Warner v. Morgan

81 Misc. 685, 143 N.Y.S. 516
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 81 Misc. 685 (Warner v. Morgan) 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
Warner v. Morgan, 81 Misc. 685, 143 N.Y.S. 516 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Goff, J.

This is an action by a stockholder of defendant Corralities Company, on behalf of himself and all the other stockholders of the said company who did not consent to the making of either of two contracts between defendants, The Corralities Com[686]*686pany and Edwin D. Morgan, dated respectively, December 7, 1910, and May 8, 1911, to set the said contracts aside-and for an accounting by the defendant Edwin D. Morg-an of the sums of money which he has received under the said contracts.

In 1900 Mr. Morgan became president of The Oorralities Company, a Colorado corporation organized for raising cattle, and continued as such until December 7, 1910, when he resigned, and the contract which is the subject of this action was made. When Mr. Morgan became president the property of the company consisted of an uninclosed tract of land of about 900,000 acres in Chihuahua, Mexico, unproductive, poorly watered and with an inferior breed of Mexican cattle. The company had a bonded indebtedness of $200,000, drawing- interest at eight per cent, per annum, upon which no interest had been paid, and its interest payment on current loans exceeded its annual profits from its business. During Mr. Morgan’s administration the whole ranch was inclosed by a wire fence, numerous wells were driven, the grade of the cattle was improved at least three hundred per cent., about 150,000 acres were irrigated, and all these improvements were paid for out of the receipts derived from the sale of cattle, and the corporation’s indebtedness was not increased. The bonded debt was refunded and the holders of the old bonds with accrued interest exchanged them for new bonds bearing four per cent, interest, payable out of the income to be derived from the property. In-1910 the property was put upon a dividend paying basis, and in 1910, 1911 and 1912 dividends of two per cent., six per cent, and six per cent., respectively, were distributed. It is not denied that during Mr. Morgan’s presidency the value of the property was greatly increased.

Upon Mr. Morgan’s resignation as president on [687]*687December 7, 1910, in order to retain Ms services the stockholders approved on April 11, 1911, at the annual meeting of the company, of a contract executed on the date of his resignation, which provided in substance that Mr. Morgan agreed to serve as general agent of the corporation for ten years, beginning with the year 1911, his duties to be substantially the same as those performed by him as president, and the company agreed to pay him (a) fifteen per cent, for the first year and seven and one-half per cent, for the remaining nine years of the gross receipts of the company from the sale of live stock, and (b) ten per cent, of the price at which the Avhole or any part of the properties of the company should be sold, if sold during said ten years, and, in case of no sale or only a partial sale being made during ten years, ten per cent, of the appraised value of the properties and any addition or improve'ments thereto; and it was stipulated that if no sales were made the appraised value of the property should be $2,000,000, and that in case of his death, resignation or incapacity that said ten per cent., or $200,000, should be paid to Mr. Morgan or his estate at the time of such death, resignation or incapacity; and (c) seAren and one-half per cent, of the gross receipts of the company from the sale of farm products to be paid only, however, in case the receipts from such sale exceeded the cost thereof and fifteen per cent, in addition. This contract was modified by a contract executed May 8, 1911, and approved by the stockholders at the annual meeting on April 9, 1912, as follows: (a) As to the commission to be paid upon the sales of live stock, it proAdded “ that in any of said years Avhen 6 per cent, is not earned or paid on the preferred stock of the company said commission for that particular year payable to him in accordance tliereAvith shall be only such proportion of such commission for [688]*688that particular year as the dividend actually earned or paid on the said preferred stock during that year shall bear to 6 per cent., and if no dividend is earned or paid on the preferred stock in that particular year, then no commission shall be paid to him for that particular year.” (b) In reference to the ten per cent, commission to be paid upon the sales of the property of the company it provided “ that said 10 per c'ent. commission shall not be paid to said Morgan if he resigns within two years from the date of this agreement; and provided further that in case he shall resign at any time between December 7, 1912, and December 7,1915, then said Morgan shall be paid such proportion of said 10 per cent, commission as the period from the date of this contract to the date of his resignation shall bear to the period of ten years.”

The plaintiff claims that this amended contract is ultra vires and unfair. It is not alleged in the com- ’ plaint that the contract is fraudulent nor collusive nor ultra vires, but by amendment on the trial the plaintiff was permitted to add an allegation of ultra vires. The plaintiff’s contentions cannot be sustained.

In the first place the contract was plainly within the powers of the corporation. A corporation which must act through agents has power to emplo}?- a general manager. That it may agree to pay him for his services is too clear for argument. Article III of the bylaws of The Corralities Company provides that the directors shall have power to appoint such agents and employees of the company as they may deem necessary, and to fix their salaries and regulate other powers and duties.” The plaintiff bases his argument on the assertion that the provision in Mr. Morgan’s contract for the bonus of ten per cent, on the value of the property is a gratuity ” and a “ gift ” of the' corporation’s money, and relies on the case of Beers [689]*689v. New York Life Ins. Co., 66 Hun, 75. In that case an action was brought by the former president of the defendant to recover the first quarterly payment of a salary agreed to be paid him under a contract executed at the direction of the company’s board of trustees. The plaintiff for many years prior to February 10, 1892, had been president of the defendant company. At a meeting of the board of trustees held on February 8, 1892, at which meeting the board accepted his resignation as president, to take effect on February 10, 1892, the board authorized an agreement whereby his services in an advisory capacity were to be secured during the remainder of his life upon half pay, viz., at an annual salary of $37,500. Such a contract was made, but the contract, so far as the plaintiff was concerned, was “ so far as strength and health might permit,” and it should be particularly noticed that all the negotiations leading up to the contract were permeated with the idea that the contract was based upon past services, and the very recitals of the contract itself contain the words, “ a proper recognition of such services.” This contract was held ultra vires. But the Beers case is obviously different from that at bar. In the Beers case the corporation was attempting to provide, a salary for a retiring president, .not for services to be continued as president, but for such services as might be required, if any. The contract did not depend upon Beer’s ability to render any service to the company. The payment to Beers, therefore, was not in consideration for services and was a mere “ gift ” or “ gratuity ” and ultra vires. But,

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Bluebook (online)
81 Misc. 685, 143 N.Y.S. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-morgan-nysupct-1913.