Opinion
May, 1905.
George Zabriskie, for the appellant.
Morris A. Tyng, respondent, in person.
The plaintiff was a stockholder in the American Beet Sugar Company, a foreign corporation, organized under the laws of the State of New Jersey, having an office for the transaction of business in the city of New York. The Corporation Trust Company was also a foreign corporation, having an office for the transaction of business in the city of New York, and was the transfer agent in the State of New York of the American Beet Sugar Company. The plaintiff demanded of both corporations an inspection of the stock book of the American Beet Sugar Company and both corporations refused to allow him to see such book. It is provided by section 53 of the Stock Corporation Law of New York (as amd. by Laws of 1897, chap. 384, § 3) that every foreign stock corporation having an office for the transaction of business in the State of New York, except moneyed and railroad corporations, shall keep in the State a book to be known as the stock book, and that "If any such foreign stock corporation has in this State a transfer agent, whether such agent shall be a corporation or a natural person, such stock book may be deposited in the office of such agent and shall be open to inspection at all times during the usual hours of transacting business, to any stockholder, judgment creditor or officer of the State authorized by law to investigate the affairs of such corporation. For any refusal to allow such book to be inspected, such corporation and the officer or agent so refusing shall each forfeit the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars to be recovered by the person to whom such refusal was made."
The plaintiff brought separate actions in the Municipal Court of the city of New York against each of the corporations named for the penalty prescribed in the section of the statute above mentioned, and recovered a judgment in each action. The defendants appealed to the Appellate Term of the Supreme Court, where such judgments were affirmed, and then, by permission, the judgments were brought up for review in this court.
That the plaintiff was entitled to recover against the Corporation Trust Company is clear. There was proof of every fact required to be shown to render that company liable under the statute. The demand was made, it was made of the transfer agent, it was refused and the demand was for the book called the stock book kept by the transfer agent in the State of New York. That the book did not contain every particular item required by the statute to be recorded therein could not affect the liability of the American Beet Sugar Company. It could not refuse to produce what was called and used as a stock book, because there was a failure to comply with every specific requirement of the law. There was a book which was kept as a stock book and that book the plaintiff was entitled to inspect.
It is suggested (not by counsel) that a corporation has complied with the statute when its stock book is deposited with its agent; and, consequently, where this has been done it incurs no penalty where it does not produce such stock book. The point was not taken upon the trial of the action, nor was it taken by counsel either on the oral argument of this appeal or in the brief presented on such argument. It was not intimated in any form or relied upon in any way. Even if it had been, it would be too late to raise it upon appeal and it cannot be considered. There was no objection made at the trial to the plaintiff's right to maintain two independent suits for a specific penalty against each of these corporations. The cases must be disposed of here upon the theory and on the record on which they were tried. ( Sears v. Wise, 52 App. Div. 118, 122; Wellington v. Morey, 90 N.Y. 656; Vann v. Rouse, 94 id. 401.)
The judgment in each case should be affirmed, with costs.
O'BRIEN, HATCH and LAUGHLIN, JJ., concurred; VAN BRUNT, P.J., dissented.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.