Steinway v. Steinway & Sons

17 Misc. 43, 40 N.Y.S. 718
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 17 Misc. 43 (Steinway v. Steinway & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steinway v. Steinway & Sons, 17 Misc. 43, 40 N.Y.S. 718 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Beekman, J.

The plaintiff is a stockholder of the defendant corporation, Steinway & Sons, and. brings this action against, the trustees of the corporation for injunctive relief restraining the continuance .of certain acts alleged to be ultra vires, or to involve wasteful, extravagant • and unnecessary expenditures, having no proper relation to the business of the corporation. An accounting is also asked for in respect to past transactions- of • this character, - and the enforcement of a personal liability against the trustees ¡to the corporation by reason of these- alleged unlawful acts. •

It is-proper to state at .the outset that the issues in this action do not involve any charge of fraud. It is- not claimed that there was, nor does the evidence justify the .slightest imputation of, bad •faith on the part of any of the defendants. The - inquiry, then, is largely limited to the question of corporate power, and the equities ■which bear upon the plaintiff’s right to impeach the acts of which :he complains. The evidence is so voluminous, and the range of inquiry has been so broad,, covering, as it has, some sixteen years, ■'the entire period of the corporate existence of Steinway & Sons, that I shall not under take, to do more: than to state my conclusions Upon the proofs, although the entire record has been examined [45]*45with the care which the importance of the questions involved has required.

The chief ground upon which plaintiff rests his complaint is the very large and,- as he claims, unnecessary holdings of real estate by the corporation, and the extensive expenditure of money in developing the property for purposes having no immediate relation to the objects for. which Steinway & Sons was incorporated. It appears that the company was incorporated in 1876, under the General Manufacturing Act of this state, for the purpose, as expressed in the certificate of incorporation, of manufacturing and selling pianofortes and other musical instruments. At that time the business was one of large proportions, which had for many years been conducted by the Steinway family as a copartnership, and the change which was effected by the incorporation was one of form rather than of substance. It continued to be the same in its object and purposes, and under substantially the same ownership and control. The incorporators were the copartners, the defendant, William Steinway, and his brothers, O. F. Theodore Steinway and Albert •Steinway, by whom all of the assets of the firm were transferred to the corporation in exchange for the greater part of the capital stock, which was fixed at $1,500,000. Among these assets were certain real estate in the city of New York, and some 400 acres of land, situate at Astoria,' and within the limits of Long Island City, in Queens county. The principal factory and field of mechanical operation was- in this city, but it was designed ultimately to transfer the entire'manufacturing plant to Astoria, and it was with this purpose that the land at that place had been originally acquired. This policy thus inherited, and which has been continued by the corporation, was founded upon the theory that the growth and expansion of the business would require larger accommodations, which could not be obtained in the city of New York, and also that provision could be made for gathering together, as residents upon the property, the .large number of employees in their service, under conditions and influences of exceptional advantage to them and their families, and‘thus promoting better and more permanent service, on their part in their relations to the business. At the time this property was taken over this policy was in course- of execution; a portion of the manufacturing was carried on there, and some houses had been con-' structed in which employees of the company resided. Since then other factory buildings have been erected and improvements made, [46]*46so that at the present time the manufacturing part of the business of the.corporation is almost exclusively located, there,-and a very large proportion of the employees live upon the jnoperty in proximity to their work, either in' houses owned by the corporation or which they have acquired themselves by purchase from the corporation. ' For their benefit the' company has also, at a very moderate expenditure, contributed specific property and money toward the establishment of a church, a school, a free library and a free bath — all agencies- the usefulness of which in the development of the best industrial results of • a community is fully recognized.

The mass of these employees are .skilled operatives, -who have been permanently in the' service of the company for many years in harmonious relations" with their employer, which have been practically uninterrupted" by strikes or'suspension of busineSs for any cause. It may be fairly inferred from this that this policy of the- company in dealing with its operatives has been a wise one, and apart from its moral aspects has materially contributed to the resources of the corporation.

. In connection with this general purpose, and also for the purpose of developing the remainder of this large tract, -comprising in all about "4.00 acres, the trustees of the corporation have from time to time authorized the expenditure of money in regulating several streets or avenues running through the property, and in the construction of sewers and the - supply of water. There is nothing in the proofs before me which reflects upon the wisdom of this, -or which tends to show that the company has not realized a profitable return from the expenditure. ■ At the time the property wa's taken over by the company upon its incorporation, it had been laid oút as a part of the city in which it is, with streets and avenues, and had been subdivided into lots.. Its character was thus fixed,' and.assuming that the corporation had the right to hold that portion •of it which was not necessary for its immediate needs and future wants,- the propriety of these expenditures could not-be-assailed.

It is contended," however,' on the.part of the plaintiff that all •of the disbursements to. which I have referred, saving only those immediately connected with the works and plant, were improper. and not within the competency of the trustees to sanction;, that the corporation was actually engaged in an extensive land business, which was outside of its chartered powers; and that the .contributions made toward the church, library and kindred enterprises to which I have referred were likewise without authority in law.

[47]*47The general rule of law undoubtedly is that a corporation must keep within the prescription of its charter. The difficulty, however, which arises, and which has given birth to the many decisions upon the subject,, to some extent conflicting, is in the application of the rule to individual cases, so that the question is mainly one of construction (27 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 355), where it is also said: “ It'may be stated as a general rule that the charter of a corporation, read in connection with the general laws applicable thereto, is the true measure of its powers, and a transaction manifestly beyond those powers is ultra vires; yet, whatever under the charter and general laws, reasonably construed, may fairly be considered as incidental to the purposes for which the corporation was created, is not to be taken as prohibited, but is as much granted as that which is expressed.”

It is a question, therefore, in each case of the logical relation of the act to the corporate purpose expressed in the charter.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Misc. 43, 40 N.Y.S. 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinway-v-steinway-sons-nysupct-1896.