Stratton v. Bertles

238 A.D. 87, 263 N.Y.S. 466, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9428
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 7, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 238 A.D. 87 (Stratton v. Bertles) 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
Stratton v. Bertles, 238 A.D. 87, 263 N.Y.S. 466, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9428 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Townley, J.

This action is brought by the trustees in bankruptcy of a Delaware corporation, Clarence Saunders Stores, Inc., to [88]*88recover from defendant, respondent, Bertles, the amount of dividends which the defendant as a director of that corporation is alleged to have participated in declaring in violation of the Delaware statute. The action is based on sections 34 and 35 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware, which are pleaded. The amount sought is $127,975.86. This sum is the aggregate of four allegedly unlawfully declared dividends which were paid out in 1929. During this period the defendant was a director of the company. The dividends were paid out of the capital and not out of surplus or net earnings.. The facts are set forth in the complaint showing how the fictitious profits were arrived at and how the declaration of the payments of dividends was unlawful. It is alleged that the non-existence of surplus earnings or profits was well known to the defendant and that his action in afithorizing the payment of dividends was either willfully or negligently in violation of the charter, the by-laws and the law of Delaware.

The first separate and complete defense (which is also pleaded as a partial defense) sets up as a plea in abatement that the Delaware statute sued on is a penal statute of a foreign State and is, therefore, not enforcible in the courts of this State. This conclusion is reached by the following reasoning: Prior to March 10, 1899, section 7 of chapter 147 of 17 Laws of Delaware (1883) provided that in the event of a wrongful declaration of dividends out of capital, the creditors, on a dissolution or insolvency, might bring an action to recover the full amount of the dividend illegally declared. This section 7 was construed by the Superior Court of Delaware in the case of Roeblings Sons Co. v. Mode (1 Pennewill, 515; 43 Atl. 480) as providing for an action in equity to recover the wrongfully declared dividend for the benefit of all creditors. The court held that the statute did not provide for an action on the case by a single creditor to recover the full amount of his indebtedness. Thereafter the Legislature in Delaware amended the statute to provide that an action could be brought under it by a single creditor against a director who had participated in the declaration of an improper dividend, to recover on the debt up to the full amount of the dividend improperly declared. (21 Laws of Delaware [1899], chap. 273, § 18.) Sections 34 and 35 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware were derived in part from section 7 of chapter 147 of 17 Laws of Delaware (1883), and section 18 of chapter 273 of 21 Laws of Delaware (1899). The conclusion of the pleader then is that sections 34 and 35 by action of the Legislature have been declared in effect to constitute a penal statute which may be sued upon by each individual creditor for his own benefit [89]*89and not as a general equitable claim, for the return of the amount of an unlawful dividend to the corporation for the benefit of all creditors.

The relevant part of section 35 of the General Corporation Law of,the State of Delaware reads thus: “ * * * the Directors under whose administration the same may happen shall be jointly and severally liable, in an action on the case, at any time within six years after paying such unlawful dividend, to the corporation and to its creditors, or any of them, in the event of its dissolution or insolvency, to the full amount of the dividend so -unlawfully paid, * * *.”

The parallel section of the New York law (section 58 of the Stock Corporation Law, supra) is as follows: “ * * * the directors in whose administration the same shall have been declared or made * * * shall be hable jointly and severally to such corporation and to the creditors thereof to the full amount of any loss sustained by such corporation or by its creditors respectively by reason of such dividend or distribution.”

It is urged that this court should not take jurisdiction of the suit at bar. Section 35 of the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware, it is claimed, is a penal statute of a kind so different from section 58 of the New York Stock Corporation Law that the Delaware statute should not be enforced here on the principle that the obligation of comity is denied where a foreign statute is sought to be enforced against a citizen, which has created a liability, or has granted a remedy, unknown to the common law, or contrary to our declared policy.” (Hutchinson v. Ward, 192 N. Y. 375, 381.) The argument is that there is a material difference in policy between making the directors liable for the repayment “ to ” the entire amount of the illegal dividend and making the directors liable for the full amount of any “ loss ” sustained by the corporation by reason of an illegal dividend. Defendant relies strongly upon Merchants' Bank v. Bliss (35 N. Y. 412). In that case the court construed the statute which made the trustees jointly and severally hable for all the debts of the company in the case of a wrongful declaration of dividends. However small or trifling the amount of the erroneous dividend, the trustees were subjected to the whole amount of the debts of the company. This was declared a penal statute. It is clear that both the present New York statute and the present Delaware statute are in no wise penal in that sense. The Delaware statute makes the defendant liable for the return to the company of the capital depreciation suffered “ to the full amount ” of the illegal dividend. The New York statute is somewhat less drastic in that it makes the directors liable for [90]*90illegally declared dividends only to the extent that the corporation can show a loss.

The cases in which the Court of Appeals of this State has refused to take jurisdiction of suits in this forum under foreign statutes fixing some sort, of liability on stockholders, involve very extreme statutes, such as that interpreted in Marshall v. Sherman (148 N. Y. 9). In that case the court was considering a Kansas statute. This statute provided, among other things, that plaintiff, having an unsatisfied execution against a corporation, might proceed by action to charge the stockholders with the amount of his judgment. This was held to be a type of action unknown to the common law. The court said that if an action could be maintained at all in New York on such a liability, it must be in such form and by such modes of procedure as stockholders’ liabilities created under our own statutes are enforced against our own citizens. The court then said that a single creditor under the Kansas statute would not be permitted to sue a single stockholder for the recovery of a specific sum of money in New York. Another type of case was illustrated by Bank of China, etc., v. Morse (168 N. Y. 458). The court refused to take jurisdiction in that case because it held that the statute under which the plaintiff was suing was unequal and oppressive.

At common law the creditors of a corporation have no right to interfere with the company’s management and have no cause to complain of wrongful acts, but they may hold the company’s agent hable for wasting assets which are needed to satisfy their claim on the ground that this constitutes a misapplication of trust funds. (1 Morawetz Priv. Corp.

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Bluebook (online)
238 A.D. 87, 263 N.Y.S. 466, 1933 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stratton-v-bertles-nyappdiv-1933.