Strong v. Wheaton

38 Barb. 616, 1861 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 236
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 38 Barb. 616 (Strong v. Wheaton) 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
Strong v. Wheaton, 38 Barb. 616, 1861 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 236 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1861).

Opinion

By the Court, Mullin, J.

To entitle the plaintiff to recover he was bound to prove, not only the existence of the corporation, the recovery of a judgment against it, the issuing and return of an execution unsatisfied in whole or in [618]*618part, but the performance of labor to some amount, and that the defendants were stockholders.

It is insisted by the appellants’ counsel that there is no legal proof of service rendered to an amount equal to the sum recovered. The plaintiff himself was called, and testified that he commenced work for the corporation in December, 1856, and worked to the last of February, 1857, at twelve shillings per day. He does not inform us on what day or in what part of the month of December he commenced, nor the day on which his service ended. On his re-direct examination he says: “ we received no money in December, January or February; we asked for some in each of these months.” Being employed by the day, he was entitled to recover only for the amount of days he actually worked, and it is quite clear that he did not work all the time. To pbviate the difficulty of not having proved the precise number 6f days’ labor, the plaintiff gave evidence of a settlement with the foreman and a balance struck, in March, after the corporation had ceased business. This evidence was objected to, but the objection was overruled, and the evidence received. If the corporation had ceased business it is difficult to understand how the foreman could bind the company, much less the stockholders, by any act or declaration of his own.

I am quite clear that on the evidence the corporation was not bound by the settlement. But if I am mistaken in that, there can be no pretense whatever for holding the individual stockholders bound by the act or declaration of the foreman. He was in no respect their agent. .

The judgment recovered against the corporation is no evidence of the amount which the plaintiff is entitled to recover, as against the stockholders. It is essential to a right of action against the stockholders that a judgment should have been recovered, but it is proof of nothing beyond the fact of its own existence. (Moss v. McCullock, 5 Hill, 131. In Same v. Same, (7 Barb. 279,) the general term in the 4th district held a judgment against the corporation prima facie evi[619]*619dence, in an action against the stockholders; thus directly overruling the case in the 5th Hill. The latter case is overruled on the grounds that the case of Slee v. Bloom, (20 John. 669,) in the court of errors, was decisive of the question, and the court was not at liberty to follow the case in the 5 th Hill. Justice Cowen, in his opinion in the latter case, reviews the opinion of Chief Justice Spencer in Slee v. Bloom, and comes to the conclusion that he did not intend to depart from the law as laid down by the chancellor on the point under consideration, and as the judgment of the court of errors could be sustained upon other grounds, he concluded that Slee v. Bloom was not decisive. And the other judges seem to have concurred with him, and to have adopted, after mature consideration, the rule as I have stated it. With all respect for the court which felt itself at liberty to overrule the decision in 5th Hill, it seems to me that Justice Cowen was right in holding the decision of the court of errors not binding on this question.

When that case was before the chancellor, (5 John. Ch. 366,) it was shown that the indebtedness to the plaintiff from the corporation was for real and personal estate sold by Slee to A., for part of which he accepted stock in payment and a bond of the company for the residue. About the time the corporation ceased business the trustees and Slee had a settlement of their respective claims, and the balance due on the bond was ascertained. After this, Slee brought his action to recover such balance, against the company, and recovered. The bill was then filed against the stockholders, under the statute, to compel contributions to pay the plaintiff’s debt. The bill was dismissed by the chancellor on grounds not necessary to be considered here. The decree was reversed, and the case remitted to chancery to give effect to the judgment. In the decree entered in chancery there was an order of reference to ascertain and report the debt due to Slee, and the parties were permitted to use the pleadings and proofs, and to give such further competent proof as either [620]*620party might see fit to furnish. The master made a special report, in which he stated there were questions raised before him which it was important to the parties to have decided before he proceeded further in the investigation of the accounts; that in order to establish the debt against the corporation, a copy of the judgment in favor of Slee against it had been produced, and describes the judgment. He then proceeds to say that from the proved and admitted facts in the case the corporation did make, execute and deliver the bond described in the judgment record, and that it was given for a balance of account due to him as finally adjusted by the trustees. The plaintiff’s counsel also exhibited to the master a statement of his account against the corporation, and insisted the balance appearing due should be considered as the amount due to him. The defendants’ counsel insisted that the account, bond and judgment were not conclusive, but that they were at liberty to contest the same. The master further reported that neither the decree nor remittitur expressly directed that the bond and liquidation should be conclusive, nor that the consideration might be inquired into, but left the question whether they were to be treated as conclusive as prima facie evidence of the debt, to be ascertained according to the principles of equity. The plaintiff’s counsel excepted to the foregoing branch of the report. The chancellor, in disposing of this exception, says the judgment against the company in its corporate character is not binding and conclusive upon the defendants when charged in their private and individual characters, and as by the pleadings sufficient grounds had been laid for opening the account, he authorized the defendants to go into evidence on that subject. From this order there was no appeal to the court of errors, and the foregoing branch of it, as to the effect of the judgment, was affirmed. It will be seen from this abstract of the proceedings that the question whether a judgment against the corporation was conclusive against the stockholders was "the only question decided by the chancellor, and hence the only [621]*621one presented to the court of errors. Whether or not it was prima facie evidence could not be before the chancellor, because the defendants yielded to it as prima facie before the master, and merely claimed that they should be permitted to go behind it and assail the consideration. What the chief justice may have said as to the effect of the judgment is not very important. If the judgment was not conclusive, the question as to what other weight it might be entitled to as evidence was not before the court, and the remarks of the judge, while entitled to the highest respect, are not binding as authority.

It seems to me, therefore, that the supreme court was at full liberty to decide the question in the 5th Hill, entirely relieved from the case of Slee v. Bloom, as a binding authority; and having held that the judgment was not even prima facie

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Bluebook (online)
38 Barb. 616, 1861 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-v-wheaton-nysupct-1861.