Shayne v. . Evening Post Publishing Co.

61 N.E. 115, 168 N.Y. 70, 6 Bedell 70, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 860
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 61 N.E. 115 (Shayne v. . Evening Post Publishing 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
Shayne v. . Evening Post Publishing Co., 61 N.E. 115, 168 N.Y. 70, 6 Bedell 70, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 860 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

*73 Parker, Ch. J.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for alleged libels published in the defendant’s newspaper in February, 1899, and when the action came on for trial on the 15th day of May, 1900, the defendant’s attorney brought to the attention of the court the fact that the corporate existence of the defendant had terminated on the next preceding first day "of January. As the action had abated, the plaintiff thereafter moved the court at Special Term for an order continuing and reviving it against the former directors of the defunct corporation and the motion was granted. The Supreme Court in its Appellate Division, however, reached the conclusion that the death of the corporation operated to destroy the cause of action and so it reversed the order. There was a difference of view in the court, but the majority apparently felt constrained to follow the occasional dicta of judges that in actions of slander, libel, assault and battery, or false imprisonment, the property of the shareholders of the corporation is no more subject to pursuit after the dissolution of the corporation than is the property of an individual after his death. The statute providing for the maintenance of actions against executors or administrators of a wrongdoer, expressly excepts causes of the character last above named from the operation of the statute. (2 R. S. 447.) This statute modified the rule of the common law so as to permit actions to be brought against executors or administrators for wrongs done to property rights or interests of persons; but it does not affect one way or the other causes of action against corporations. For is there any statute in this state indicating a legislative policy to prevent the maintenance of actions against a corporation or its trustees after dissolution, whether the cause of action be founded on a wrong or otherAvise. For are we foreclosed by authority in this court from considering the question on its merits, for neither the diligence of counsel nor patient investigation on our part has brought to light any decision of this court bearing directly upon the question.

For this court to lay down a rule which would cut off causes *74 of action for wrongs against a corporation upon its dissolution would seem to be both arbitrary and unjust, and in. some cases it could be taken advantage of by the officers of the corporation by permitting the charter to expire and afterwards reorganizing, instead of renewing the charter before its expiration. In this case there is no question of the good faith of the defendant. Its charter was allowed to expire by an oversight and for a little time it proceeded as if its charter were in full force and effect. But if it be true, as the defendant contends, that the termination of the charter operated of itself to put an end absolutely to all causes of action for wrongs, then it matters not whether the termination be due to oversight or design, for it is the civil death of the corporation, and not the cause of its death that destroys causes of action for wrongs. It hardly need be suggested that if such were the established rule there would be found plenty of persons interested in corporations who would plan to so take advantage of it as that meritorious causes of action might be destroyed with only the temporary embarrassment and expense incident to the organization of a new corporation. Of still further importance, however, is the fact that such a rule would work unjustly in every case to a plaintiff in an action for libel such as this one, assuming as we should that the plaintiff has a meritorious cause of action.

If a recovery be had during the lifetime of the corporation, the moneys required to satisfy the judgment are necessarily taken from assets belonging to the stockholders and reduce the value of their holdings in the amount required to pay the judgment. If a judgment be recovered after the termination of the existence of the corporation the result is the same; for the avails of all the assets of the corporation after payment of all just debts and claims owing by it must be distributed " among the stockholders if the corporation be wound up, or if another course be taken and a reorganization be had, the assets of the new corporation are reduced in value in the amount required to pay the judgment. So far as the stockholders, who are the owners of all of the assets of the corporation are *75 concerned, therefore, it matters not whether the judgment be taken before dissolution or afterward, for in- any event it is the assets of the corporation which are used in satisfying the demand. In the one case the action is prosecuted to judgment against the corporation, and in the other against the directors, who by force of the statute have become the trustees of the assets of the corporation for the benefit of the stockholders. But this is a difference of form, not of substance, for both the corporation and the trustees represent the assets out of which the judgment must be satisfied and in which the stockholders are alone interested after the satisfaction of all just debts and demands. It is apparent, therefore, that the stockholders have no just ground upon which to predicate a claim that the party who has been wronged by the corporation shall he deprived of his cause of action in the event of the dissolution of the corporation. On the other hand, the plaintiff needs his damages, and in some cases the vindication which an award of damages brings,- none the .less because, designedly or carelessly, the charter of the corporation is permitted to expire.

If we are right in the view thus expressed as to the merits of the controversy, there can be no doubt what would he the decision of the court were the question one which had never before been up for consideration in the courts of this country or England. It is urged, however, that notwithstanding that the merits appeal strongly in the plaintiff’s behalf, and that there is an utter absence of decisions in this state standing in the way of a just determination, we are prevented from making that determination by a rule of the common law of England which concededly would have cut off such a claim as plaintiff’s. Inasmuch as the Constitution of 1777 provided that Such parts of the common law and of the acts of the legislature of the colony of Hew York as together already form the law of the said colony * * * shall be and continue the law of this state, subject to such alterations as the legislature shall make concerning the same,” it is contended that the common law is now in force except so far as it may *76 have been expressly altered by acts of the legislature of this state. This court has interpreted this provision of the Constitution to mean not that all the common law of England was the law of the colony at the time of the making of the Constitution, but only so much of it as was applicable to the circumstances of the colonists and conformable to our institutions. (Cu tting v. Cutting, 86 N. Y. 522, 529; Williams v. Williams, 8 N. Y. 525, 541.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 N.E. 115, 168 N.Y. 70, 6 Bedell 70, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shayne-v-evening-post-publishing-co-ny-1901.