Summary
In Varnum v. Hart (119 N.Y. 101) it appeared that the director of the corporation upon whom the summons and complaint were served, acting in concert with the creditor, knowing the company to be insolvent, and meaning to permit the creditor to obtain a preference in payment of his claim over other creditors, kept the fact of the service of the papers upon himself concealed from the other officers of the company, and a judgment by default was granted.
Summary of this case from Spellman v. LooschenOpinion
Argued December 18, 1889
Decided January 14, 1890
James Breck Perkins and Joseph S. Hunn for appellant.
Martin W. Cooke for respondent.
To maintain this action it must be held that the judgments against the Evening Express Printing Company and the sale of its property under the executions issued thereupon worked a transfer of the property of the corporation in violation of the provisions of the Revised Statutes which declare that "whenever any incorporated company shall have refused the payment of any of its notes or other evidence of debt in specie or lawful money of the United States, it shall not be lawful for such company or any of its officers to assign or transfer any of the property or choses in action of such company to any officer or stockholder of such company, directly or indirectly, for the payment of any debt; and it shall not be lawful to make any transfer or assignment in contemplation of the insolvency of such company to any person or persons whatever; and every such transfer and assignment to such officer, stockholder or other person or in trust for them or their benefit shall be utterly void." (R.S. part 1, chap. 18, tit. 4, § 4.) None of the plaintiffs in the judgments were officers or stockholders of the corporation, and hence the last clause of the section quoted only can be claimed to have any application to this case.
It is undoubtedly true that it was the purpose of the provision to prevent unjust discrimination among creditors of an insolvent corporation. But this was to be accomplished in only one way, to wit.: by restraint upon the action of the corporation and its officers. They having the best and the earliest knowledge of the actual or impending insolvency, were not to transfer or assign any of its property so as to give any preference or advantage therein to any person; but the purpose was in such case to leave the property to be taken or disposed of by due course of law. The officers of a corporation are under no legal duty in the case of its insolvency to take measures to procure a disposition of its property, without preference, among all its creditors. They may, like an insolvent person, permit the creditors to take hostile proceedings and allow those to obtain preferences who are the most vigilant. The statute places no restraint whatever upon the creditors, and they are permitted to pursue their remedies in all the ways allowed by the law, and to procure satisfaction of their claims if they can. Furthermore, the statute contemplates no affirmative action on the part of the corporation, and it cannot be violated by mere silence or omission to act on its part or the part of its officers. An insolvent corporation is not obliged to defend any suit brought against it for the sole purpose of defeating a preference, and it may in such case suffer default and thus allow a judgment to be obtained against it, knowing that the creditor designs to obtain, and will thus obtain, a preference. Such conduct on its part does not constitute a transfer or assignment of its property, and there is nothing in the statute which condemns judgments thus obtained.
Preferences by judgments were condemned in the National Bankrupt Acts by the express language used therein. In the act in reference to moneyed corporations (Laws of 1882, chap. 409, § 187) we find this language: "No such conveyance, assignment or transfer, nor any payment made, judgment suffered, lien created or security given by any such corporation when insolvent, or in contemplation of insolvency, with the intent of giving a preference, etc., shall be valid in law;" and the Revised Statutes (part 2, chap. 4, tit. 1, art. 1, § 20), in reference to limited partnerships, provides as follows: "Every sale, assignment or transfer of any of the property or effects of such partnership, * * * and every judgment confessed, lien created or secured, * * * shall be void." It is thus seen that when law-makers intend to prevent preferences by judgments in the case of insolvent corporations or persons, they have not deemed the words "transfer," "assignment," "conveyance," "sale" sufficient for that purpose, but have specially named judgments. The provisions as to limited partnerships came under consideration in Van Alstyne v. Cook ( 25 N.Y. 489), and the court there said that they "do not avoid payments made or judgments suffered, or require a creditor to account for anything received by the creditor of the partnership or of either of the partners. * * * These sections clearly do not inhibit or apply to judgments recovered against the members of a limited partnership in invitum, or suffered by them by default or otherwise."
