Wing v. Smith

165 A.D. 958, 150 N.Y.S. 447
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 165 A.D. 958 (Wing v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wing v. Smith, 165 A.D. 958, 150 N.Y.S. 447 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Hotchkiss, J. (dissenting):

The action is brought to enforce defendant’s liability on a so-called subscription agreement dated September 1, 1907. When the case of Wing v. Stringer (168 App. Div. 890), which involved similar if not identical issues, was before us, I was unable to concur in the decision, but' I did not record the grounds of my dissent. Now that the question of the plaintiff’s right to recover is again .presented, I think it proper to express the views I take of the case. The facts alleged or necessarily to be inferred from the pleadings and the exhibits attached thereto are in substance as follows: The subscription agreement recites that defendant and his associate subscribers were owners in severalty of 3,000 shares of the stock of the Refugio Syndicate (a New Jersey corporation, which I shall hereinafter term the Refugio Company); that the subscribers desired to purchase 8,000 additional shares of stock of the same company, which shares were the entire remaining authorized capital stock thereof. For the purpose of providing the purchase price the subscribers nominated and appointed certain individuals as managers, and severally authorized these managers to borrow on their (the managers’) note payable “not earlier than March 1st, 1909,” a sum not exceeding $800,000 for the account of the subscribers severally and to pledge as security therefor the 3,000 shares owned and the 8,000 shares to be purchased, and also the subscription agreement and the several liability of the subscribers thereon; also that the note or obligation so to be given [959]*959by the managers for such lean should be binding upon the several subscribers to the extent of then several subscriptions which they agreed to pay on calls therefor to be made by the managers; but no call was to be made before January 1', 1909, unless on consent of seventy-five per cent in amount of the subscribers and then on thirty days’ notice, and no call was to exceed fifteen per- cent of the several subscriptions. After January 1, 1909, calls were to be at the discretion of the managers on thirty days’ notice; on payment of his subscription each subscriber was to receive Refugio Company stock to the par value of $1,000 for each $800 subscribed, thus calling for a total of 10,000 shares. Thereafter the managers subscribed for and purchased directly from the Refugio Company the 8,000 shares of stock, and for the purpose of raising the moneys to pay therefor the managers entered into a trust agreement with the Guardian Trust Company, under the provisions of which instrument the plaintiff claims to act as substituted trustee. This instrument, dated March 2, 1908, recites the execution of the subscription agreement, the acquisition thereunder by the managers of the said 2,000 shares, and their acquisition from the Refugio Company of the 8,000 shares, which latter shares they had exchanged for voting trust certificates; that “for the purpose of discharging their duties as Syndicate Managers ” (which I take it means to pay for the 8,000 shares) the managers desired to borrow $800,000, to be evidenced by their one-year note for that amount payable to bearer, the payment of which note to the holder thereof they desired to secure by pledging all of said shares (or voting trust certificates therefor) together with the said subscription agreement (including the obligations of the subscribers thereunder), for which purpose they assigned all of said collateral to the trust company, for the following purposes, among others: (1) On receipt of the pledged securities the trustees shall certify and deliver on the order of the managers the aforesaid note for $800,000, the form of which is set forth at length in the trust agreement; (2) all moneys to be paid by the subscribers on account of the subscription agreement shall, as long as the note is unpaid, be received by the trustee; (3) until the note is paid, any subscriber may pay to the trustee the amount of his subscription, and shall thereupon be entitled to receive the certificates for shares to which he is entitled by virtue of the subscription agreement, and all moneys so received shall be held and applied by the trustee on account of the note; (4) on default in the payment of the note the trust company is authorized (a) to require the managers to make calls for unpaid subscriptions, and in the event the calls are not made or if made are not paid, thé trustee is authorized to itself enforce payment of such calls; (b) to sell all stock remaining in its possession; (c) all moneys received by the trustee by virtue of the trust agreement to be held and paid by it to the holder and owner of the note. It is proper here to call attention to the fact that it is not expressly alleged that the note at its inception was delivered directly to the Refugio Company in payment for the 8,000 shares, but from the recitals contained in the participation certificate agreement of even date with the trust agreement last above referred to, and to the terms of which participation certificate agreement I shall shortly [960]*960allude, and from the allegation of the complaint that on the cancellation of said participation certificate agreement the note was ‘' redelivered ” by the trust company to the Refugio Company, and from the allegations in one of the defenses demurred to that the note was given to the Refugio Company in payment for the stock, it is necessarily to be inferred that the trust company, purporting to act under the trust agreement, was a mere conduit through which the note passed from the managers to the Refugio Company in payment for said shares. The participation certificate agreement to which I have referred, as I have said, was of even date with the trust agreement, and was entered into between the Refugio Company and the trust company. It recites the execution and delivery by the managers to the trust company of the aforesaid note in pursuance of the said trust agreement; that the Refugio Company “ has purchased and is the owner of said note,” and desires to sell to third parties participations or interests therein, for which purpose the Refugio Company sells the note to the trust company, to hold the same, together with the collateral pledged therefor, in trust for the equal benefit of all holders of participation certificates in said note, which certificates are to be issued by the trust company as and when requested by the Refugio Company. With respect to this participation certificate agreement and the certificates thereunder, the complaint alleges that after the issuance of “ certain ” thereof by the trust company, holders of such certificates surrendered the same for cancellation and accepted in lieu thereof participation certificates issued directly by the Refugio Company, and that the participation certificate agreement between that company and the trust company was canceled and the said note was " redelivered ” by the trust company to the Refugio Company. It is further alleged that simultaneously with the cancellation of the said participation certificate agreement, the trust company resigned as trustee under the trust agreement of March 2, 1908, between the managers and the trust company, and that plaintiff was substituted as trustee thereunder; and that thereafter the said $800,000 note was sold and delivered to one McDougall “ subject to the aforesaid outstanding participations therein.” Among the defenses contained in the amended answer is one which alleges that the aforesaid note of $800,000 was given directly by the managers to the Refugio Company in payment of its aforesaid subscription for said 8,000 shares, which it is alleged was a violation of the Hew Jersey statute

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Related

Wing v. Smith
173 A.D. 57 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
165 A.D. 958, 150 N.Y.S. 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wing-v-smith-nyappdiv-1914.