Whitney Arms Co. v. . Barlow

63 N.Y. 62, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 11
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 8, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by203 cases

This text of 63 N.Y. 62 (Whitney Arms Co. v. . Barlow) 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
Whitney Arms Co. v. . Barlow, 63 N.Y. 62, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 11 (N.Y. 1875).

Opinion

Allen, J.

But a small, if any, portion of the debt for which a recovery was had accrued prior to the making and publishing of the report by the corporation in January, 1872, and if that document-was in conformity to the-statute requiring annual reports by manufacturing corporations, and a substantial compliance with the requisition of the act, the appellants are entitled to a reversal of the judgment.

The trustees of a manufacturing corporation are chargeable with the debts of the company upon failure of the corporation within twenty days from the first day of January in each year to make, publish and file, as prescribed by the act, a verified report, which shall state the amount of capital and of the proportion actually paid in, and the amount of its existing debts.” (Laws of 1848, chap. 40, § 12.) At the time of the enactment of this law payment of the capital *66 stock of this class of corporations was required to be in money. By a subsequent statute (Laws of 1853, chap. 333) trustees of such corporations, were authorized to purchase mines and other property, and to issue stock to the value thereof in payment therefor. The same statute enacted that in all statements and reports of the company to be published the stock so issued should not be stated or reported as being issued for cash paid in to the company, but should be reported in this respect' according to the fact. The form of the report, as prescribed by the twelfth section of the original act (supra), was thus modified in all cases where the whole or a part of the capital stock was issued in payment for property purchased instead of for cash. The reports should in all essential particulars comply with these statutes. The facts need not necessarily be stated with technical or grammatical precision and accuracy, hut they must substantially appear and be verified by the oath of the president and a majority of the trustees, and so distinctly stated that if untrue perjury could be assigned or an action maintained by any one sustaining legal injury from the misstatement.

The reports of corporations should receive a reasonable interpretation and excessive nicety or exactness should not be exercised in bringing them to the test of the statutes.

It cannot be denied that the report made by the American Seal Lock Company in 1872 is ambiguous, and it is very plausibly urged that it is entirely consistent with a capital stock greatly in excess of the amount stated as having been issued on the purchase of patent rights, as well as with the other fact that there was capital stock of the company for which cash had been paid in. The argument is that, leaving out the first copulative, the statement is, in terms, that the amount of the capital stock which had been issued for the purchase of patent rights, and which had not been paid in cash, was" $300,000, and that such statement would have been literally true if the capital stock had been $1,000,000 and all but the $300,000 had been paid for in cash, or had not been paid for at all. It is then said that the insertion of the copu *67 lative and,” so as to make it read that the capital stock of the company and which had been issued for the patent rights, etc., does not alter the sense upon any grammatical interpretation, or as it would be understood by the casual or ordinary reader, or those for whose benefit and protection the report and publication are required.

But the statute is in one sense and for some purposes, as adjudged by this court, of a penal character, in so far as it subjects the trustees to liability for the debts of the corporation for their neglect to make the report; and while it is also remedial as it confers upon the creditor a remedy for his debt and takes from the governing body of the corporation the shield and protection of the corporate organization and holds them to a personal liability for debts contracted, the reports and statements of the corporation, made and published professedly in compliance with the statute, should receive a liberal interpretation and the benefit of any doubt as to the true sense and meaning of the document be given to the trustees sought to be charged. This is a reasonable rule in the absence of any evidence, in or out of the report, of an intent to evade the statute and put forth a report false or deceptive; and when the report, read and interpreted as claimed by the trustees, is true in fact. The court is of the opinion that the report now under review, notwithstanding the criticism to which it is fairly subject, should, ihe application of these principles and in view of the fact that the entire capital of the corporation was, at the time it was made, but $300,000, and the whole amount had been issued in payment for patent rights, be deemed a fair and full compliance with the statute, thus saving the forfeiture which the trustees, upon any other interpretation, would have incurred. In any view of the report, it did not exaggerate the resources and condition of the company.

As it is left in doubt whether some portion of the debt did not accrue during the default of 1871, and as other questions may arise, it is necessary to consider the other objections taken by the appellant to the judgment.

*68 r It must be conceded that the manufacturing and vending ' of “ railroad locks ” is not within the purposes for which the plaintiff was incorporated, or within the powers conferred by its charter. Heither is such business incidental to the purposes of the incorporation, or in any way necessary to, or as far as appears even an aid in the exercise of the powers conferred upon the plaintiff by its constitution, so that it could be regarded as among the implied powers granted by the legislature and assumed by the corporators. r Did the question now made arise upon an application by the stockholders and corporators to restrain the corporate agents from applying the corporate funds to purposes foreign to the corporation, or engaging in business outside of that for which the company was formed, or on proceedings by the sovereign power to annul the charter for an abuse of the powers granted, or in a proceeding to enforce and for the performance of an executory contract, where, upon a rescission or annulling the agreement, both parties would have the same position ps if no contract had been made, the rules of decision would be different from those which must prevail in the present action. In either of the cases suggested it is very likely the courts would be compelled to give full effect to the objection and hold the business unauthorized and a violation of the charter, and a forfeiture of the chartered rights and the contract null, and refuse to perform it or give effect to it. The manufacture of the locks, or contract to sell them to the Seal Lock 'Company, were not acts immoral in themselves or forbidden by any statute, neither mala in sese or mala jprohibita, so as to make the contract illegal and incapable of being the foundation of an action; such a contract as the law will not recognize or enforce, hut applying the maxim, ex facto illioito non oritwr actio, leave the parties as it finds them.

When acts of corporations are spoken of as ultra,

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.Y. 62, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-arms-co-v-barlow-ny-1875.