Schwarz v. General Aniline & Film Corp.

113 N.E.2d 533, 305 N.Y. 395, 1953 N.Y. LEXIS 808
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 113 N.E.2d 533 (Schwarz v. General Aniline & Film Corp.) 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
Schwarz v. General Aniline & Film Corp., 113 N.E.2d 533, 305 N.Y. 395, 1953 N.Y. LEXIS 808 (N.Y. 1953).

Opinions

Desmond, J.

This proceeding is brought under sections 64 to 68, found in article 6-A, as enacted in 1945 (L. 1945, ch. 869), of the General Corporation Law, which sections set up a system whereby the New York courts may, in certain situations, order that a corporation reimburse its officials for their previously [398]*398incurred litigation expenses. With section 63 of the same law we are not concerned here since that part of article 6-A has to do with reimbursements authorized by corporate charter or resolutions. The real question here is as to whether sections 64 to 68, hereinafter dealt with at greater length, cover the present case.

In the petition, which has been dismissed for insufficiency (and the allegations of which we accept as true), it is said, among other things, that in December, 1941, a Grand Jury in the United States District Court, Southern District of New York, indicted General Aniline & Film Corporation and other defendants, including petitioner Schwarz, individually, for alleged violations of the first section of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (U. S. Code, tit. 15, § 1). Petitioner was at that time a vice-president and director of General Aniline & Film Corporation, but had resigned as officer and director, and retired, at the end of 1941, a few days after the indictment was handed up. The petition goes on to say that Schwarz was not guilty of any violation of the Sherman Act, that he pleaded not guilty to the indictment, and retained attorneys in New York City to whom he agreed to pay a fee of $7,500 to defend him up to but not including the trial if there should be one, these attorneys informing him at the time that, if the case should go to trial the fee for representing him at such a trial would be $1,000 per day; that Schwarz, from his own funds, paid these attorneys a retainer fee of $7,500 plus certain disbursements. The petition further says that, in January, 1950, petitioner’s lawyers informed him that the United States was no longer interested in prosecuting the cause, but desired to terminate it and was willing, if the court would consent, to permit all the individual defendants, including Schwarz, to plead nolo contendere (see Federal Buies of Criminal Procedure, rule 11), that petitioner did not wish to do so, but that he was told by his attorneys that he would probably be punished by a small fine only, and that the expense of a trial of the case would be financially crushing to him. He alleges in this petition that, pursuaded by these arguments, he pleaded nolo contendere, was fined $500 by the court, paid the fine and requested General Aniline & Film Corporation to reimburse him but that the corporation notified him that it did not feel authorized to do so without an order of [399]*399the court. Thereupon, through new attorneys, petitioner applied to the United States District Court for an order directing reimbursement of these expenses, but that proceeding was dis- A missed on the ground that the Federal court had no power to enter such an order in the criminal cause, and that, therefore, petitioner’s rights, if any, would, under section 65 (supra), have to be enforced in the State courts. Petitioner thereupon brought this present proceeding in Supreme Court, New York County. Respondent contended, at Special Term, that the proceeding did not lie, for two reasons: first, that the statutes were not intended by the Legislature to apply to expenses incurred in criminal proceedings, but only in stockholders’ suits and similar civil causes; and, second, that even if they did apply, petitioner was barred from recovering by the language found at the end of section 64 (supra), which says that there shall be no such reimbursement in relation to matters as to which it shall have been adjudged, in the action, suit or proceeding in which the fees were incurred, that the official, director or employee is liable for misconduct ” in the performance of his duties. The Special Term opinion said, quoting People v. Daiboch (265 N. Y. 125,128, 129), that, while a plea of nolo contendere is not an admission of guilt, it nonetheless is a conviction and has the same consequences, in the criminal cause in which it is entered, as a plea of guilty. The court called attention to section 5 of the Clayton Act (U. S. Code, tit. 15, § 16) to the effect that a judgment entered on a plea of nolo contendere in an antitrust prosecution is not to be treated as an admission in any other action. Nonetheless, the court thought that the imposition of a fine on petitioner amounted to an adjudication that he was »- liable for misconduct in the performance of his duties, and that, therefore, under the express language of section 64, he could not be awarded reimbursement.____

On petitioner’s appeal to the Appellate Division, the four Justices who voted for affirmance wrote no opinion, so that we do not know on which ground, or grounds, the majority based its approval of a dismissal of the petition. The dissenting Justice, in that court, was of the opinion that petitioner’s conviction did not constitute an adjudication of misconduct ” within the meaning of section 64. He stated that no moral [400]*400turpitude had been shown in the criminal cause as to this petitioner, and that, accordingly, it would not be against public policy to permit reimbursement. He pointed out that the facts in the antitrust prosecution were not before the court in this petition, and so, he thought, the plea of nolo contendere did not necessarily show any ‘1 misconduct ” as to the corporation, and indeed, might have covered conduct in promotion of the corporation’s interests, and that the making of the plea by defendant might well have been a mere settlement in the antitrust suit, not involving any adjudication, or any misconduct at all. Despite the discussion in appellant’s brief here as to the absence of moral turpitude in antitrust law crimes, it is the fact, and stated in the petition, that these attorneys’ fees were spent by petitioner in defending himself against an indictment for a violation of a Federal criminal statute, that he put-in a plea of nolo contendere, which is unknown except in criminal causes, and that he was ordered to, and did, pay a fine. Thus, whatever be his moral guilt or lack of it, he did incur these expenses while defending himself in a criminal prosecution.

Neither court below discussed the question as to whether article 6-A was intended to apply to expenses incurred by an officer or director in his defense against a criminal indictment. For ourselves, however, we cannot believe that the Legislature, in enacting article 6-A, ever intended to provide reimbursement to anyone for his attorneys’ fees in a criminal cause against himself. As we know, these provisions for reimbursement came into the statute law after, and because of, the famous opinion of Judge Crouch, sitting as an Official Referee, in 1939, in New York Dock Co. v. McCollum (173 Misc. 106). (See Bailey v. Bush Term. Co., 293 N. Y. 735.) There it had been decided, in effect, that the corporation in whose behalf a stockholder’s suit is brought, was not obligated, at common law, to pay legal fees incurred by its directors in defending themselves as individual defendants in such an action. That left corporate directors (and officers) in an unsatisfactory position since, when sued and although successful in a stockholder’s suit, they would find themselves exonerated from fault but subject to the heavy attorneys ’ fees characteristic of the defense of such actions.

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Bluebook (online)
113 N.E.2d 533, 305 N.Y. 395, 1953 N.Y. LEXIS 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwarz-v-general-aniline-film-corp-ny-1953.