Stokes v. . Continental Trust Co.

78 N.E. 1090, 186 N.Y. 285, 24 Bedell 285, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1112
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 13, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 78 N.E. 1090 (Stokes v. . Continental Trust 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
Stokes v. . Continental Trust Co., 78 N.E. 1090, 186 N.Y. 285, 24 Bedell 285, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1112 (N.Y. 1906).

Opinions

Vann, J.

Mo exception worthy of notice appears in the record, except those filed to the conclusions of law found by the trial judge. If those conclusions are supported by the facts found, the Appellate Division had no power to reverse the judgment rendered by the Special Term on questions of law only, as, from the silence of the record, it must be presumed was done. (Code Civ. Pro. § 1338.) If the facts found did not warrant the légal conclusions of the trial court the order of reversal was right and should be affirmed. Thus the question presented for decision is'* whether according to the facts found the plaintiff had the legal right to subscribe for and take the same number of shares of the new stock that he held of the old ?

The subject is not regulated by statute and the question *290 presented has never been directly passed upon by this court, and only to a limited extent has it been considered by courts in this state. (Miller v. Illinois Central R. R. Co., 24 Barb. 312; Matter of Wheeler, 2 Abb. Pr. [N. S.] 361; Currie v. White, 45 N. Y. 822.)

In the first case cited judgment was rendered by a divided vote of the General Term in. the first district. The court held that the plaintiff was entitled to no relief because he did not own any shares when the new stock was issued but only an option, and that he could not claim to be an actual holder until he had exercised his right of election. The court further said, however, that if he was the owner of shares at the time of the new issue he had no absolute right as such owner to a distributive allotment of the new stock.

Matter of Wheeler was decided by Jndge Mason at Special Term, and although the point was not directly involved, the learned judge said : As I understand the law all these old stockholders had a right to share in the issuing of this new stock in proportion to the amount of stock held by them. And if none of the stock was to be apportioned to the old stockholders, they had certainly the right to have the new stock sold at public sale, and to the highest bidder, that they might share in the gains arising from the sale. In short, the old stockholders, as this was good stock and above par, had a property in the new stock, or a right at least to be secured the profits to be derived from a fair sale of it if they did not wish to purchase it themselves; and they have been deprived of this by the course which these directors have taken with this' new stock by transferring or issuing it to themselves and others in a manner not authorized by law.”

In Currie v. White the point was not directly involved, but Judge Folger, referring to the rights acquired under a certain contract, said: “ One of these rights was to take new shares upon any legitimate increase of the capital stock, which right attaches to the old shares, not as profit or income, but as inherent in the shares in .their very creation,” citing Atkins v. Albree (12 Allen, 359); Brander v. Brander (4 Ves. 800, and *291 notes, Sumner ed.). While this was said in a dissenting opinion, Judge Rapallo, who spoke for the court, concurred, saying, “ As to the claim for the additional stock, I concur in the conclusions of my learned brother Folger.” The fair implication from both opinions is that if the plaintiff had preserved his rights, he would have been entitled to the new stock.

In other jurisdictions the decisions support the claim of the plaintiff with the exception of Ohio Insurance Co. v. Nunnemacher (15 Ind. 294) which turned on the language of the charter. The leading authority is Gray v. Portland Bank, decided in 1807 and reported in 3 Mass. 364. In that case a verdict was found for the plaintiff, subject, by the agreement of the parties, to the opinion of the court upon the evidence in the case whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover, and, if so, as to the measure of damages. The court held that stockholders who held old stock had a right to subscribe for and take new stock in proportion to their respective shares. As the corporation refused this right to the plaintiff he was permitted to recover the excess of the market value above the par value, with interest. In the course of its argument the court said: “ A share in the stock or trust when only the least sum has been paid in is a share in the power of increasing it when the trustee determines or rather when the cestuis que trustent agree upon employing a greater sum. * * A vote to increase the capital stock, if it was not the creation of a new and disjointed capital, was in its nature an agreement among the stockholders to enlarge their shares in the amount or in the number to the extent required to effect that increase. * * * If from the progress of the institution and the expense incurred in it any advance upon the additional shares might be obtained in the market, this advance upon the shares relinquished belonged to the whole, and was not to be disposed of at the will of a majority of the stockholders to the partial benefit of some and exclusion of others.”

This’ decision has stood unquestioned for nearly a hundred years and has been followed generally by courts of the highest *292 standing. It is the foundation of the rule upon the subject that prevails, almost without exception, throughout the entire-country.

In Way v. American Grease Company (60 N. J. Eq. 263, 269) the head note fairly expresses the decision as follows: Directors of a corporation, which is fully organized and in the active conduct of its business, are bound to afford to existing stockholders an opportunity to subscribe for any new shares of its capital, in proportion to their holdings, before disposing of such new shares in any other way.”

In Eidman v. Bowman (58 Ill. 444, 447) it was said: When this corporation was organized, the charter and all of its franchises and privileges vested in the shareholders and the directors became their trustees for its management. The right to the remainder of the stock, when it should be issued, vested in the original stockholders, in proportion to the amount each held of the original stock, if they would pay for it, and was as fully theirs as was the stock already held and for which they had paid.”

In Dousman v. Wisconsin, etc., Co. (40 Wis. 418, 421) it was held that a court of equity would compel a corporation to issue to every stockholder his proportion of new stock on the ground that he has a right to maintain his proportionate interest in the corporation, certainly as long as there is sufficient stock remaining undisposed of by the corporation.”

In Jones v. Morrison (31 Minn. 140, 152) it was said: “ When the proposition that a corporation is trustee of the corporate property for the benefit of.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.E. 1090, 186 N.Y. 285, 24 Bedell 285, 1906 N.Y. LEXIS 1112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-continental-trust-co-ny-1906.