Sturges v. . Vanderbilt

73 N.Y. 384, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 628
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 23, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 73 N.Y. 384 (Sturges v. . Vanderbilt) 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
Sturges v. . Vanderbilt, 73 N.Y. 384, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 628 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

This action was brought to compel the' defendants to apply certain moneys received by them as stockholders of the New Jersey Steam Navigation Company, out of its assets, to the payment of a judgment alleged to have been recovered by the plaintiff's intestate against that corporation in April, 1871, and affirmed by this court in June, 1875 (62 N. Y., 625), upon which judgment, execution has been issued and returned unsatisfied. A decree was rendered in "favor of the plaintiff at Special Term, but it was reversed, at General Term on the ground that the judgment set up in the complaint was a nullity, having been rendered after the; corporation, defendant, had been dissolved by the expiration, of the term of its charter, which took place in 1869, and while the action against it was pending.

This .court decided in -the case of McCulloch v. Norwood' (58 N. Y., 562) that the dissolution of a corporation terminates an action then pending against it, and that all subsequent proceedings against it are void, unless the action be' continued by order of the court, as provided by chapter 295 of the Laws of 1832. There was no such continuance, and therefore, unless there is some special circumstance in the present case to take it out of the operation of the general rule, the judgment in question is clearly void, and this action: cannot be maintained as a creditor’s suit.

It is claimed on the part of the plaintiff that under the New Jersey statute the corporation after dissolution was not *389 entirely defunct, but was continued in being for the purposes «of liquidation and the defense of existing suits, and that it «differs in this respect from the statute of this State relating do the liquidation of dissolved corporations. The argument in support of this claim is that by our statute (1 R. S., 600, «§ 9), upon the dissolution of a corporation, the directors or managers of its affairs at that time, are constituted trustees of the creditors and stockholders of the corporation dissolved; whereas by the statute of New Jersey (Laws of N. J.., 1846, Ap. 15, § 29) such directors and managers are in the like case constituted trustees of such corporation, and that this .language implies that the corporation still exists as cestui que ¿rust, and is capable of defending in its corporate name. We do not think that the language used has the effect con"tended for, especially when the corporation, as in this case, has expired by the termination of the period for which it was created, or that its capacity to sue and be sued was intended to be prolonged in any case beyond its own life. JFor in the same act (section 30) it is provided that the trustees shall have authority to sue by the name of the trustees of .such corporation, and shall be sueable by the same name, or in their individual names. The laws of Row Jersey provide a method of continuing actions pending against corporations at the time of their dissolution, which would be quite superfluous if the plaintiff is right in supposing that the faculty of defending, after dissolution, in the corporate name was preserved by the statute first cited. It is not material to refer to the New Jersey statute as to the mode of continuing an action, as that is a matter of practice which must be governed by our own laws, and in the present case there was no attempt to continue the action pursuant to the laws of either State.

It is further claimed, that, until a corporation is declared dissolved by judicial decree, creditors may proceed against it by its corporate name, and that it remains in esse until formally adjudged dissolved. All the cases cited in support «of this proposition relate to a dissolution in consequence of' *390 insolvency or non-user or mis-user of the corporate franchises,, or some other cause of forfeiture. In such cases, it is well-settled that the dissolution does not take effect until judicially declared. But the principle upon which that class of cases rests is not applicable to a dissolution by expiration of the charter. The dissolution in such a case is declared by the act of the Legislature itself. The limited time of existence-has expired and no judicial determination of that fact is. requisite. The corporation is de facto dead. (People v.. Walker, 17 N. Y., 503; Greeley v. Smith, 3 Story C. C. R., 658.) Where the charter of a corporation is annulled by act of the Legislature, the corporation is extinct and no judgment can be rendered against it. (Mumma v. Potomac Co.,, 8 Pet., 286; Merrill v. Suffolk Bk., 31 Me., 57.) We have been referred to no authority holding a contrary doctrine.

The appellant further claims that the defendants have estopped themselves from setting up the invalidity of the judgment against the corporation, by defending the action, which was tried in 1871, after the dissolution, and by the subsequent appeals, taken in the name of the company from said judgment to the «General Term and to this court, which appeals were taken after the dissolution.

A sufficient answer on behalf of the defendant Vanderbilt,, who is the only respondent here, is that it does not appear that he took any part in said defense or appeals, or authorized or was in any manner connected with them. It is; claimed that he was one of the trustees of the dissolved corporation by virtue of his having been a director at the time; of its dissolution, and that is found ; but this finding was: excepted to, and is not only unsustained by any evidence, but is contrary to the uncontroverted evidence, and to other, findings in the case.

It is found that in the month of. January, 1864, the defendant Vanderbilt and others were directors, and that no persons other than said defendants were elected after January 1,1864, either as directors or president of the company ; but it is also found that in the month of September, 1864, the *391 defendant Vanderbilt sold and delivered his shares in the stock of the company to the defendant Englis, and ceased to be a stockholder in said company. That subsequently to said sale and delivery, the defendant Vanderbilt attended no meeting of the board of directors, and did not act or assume to act as a director thereof, and did not engage in or have any transaction either as stockholder, director, officer, manager or employee of the company.

By the terms of the charter of the company the directors were to be elected annually for the term of one year. The charter contains no provision as to directors holding over until their successors are elected. Although by the general rule of law directors may so hold over, yet there is no rule which compels them to do so, and where as in this case a director sells out all his stock in a corporation and ceases to take any part in the management of its affairs or the meetings of its directors, he is not bound to see that a successor is elected in his place or to tender any formal resignation.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.Y. 384, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturges-v-vanderbilt-ny-1878.