Now, what are the facts as to these judgments? We will for the present confine ourselves to the judgments in favor of Hart, Miller and the bank. They were all recovered, as the trial court found, for valid debts past due, and the debts being such, it does not appear that there was any just or legal defense which could have been interposed to them. They were recovered by default after legal service of the summons in each case upon Tracey, one of the directors of the company, and also its secretary, treasurer and financial manager. It is quite true that they acted in concert, and that they knew that the company was insolvent and meant to gain a preference in the payment of their claims over other creditors. But all this is unimportant. The statute could not be violated by any act, conduct or intention on their part. They were under no statutory restraint. So they did not violate the statute by arranging with Tracey that he should not disclose the service of the summons upon him to the other officers of the company. Nor was the statute violated because Tracey did not disclose the service of the summons to the other officers. He did nothing. He suffered the plaintiffs to obtain their judgments, but did not assign or transfer any property. Suppose he had disclosed the service of the summons, the statute would not have been violated if all the officers had then remained silent and had thus suffered the judgments to be obtained, and if they had so acted for the express purpose of allowing the plaintiff in those actions to obtain the first judgments, and thus the first chance of payment. It is true that the other officers, if they had known of the commencement of the actions, might have taken measures to defeat any preference and for an equal distribution of the corporate assets among all the creditors of the corporation. But they would not have been bound to do so, and it remains true that in all that was done or authorized to be done, there was no assignment or transfer of property and no violation of the statute. If there had been any defense to the actions, there was ground for an application to the court to set aside the judgments and open the defaults; but there is no ground for holding the judgments absolutely void as in violation of the statute.
The argument of the plaintiff would have more force (we do not say would be valid) if the corporation had had real estate upon which the judgments became liens. It had only personal property, and thus the judgments were simply a higher form of obligation than the plaintiffs therein before had for their claims. The executions were issued by the plaintiffs, and the seizure and sale of the property were by the sheriff, and it does not appear that, in reference to them, there was any active interference on the part of the officers of the corporation which could be claimed to be in violation of the statute.
The judgments were entered on the 3d day of March, 1882, and on the same day executions were issued to the sheriff, and he levied upon the property and took it into his possession. Subsequently, on the tenth day of April, an action was commenced against the corporation by the people for its dissolution, and such proceedings were had therein, that on the twelfth day of April the plaintiff was appointed its receiver, and thereafter entered upon the discharge of his duties as such. On the nineteenth day of April the sheriff sold the property by virtue of the executions. The claim is now made that on account of the appointment of the receiver, the sale of the property was absolutely void, and that for that reason the plaintiff was entitled to recover in this action. It is sufficient to say that no such cause of action was alleged in the complaint, and there was no finding in reference thereto by the trial judge. Besides, the sheriff having seized the property, the sale thereof by him after the appointment of a receiver, while the property was in his possession and not in the possession of the receiver, was not absolutely void, and could at most be held to be irregular; and the case of Walling v. Miller ( 108 N.Y. 173) does not uphold the plaintiff's contention, as there the property was sold by the sheriff after the title had passed to the receiver, and while it was in his possession.
But the case of Ellwanger stands upon a different footing. He commenced an action upon his claim against the corporation by service of the summons upon its president on the 3d day of March, 1882. The directors held a meeting on the fourth day of March and resolved that an attorney should be authorized to appear in the action and offer judgment for the amount of the claim. Thereafter, on the sixth day of March, the attorney of the corporation did appear and offer judgment, and on the same day judgment based upon the offer and the acceptance thereof was entered; and on the same day execution was issued thereon and placed in the hands of the sheriff. On the eighth day of April thereafter Hart, Miller, the bank and Ellwanger made an arrangement that the sheriff should sell the property by virtue of the four executions, and that the proceeds of the sale should be applied pro rata thereon. The property brought at the sheriff's sale $20,000, which was its full value, and that sum was applied according to the agreement. The judgments in favor of Hart, Miller and the bank were in the aggregate for some $20,000, and the property sold was not sufficient to satisfy the three executions first levied, and all that Ellwanger received of the proceeds of the sale he received by virtue of the agreement made with the other execution creditors. Upon these facts the plaintiff claims especially that the judgment of Ellwanger was in violation of the statute and void, and as the sale was made under all the judgments it was illegal and void. It is quite true that the judgment of Ellwanger stands upon a different footing from the others. It was obtained in consequence of the affirmative action of the corporation taken for the express purpose of giving him some advantage in its property. We will assume, without deciding it, that that judgment was in violation of the statute and, therefore, void ( Kingsley v. First Nat. Bank, 31 Hun, 329); and yet the sale for that reason was not illegal and void. The valid executions had the prior lien and right, and as they were of greater amount than the whole of the corporate property sold, the presence of the invalid execution in the hands of the sheriff could work no harm. The valid executions uphold and justify the sale, and the sale must be referred to them if the other execution was void. Even if Ellwangers' execution had been valid, he could not legally have received one dollar from the proceeds by virtue thereof, as all the property levied on was insufficient to satisfy the three executions having the prior right. This is unlike the case of a tax sale where real estate is sold for taxes, some of which are illegal, because there is the right in such a case of redemption which could not be exercised except by the payment of the illegal tax. ( People v. Hagadorn, 104. N Y 516.)
Therefore, without considering other objections to the judgment which have been ably argued and fully presented in the learned briefs, we are of opinion that the judgment against the appellants should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.