Siegman v. Electric Vehicle Co.

140 F. 117, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4771
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedAugust 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 140 F. 117 (Siegman v. Electric Vehicle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Siegman v. Electric Vehicle Co., 140 F. 117, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4771 (circtdnj 1905).

Opinion

LANNING, District Judge.

The complainant in this cause is a holder of preferred and common stock of the Electric Vehicle Company. By his bill he seeks a decree requiring the defendant Martin Maloney to pay to the defendant the Electric Vehicle Company the sum of $704,800, being the amount distributed as dividends amongst the stockholders of the company in 1899 and 1900, which the complainant charges were paid with the aid of the vote of Mr. Maloney, then a director in the company, not out of the surplus or net profits, but out of the capital of the company. The present board of directors have refused to comply with the complainant’s demand that they sue the directors of 1899 and 1900 to compel them to make good the impaired capital, and the complainant has now filed the bill in this suit against the Electric Vehicle Company and Mr. Maloney to secure the relief to 'which he deems his corporation entitled.

The Electric Vehicle Compariy has filed a plea, together with a supporting'answer, as required by Equity Rule 32, and the present hearing is upon the bill and that plea only. The bill cannot be sustained unless the complainant shows that in their refusal the present board of directors have violated a trust or disregarded a plain duty. Corporations, like individuals, often have enforceable rights against others which it is deemed best not to press to suit. The purely discretionary powers of a board of directors concerning the internal affairs of their corporation, fairly and honestly exercised, are not reviewable or controllable by the courts of law or equity. A board of directors is elected by the stockholders of a corporation for the very purpose of managing its affairs, and in so doing, so long as they act in good faith and strictly intra vires, it is their judgment, and not that of its stockholders outside of the board of directors, or of any court, that is to shape its policies or decide upon its corporate acts. This principle is not disputed, and the citation of authorities in its suppport is unnecessary.

But section 30 of the New Jersey general corporations act of Í896 (P. L. p. 286), under which the Electric Vehicle Company is incorporated, provides that:

“No corporation shall make dividends, except from the surplus or net profits arising from its business, nor divide, withdraw, or in any way pay to the stockholders or any of them, any part of its capital stock, or reduce its capital stock, except according to this act, and in ease of any violation of the provisions of this section, the directors under whose administration the same may happen shall be jointly and severally liable, at any time within six years after paying such dividend, to the corporation and to its creditors, in the event of its dissolution or insolvency, to the full amount'of the dividend made or capital stock so divided, withdrawn, paid out or reduced, with interest on the same from the time such liability accrued; provided, that any director who may have been absent when the same was done, or who may have dissented from the act or resolution by which the same was done, may exonerate himself from such liability by causing his dissent to be entered at large on the minutes of the directors, at the time the same was done, or forthwith after he shall have notice of the same, and by causing a true copy of said dissent to-be published, within two weeks after the same shall have been so entéred, in a newspaper published in the county where the corporation has 'its principal office.”

[119]*119It thus appears that the legislative policy is to require the capital of a corporation to be preserved, unimpaired by the payment of dividends out of it, not only for the protection of creditors in the event of insolvency, but of the corporation itself while solvent. A board of directors have no legal power to declare dividends and direct their payment when they know, or ought to know, that the payment will result in impairing the capital fund of their corporation.

The substance of the complainant’s charges is that when Mr. Maloney and the other directors of 1899 and 1900 declared the dividends of those years they made no examination of the financial condition of the company, that they knowingly made inflated valuations of certain stocks appearing amongst the assets of the company for the purpose of building up' a fictitious surplus as the apparent warrant for the declarations of dividends, and that Mr. Maloney knew there was no real surplus out of which to pay the dividends.

The plea sets forth the resolutions of the present board of directors, which are as follows:

“The board of directors having examined the report of the committee appointed to consider the application of Richard Siegman, and having heard the statements made by the committee, and having examined documents, accounts and statements showing the history and affairs of the Company in the years eighteen hundred and ninety-nine and nineteen hundred, and the board being satisfied from its examination that the dividends declared in those years were reasonably made in the light of what was known and believed at the time, and that the said dividends were declared fairly and in good faith, and that it is not for the interest of the company that suit should be brought against the directors to recover said dividends, and the advice of counsel having been taken regarding the power and duty of this board:
“Resolved, that the demand of Richard Siegman that suit be brought against the former directors of the company to recover the dividends declared by them in the years eighteen hundred and ninety-nine and nineteen hundred, be and the same hereby is denied, unless and until such suit shall be ordered by a majority, in interest, of the stockholders, other than the said former directors, and that unless so ordered, no suit shall be brought by the company or on its behalf to recover from the said former directors any of the dividends declared.
“Resolved, that on the written demand of Richard Siegman or of any other stockholders the president shall call a special meeting of stockholders to consider the application of said Siegman, or of such other stockholders, for the bringing of such suit.”

It also appears by the plea that after the adoption of these resolutions the complainant requested that a spécial meeting of the stockholders be called to consider the complainant’s demand; that on February 24, 1904, the meeting was held, each stockholder having been previously served with notice of the call, and with a copy of the complainant’s demand, of the report of the committee, of the resolutions of the board, and of the complainant’s request for a special meeting of the stockholders; and that at this meeting of the stockholders the following resolutions were adopted by a vote representing 124,759 shares against a contrary vote representing 650 shares:

“Whereas, it appears that no just ground exists for a suit against the former directors of the company on account of the declaration by them of the dividends in the years 1S99 and 1900; and it further appears that it is not’expe[120]*120client nor for the interest of the company that a suit on that account should be brought against the said former directors: Therefore, resolved, that the action of the board of directors in refusing to bring suit against the former directors of the company to recover dividends declared by them in the years 1899 and 1900 be approved and ratified.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 F. 117, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siegman-v-electric-vehicle-co-circtdnj-1905.