Strong v. . Brooklyn Cross-Town R.R. Co.

93 N.Y. 426, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 301
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 9, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 93 N.Y. 426 (Strong v. . Brooklyn Cross-Town R.R. 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
Strong v. . Brooklyn Cross-Town R.R. Co., 93 N.Y. 426, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 301 (N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

The defendant is. a horse railroad company, organized under the general laws of this State, and the plaintiff is the holder of fifty shares of its capital stock, of one hundred dollars each.

The company was organized in the year 1868, with a capital of $300,000. In 1874 its capital was increased to $400,000. In June, 1878, under chapter 264 of the Laws of 1878, it reduced its capital to $200,000 by a vote of its directors and stockholders, and the proceedings prescribed by that act, and immediately thereafter the directors caused to be issued certificates of indebtedness, bearing interest, for $200,000, to be distributed to the stockholders on their surrendering their' certificates for $100 shares, and accepting in exchange certificates for $50 shares. All of the stockholders except the plaintiff and the holders of fifty other shares assented to this arrangement, and surrendered their certificates of shares of $100 each, receiving in exchange certificates for an equal number of shares of $50 each, together with certificates of indebtedness for a like amount.

The judgment appealed from restrains the company from paying these certificates of indebtedness, or any part thereof, or any interest thereon, out of the earnings or funds of the company.

Reynolds, J., on continuing the temporary injunction at Special Term, held that the act of 1878 (Chap. 264), under which the defendant proceeded, did not authorize the payment to the stockholders of any of the capital, but was intended *431 simply to enable corporations whose capital had been impaired to reduce its nominal amount.

There is much in the frame of the act which favors this view.

The only things required by the act are that whenever any company shall desire to call a meeting of its stockholders for the purpose of “ diminishing the amount of its capital stock,” a certain notice shall be published and served; that a vote of at least two-thirds of all the shares of stock shall be necessary to a diminution of the amount of the capital stock; that the meeting shall proceed and the vote be taken in the manner pointed out by the act, and that if, on canvassing the votes, it shall be found that a sufficient number of votes have been given in favor of diminishing the amount of capital, a certificate shall be made and verified, showing:

First. The amount of capital aótually paid in.

Second.' The whole amount of debts and liabilities of the company.

Third. The amount to which the capital stock shall be diminished.

This certificate is required to be filed, with the approval of the comptroller, to the effect:

First. That the reduced capital is sufficient for the proper purposes of the company.

Second. That it is in excess of all debts and liabilities of the company, exclusive of debts secured by trust mortgages.

Third. That the actual market value of the stock of the company prior to the reduction of the capital was less than the par value of the same.

These are all the requirements of the act, and it closes by declaring that when the certificate is filed, the capital stock of the corporation shall be reduced to the amount specified in such certificate.

There is no provision for returning any portion of the actual capital held by the company, to the stockholders, nor for any inquiry into the financial condition of the company, beyond the fact how much of the capital was paid in and the amount *432 of its debts not secured by trust mortgages. The filing of the certificate of itself operates to reduce the amount of the capital, without the withdrawal of any part of the actual capital; and it will be seen that while the act is grossly incomplete if it was intended to authorize the distribution of any part of the actual capital, it contains every thing that is essential if its object was simply to reduce the nominal amount of capital specified in the certificate of incorporation, so as to meet the case of a company whose actual capital has been impaired, or who has been unable to obtain subscriptions to its stock for the full amount named in the certificate of incorporation.

The requirement that, to authorize it to avail itself of the provisions of the act, the company must obtain the certificate of the comptroller that the market value of its stock is less than par, shows that the reduction which the act had in view was the reduction of the nominal capital to an amount which should correspond with its , actual value, rather than a withdrawal and distribution of actual capital. • A corporation whose actual capital greatly exceeds the nominal amount of its stock is precluded from availing itself of the act, unless the fact should be that while its stock is intrinsically worth much more than par, its market value is less. Even in that exceptional case, a reduction of the amount of its capital as fixed in its charter would not afford the proper relief. All the provisions of the act seem, by its language, to be aimed at diminution of the amount at which the capital stock was originally fixed, not at a withdrawal and distribution of actual capital.

If such withdrawal had been intended, provision would have been made for ascertaining in some way how much should be withdrawn and under what restrictions. The amount of property available for the joayinent of debts would have to be ascertained as well as the amount of the debts; in this act no inquiry is required to be instituted as to /the value of the property or assets of the corporation, nor as to how much can be withdrawn or distributed with safety to its creditors, but the comptroller is only to certify that the reduced capital, that is, the amount to which it is to be diminished, is sufficient for *433 the proper purposes of the company, and that it exceeds all debts and liabilities of the company, exclusive of debts secured by trust mortgages. In view of the strict provisions of the act of 1825 (1 R. S. 602), which prohibit the directors of any company from dividing or paying to stockholders any part of its capital, and'which are not repealed by the act of 1878, it is not supposable that the legislature intended to permit a corporation to distribute any part of its actual capital among stockholders, so long as it owed debts, without retaining enough property to pay the debts; but no provision is made in the act of 1878 for any examination into these matters. Its provisions are all consistent with the interpretation that the act had in view only the diminution of the amount fixed as the amount of the capital stock, and did not contemplate the distribution of any part of the actual capital.

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.Y. 426, 1883 N.Y. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-v-brooklyn-cross-town-rr-co-ny-1883.