Small v. Sullivan

218 A.D. 612, 219 N.Y.S. 34, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5987
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 17, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 218 A.D. 612 (Small v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Small v. Sullivan, 218 A.D. 612, 219 N.Y.S. 34, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5987 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Martin, J.

This suit is brought on behalf of bondholders and other creditors of the Interborough-Metropolitan Company against alleged directors.

The gravamen of the action is unlawful payment of dividends, notwithstanding impairment of the capital, accomplished as planned by means of a consolidation of the Interborough-Metropolitan with a paper corporation known as Finance and Holding Corporation which had no assets outside of $550 in cash and had never engaged in business.

The answers deny all the important allegations of the complaint and plead various defenses. The trust deed referred to and quoted in part in the answers was before the court at Special Term.

Plaintiff sought to strike out all the defenses for insufficiency. This relief was granted in part and denied in part, and these appeals resulted.

The action is brought by an alleged holder and owner of $5,000 par value four and one-half per cent collateral trust bonds of the Interborough-Metropolitan Company on behalf of himself and others similarly situated, to have declared illegal and fraudulent a consolidation of these two companies, to have it declared that certain dividends, $8,233,290 in total amount, paid by the Consolidated Company were in fact paid by the Interborough-Metropolitan Company while its capital was impaired, and to require the defendants to account to the plaintiff and other bondholders for their disposition of the property of the Interborough-Metropolitan and Consolidated and for loss sustained by the payment of the dividends, which loss it is sought to recover from the defendants, jointly and severally, with interest.

The Interborough-Metropolitan Company was a domestic corporation organized in 1906, with an issued and outstanding capital of $45,740,000 of preferred stock and $93,262,192 of common stock, it having also issued $67,825,000 face value of four and one-half per cent collateral trust gold bonds pursuant to a trust agreement with Windsor Trust Company, as trustee, which was [615]*615afterwards succeeded as trustee by the Empire Trust Company. The complaint alleges that the Interborough-Metropolitan Company was a holding company which before April 23, 1915, had sustained large losses by reason of its holdings in certain other corporations and had suffered an impairment of its capital to the extent of $80,000,000 and upwards; that it had accumulated in its treasury a large sum of money, resulting from the payment of dividends by the Interborough Rapid Transit Company, but such funds were not applicable to the payment of dividends on the Interborough-Metropolitan stock because it had no surplus profits and because in view of its impairment of capital, earnings did not . warrant dividends; and that none had been paid by the Inter-borough-Metropolitan upon its preferred stock for upwards of seven years before April 23, 1915.

It is also alleged that the Interborough-Metropolitan directors, some of whom are now dead and their estates being represented by their personal representatives, conceived a plan to pay dividends upon Interborough-Metropolitan preferred stock, of which* they themselves were large holders; and that they speculated in the purchase of both preferred and common stock in anticipation of its rise in value when dividends would be forthcoming. According to the complaint, difficulties inherent in lack of sufficient earnings and impairment of capital could be overcome, it was thought, by a consolidation of the Interborough-Metropolitan with the Finance and Holding Corporation.

The plaintiff asserts it was arranged that the new consolidated corporation should have a capitalization less than the fair net value of the Interborough-Metropolitan assets and that part of the capital of the Interborough-Metropolitan should be paid out in the form of dividends. The Interborough Consolidated Corporation was organized in the spring of 1915 with an authorized share capital of approximately $50,000,000 divided into approximately $45,000,000 of preferred stock in addition to common stock without par value but carried at five dollars a share.

It is asserted that the liability of the Consolidated upon the aforesaid Interborough-Metropolitan four and one-half per cent bonds amounted to $67,825,000; that the fair net value of Inter-borough-Metropolitan assets immediately prior to the consolidation was $52,559,397.54; that the assets of the Consolidated immediately after the consolidation was the same plus the $550 which, it is said, made up the assets of the Finance and Holding Corporation; that at the time of the consolidation the fair net value of the Interborough-Metropolitan assets did not equal the par value of its issued preferred and common stock, and that after the con[616]*616solidation the fair net value of the Consolidated assets did not equal the par value of the preferred and common stock of the Interborough-Metropolitan outstanding immediately prior to the consolidation.

The directors of the Consolidated, beginning on June 23, 1915, declared and paid quarterly dividends of one and one-half per cent upon the preferred stock of the Consolidated up to and including April, 1918, aggregating eighteen per cent, or $8,233,290, paid in cash.

The complaint further sets forth that the consolidation was illegal, a device under color 'of statutory authority to pay dividends not legally payable, because not paid from surplus profits, and resulted in a withdrawal of part of the capital of the InterboroughMetropolitan and a reduction thereof in a manner not authorized by law.

On or about March 28, 1919, the Consolidated was adjudicated bankrupt. In October, 1922, the successor trustee sold the collateral securing the Interborough-Metropolitan bonds and thereupon the balance of principal of the bonds became immediately due and payable. The trustee in bankruptcy of the Consolidated fully administered the estate, and paid the final dividend.

The bondholders and creditors of the Interborough-Metropolitan have received less than thirty per cent of the amount of their claims and there are no further assets available to them, so that the plaintiff and other bondholders have suffered a loss of at least seventy per cent of the par value of their bonds with interest from October 1, 1918. It is also alleged that such loss exceeds the aggregate amount of the dividends paid as aforesaid upon the Consolidated preferred stock.

The defendants at this time do not desire to challenge the sufficiency of the complaint.

The defenses which the plaintiff moved to strike out and which are to some extent differently numbered and pleaded in the various answers are: (1) the “ no recourse ” provision of the trust deed; (2) consolidation was permitted by trust deed and statutes, and was in good faith; (3) acquiescence and laches of plaintiff and other bondholders who deposited their bonds under a certain plan of readjustment and took and retained the benefits of the plan; (4) dividends complained of were paid from surplus profits of the Consolidated and defendants acted in good faith; (5) the cause of action, if any there be, is vested in the trustee and not in individual bondholders; (6) adequate remedy at law; (7) six years' Statute of Limitations, and (8) another action pending.

In addition, some of the defendant executors pleaded that the [617]*617estates have been administered and failure to present plaintiffs claim has the effect of barring a recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
218 A.D. 612, 219 N.Y.S. 34, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/small-v-sullivan-nyappdiv-1926.