business, while the new corporation apparently was to be a “ realty ” company. If, however, no corporation in this state is authorized to organize another, divide its assets with it and take in exchange its entire capital stock, then the proposed plan is ultra vires and the execution thereof may be restrained by injunction.

Corporations are created by statute and have no powers except those conferred by statute, directly or indirectly. (L. 1892, ch. 687; L. 1895, ch. 672, § 10.) There is no statute in this state which directly authorizes one corporation to organize another and, as we think, such action is not indirectly authorized by any reasonable inference from the most extensive powers committed to any class of corporations known to *416 our law. Corporations ate organized by natural persons, acting under the direction of a statute, and they only can become corporators, directors or officers. “ Artificial persons,” without brain or body, existing only on paper through legislative command and incapable of thought or action except through natural persons, cannot create other artificial persons,” and those, others still, until the line is so extended and the capital stock so duplicated and reduplicated, as to result in confusion and fraud. If, in the case before us, the proposed plan is carried into effect, the old corporation will be the only stockholder of the new corporation when it comes into being, which is the time to test its legality, and the entire capital stock of the latter will have been taken from the assets of the former. After the old corporation has thus split itself into two ¿orporations, both together will have only the capital that the old corporation had before. Not a dollar of new capital will have been contributed either in money or property and only when the old corporation sells to subscribers or outsiders,— and it is not alleged that it will be able to sell to either,— all or a part of the shares of stock, issued to it by the new, can any money come from the transaction. This shows that the purpose of the strange action proposed is to increase the capital stock of the old company without complying with the provisions of the statute governing the subject. The increase is to be obtained by what is in effect a forced assessment upon the full paid and non-assessable shares of the stockholders, for unless they take new stock they lose a material part of their investment, although something they do not want is given in exchange. Thus they are virtually compelled by an unlawful scheme to enter into new contractual relations with strange parties. (Mason v. Pewabic Mining Co., 133 U. S. 50.) This would be an obvious evasion of the law which the courts will restrain when applied to by the proper party. As was well said by the presiding justice below in a useful opinion: “ But it is evident from the allegations of this complaint and from the inferences that fairly may be drawn from such allegations that what was in the contemplation of the directors *417 and majority stockholders of the defendant corporation was not to have that corporation make an actual sale of the real estate to another corporation and receive shares of stock as the consideration therefor, hut to resort to a device by which to increase its' capital hy dismembering itself and organizing another corporation of which it should be the only stockholder, and thus evade the provisions of the statute relating to the increase of the capital stock of a corporation. The defendant corporation, by the resolution, is authorized and directed to create a new corporation at the expense of the old one. What it is to do, therefore, is to be a corporate act done in its capacity as a corporation. Instead of increasing its capital stock in the manner provided by law, it is to separate its assets, deliver one portion of them to its own creature, capitalize that portion at a fixed valuation, and receive back all the shares of stock issued by its creature; and there that transaction really ends. Affording an opportunity to the stockholders of the old corporation to subscribe to the stock of the new one is merely an offer to them to buy from the old corporation this new stock after it comes into the possession of the old corporation.” (129 App. Div. 36, 40.)

We cannot assume from the allegations of the complaint that the old corporation will be able to sell the shares of new stock when issued as fully paid and delivered to it. Apparently it has not been able to sell all its own stock, for 500 shares of the amount authorized have not been issued. It is possible, therefore, that the old corporation will be compelled to permanently hold a part at least of the new shares, while the new corporation will have no individual stockholders to act as officers or directors.' The law permits no such anomaly as one corporation organized hy another corporation, which furnishes all its capital, takes all its shares of stock and holds them for sale. The new organization coijld never have a valid existence, for the disposition of the shares by the old-corporation would not validate an illegal charter.

Section forty of the Stock Corporation Law does not aid the defendants. That statute authorizes a stock corporation, *418 if permitted by its charter, to acquire, hold and dispose of shares of stock issued by another corporation, and in any case to acquire, hold and dispose of shares of stock issued by certain classes of corporations, including those engaged in a similar business and those with which it might be consolidated. (L. 1892, ch.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.E. 670, 194 N.Y. 409, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwab-v-e-g-potter-co-ny-1909.