Wolf v. Arminus Copper Mine Co.

6 Misc. 562, 27 N.Y.S. 642, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 647
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Misc. 562 (Wolf v. Arminus Copper Mine Co.) 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
Wolf v. Arminus Copper Mine Co., 6 Misc. 562, 27 N.Y.S. 642, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 647 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.

With the consent of all its stockholders, the defendant corporation executed a mortgage to the defendant G-rasselli to secure the payment of a sum of money that it owed the mortgagee. An installment of $20,000 upon that mortgage coming due in February, 1893, the company was unable to pay, and an agreement was entered into between the mortgagee and the corporation whereby the mortgagee agreed to accept $60,000 and interest in full payment of the mortgage if paid on or before December 1, 1893, which was a reduction of something over $5,000 on the amount which was [563]*563due, and the company agreed that, in default of the payment of the $60,000 and interest on or before December 1, 1893, it would execute a deed conveying the mortgaged premises to the mortgagee in full satisfaction of the mortgage debt, and that a deed to carry out that covenant was to be executed by the defendant corporation and delivered to the United States Trust Company in escrow, to be delivered to the mortgagee in case of the failure of the corporation to pay the mortgage on the date named. The corporation was unable to pay the amount due to the mortgagee, and the mortgagee then demanded from the trust company a delivery of the deed, and this action was brought to restrain the delivery of that deed and for a judgment declaring the deed void. The sole ground upon which plaintiff bases his right to that relief is that the acts of the officers in making the agreement with the mortgagee, and the execution of the deed in pursuance of that agreement, were ultra vires, upon the principle established by the case of Abbot v. American Hard Rubber Company, 33 Barb. 578. This principle is now well established in this and most of the other states of the Union, and is a most salutary one, and the protection of stockholders in corporations requires that it should be in all cases vigorously enforced. The question here, however, is whether the facts in this case are brought within the principle settled in the Hard Rubber Company case.

The defendant corporation is a domestic corporation, organized under the laws of this state, formed and organized, as alleged in the complaint, solely and only for the purpose of acquiring and working certain mining property in the state of Virginia, which property is the property sought to be conveyed by the deed the plaintiff asked to have adjudged void.

In 1889 the corporation became indebted to Grasselli, as trustee, in the sum of $125,000, and, with the assent of all of its stockholders, including the then holder of the stock now owned by the plaintiff, consented to that mortgage, and that consent was duly filed as required by law. This mortgage, therefore, became a valid lien upon the property therein [564]*564described, and the plaintiff, as a stockholder, conld not object to the validity of the mortgage, as his predecessor in title, as a stockholder, had expressly consented to its execution.

After the payment of various installments, amounting in the aggregate to $50,000, on the 1st of February, 1893, an installment of $20,000 and upwards of $3,000 back interest became due, which the corporation was unable to pay. It is not alleged that at that time there was any collusion as between the mortgagee and the officers of the corporation, or that the agreement then made was unfair or injurious to the-corporation. The corporation, through its board of trustees,, with the assent of most of its stockholders and without express-objection by the plaintiff, made the agreement, and, assuming-that the corporation was then unable to pay the amount due on the mortgage, it would seem that the agreement as made was-not only fair, but was an extremely favorable contract for th& corporation. It had until December 1,1893, to pay its debt that was then due, and it obtained a reduction of the amount due of $5,000. The creditor or mortgagee was prevented, pending that time, from taking any steps to recover the amount due on his mortgage, or to foreclose it. The mortgagee has lived up to his contract, while the corporation has failed to perform its agreement. No special equity is shown that would entitle this corporation, or its stockholders, after having received the-benefit of the agreement made with the mortgagee, to repudiate its obligation under the agreement, and unless, under the-rule of the law above stated, this conveyance is absolutely void,, I do not think the court should interfere. As before stated,, the mortgage was clearly valid, and by it the mortgagee had the right, on the first of February, to proceed to foreclose his-mortgage. There is nothing presented in the moving papers-showing that the corporation would then have had, or now has, any defense to that mortgage, and if the plaintiff had proceeded on February first to foreclose, it would appear that, long before this time, he would either have had his money or the title to the property. The plaintiff having thus the right; to have the property sold and the proceeds applied to the pay[565]*565ment of his debt, and thus divesting the defendant of the title to its property, is there any legal objection to the corporation’s assuming to give to the mortgagee, in payment of its legal debt, the title to the property, which the court, on the complaint of the mortgagee, would have divested from the corporation had the agreement not been made ?

The principle relied upon by the plaintiff was stated in the opinion of Justice Sutherland at Special Term in the case of Abbot v. Hard Rubber Company, 33 Barb. 580. In that case the trustees of the corporation, organized to manufacture rubber under the Goodyear patent, attempted to sell all the property of the corporation in one lump, including its right to use the patent, with the exception of the legal title to some real estate in the state of Connecticut, and to take in payment notes of +lie grantees. It was held that this transfer would, in effect, dissolve the corporation and defeat the objects of its existence, and the principle was then established that trustees or directors appointed to conduct and manage a corporation have no authority by their voluntary act to defeat the object for which the corporation was organized. And in the opinion of Mr. Justice Sutherland at Special Term, and in the opinion delivered by Justice Allen on the appeal, the foundation upon which the rule was founded was emphasized. In that case the directors were attempting, by a voluntary act, to deprive the company of the object of its existence by the transfer, and it was held that its directors elected to manage the corporation and to accomplish the object for yvhich it was organized were given by the stockholders no power to voluntarily wipe it out of existence. Allen, J., at the General Term, says : “ By the transfer, if allowed to stand, although the corporation still remained in form with property which might be applied to some lawful purpose, the existence of the corporation was nominal. Its substance was taken-from it and its property was valueless as a hard rubber company. It had no rights, no franchises and no existence.”

The latest case in which this principle has been applied in this State, to which my attention has been called, is the case [566]*566of People v. Ballard, 134 N. Y. 269, 294, and the principle is there stated by Judge Vann, delivering the opinion of the court: “ A corporation cannot cease to exist of its own will. Its life continues until either the charter period has expired, or the court has decreed a dissolution. The law made it and the law only can put an end to it.

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Related

People v. . Ballard
32 N.E. 54 (New York Court of Appeals, 1892)
Abbot v. American Hard Rubber Co.
33 Barb. 578 (New York Supreme Court, 1861)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Misc. 562, 27 N.Y.S. 642, 59 N.Y. St. Rep. 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-arminus-copper-mine-co-nysupct-1894.