Opinion
July Term, 1903.
Order modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs.
The injunction order was granted on the complaint and affidavits. The facts, so far as material, are stated in our opinion sustaining the sufficiency of the complaint on an appeal from the interlocutory judgment on the decision of a demurrer thereto. ( Dupignac v. Bernstrom, 76 App. Div. 111.) The injunction order restrains the De Laval Separator Company from paying to its stockholders more than ninety-five per cent of its surplus or net earnings set aside for the payment of dividends, and required it to deposit the remaining five per cent thereof with the Union Trust Company to await the determination of this action. By his affidavit setting forth the facts alleged in the complaint, the plaintiff, under our former decision, establishes prima facie that he is entitled to five per cent of the dividends of this corporation. The stockholders, except the plaintiff, are non-residents. The order, therefore, in so far as it enjoins the payment of the dividends to them and requires the deposit thereof with the trust company was properly granted. The order, however, further enjoins the transfer of any shares of stock of the De Laval Separator Company pending the determination of this action, unless a notice of plaintiff's claim and a statement that the transfer is subject thereto be indorsed upon the assignment, and enjoins any further issue of certificate of stock in said company without a similar indorsement thereon or attached thereto that it is issued and accepted with notice of and subject to the claim of the plaintiff. It is manifest that such an indorsement upon the certificates of stock or assignments thereof would materially interfere with the rights of the stockholders to sell and assign their stock. The necessity for this relief by final judgment in the action in order to fully protect the plaintiff's rights is by no means clear and it should not be awarded until the issues are tried and plaintiff's rights are established, and it is shown to be essential to a protection of those rights. It follows, therefore, that the order should be modified by striking out these provisions, and as modified affirmed, without costs. Van Brunt, P.J., Patterson, Ingraham and Hatch, JJ., concurred.