(dissenting). Section 103 of the General Corporation Law, insofar as here relevant, permits a petition for dissolution of a corporation by the holders of one half of the shares of stock entitled to vote for directors “ if the votes of its stockholders are so divided that they cannot elect a board of directors ”. That is the precise situation in the case before us, for the petition explicitly recites that petitioner Badom and respondent Neidorff “ are hopelessly deadlocked with respect to the management and operation of the corporation ” and that serious disputes have developed between them with the result that “ the votes of the two stockholders are so divided that they cannot elect a Board of Directors.”
The court is given discretion, by section 106 of the General Corporation Law, to “entertain or dismiss the application” for dissolution. And, the statute continues, “ Where it entertains the application * * * the court must make an order, requiring all persons interested in the corporation to show cause before it, or before a referee designated in the order * * * why the corporation should not be dissolved.” (Italics supplied.) In this case, the court (per Greenberg, J.) did, in its discretion, “entertain” the application, and it did, on July 18, 1950, make the specified order requiring all parties interested to show cause why the corporation should not be dissolved. No motion was then made to dismiss the petition for insufficiency in law or for any other reason, and neither at that time nor at any other did respondent object to the order to show cause or seek to set it aside on the ground that the facts alleged were legally insufficient. The petition having been filed (§ 103) and the application having been entertained (§ 106), the legislature prescribed in section 113 that the court or the referee “ must hear the allegations and proofs of the parties, and determine the facts.” (Emphasis supplied.) And on June 15, 1953 — following stipulated adjournments — *9another justice at Special Term (Dicksteiít, J.), in accordance with the statutory mandate of section 113, appointed a referee to hear and report.
That reference was obligatory and should have gone forward. True, once a hearing has been had, the petition may, in the discretion of the court, be dismissed. (See Matter of Cantelmo [Brewer], 275 App. Div. 231; Matter of Myer v. Myer, 272 App. Div. 888, motion for leave to appeal denied 297 N. Y. 1038.) But, if the jurisdictional requirements of section 103 are satisfied and a show cause order under section 106 has issued, then, the legislature has made it clear, the court is powerless to order a dismissal until the facts have been heard and the issues decided. (General Corporation Law, § 113; see Matter of Quicksilver Min. Co., 186 App. Div. 347, 349; Matter of Acker & Jablow, Inc., 124 N. Y. S. 2d 298, affd. 282 App. Div. 941.) And no case, in the Court of Appeals or in any Appellate Division, has held otherwise. (See, for example, cases cited by court, supra, p. 7; Matter of Cantelmo [Brewer], supra, 275 App. Div. 231; Matter of Myer v. Myer, supra, 272 App. Div. 888, motion for leave to appeal denied 297 N. Y. 1038, where hearings were held.) For that reason, the order under review should be reversed.
I would not, however, rest decision on that ground alone. Even if the Appellate Division possessed the power to dismiss the petition without a hearing, its decision in" this case constitutes a gross abuse of discretion. "Whether petitioner will be able to sustain his claims, I do not know, but it seems exceeding plain that he has alleged more than enough to entitle him to a hearing and to an opportunity to present his proofs. (See, e.g., Matter of Acker & Jablow, Inc., supra, 124 N. Y. S. 2d 298, affd. 282 App. Div. 941; Matter of Numode Realty Co., 278 App. Div. 979; Matter of Lynch, 54 N. Y. S. 2d 111.)
For upwards of thirty years, petitioner Badom and Henry Neidorff, respondent’s husband, shared equally in the ownership and management of Badom & Neidorff, Inc. Through all that time, their relationship was harmonious as well as profitable. Neidorff died in 1950, at which time respondent, through inheritance, acquired her present 50% stock interest in the *10business. Since then, all has been discord and conflict. The parties, brother and sister, are at complete loggerheads; they have been unable to elect a board of directors; dividends have neither been declared nor distributed, although the corporation has earned profits; debts of the corporation have gone unpaid, although the corporation is solvent; petitioner, who since Neidorff’s death has been the sole manager of the business, has not received a penny of his salary — amounting to $25,000 a year — because respondent has refused to sign any corporate check to his order. More, petitioner’s business judgment and integrity, never before questioned, have been directly attacked in the stockholder’s derivative suit, instituted by respondent, charging that he has falsified the corporation’s records, converted its assets and otherwise enriched himself at its expense. Negotiations looking to the purchase by one stockholder of the other’s interest were begun — in an effort to end the impasse — but they, too, have failed.
In very truth, as petitioner states in his papers, ‘ ‘ a corporation of this type, with only two stockholders in it, cannot continue to operate with incessant litigation and feuding between the two stockholders, and with differences as fundamental and wholly irreconcilable as are those of Mrs. Neidorff and myself. * * * settlement of these differences cannot be effected, while continuance on the present basis is impossible, so that there is no alternative to judicial dissolution.” Indeed, petitioner avers, in view of the unceasing discord and the fact that he has had to work without salary and advance his own money to the corporation, he does not, whether or no dissolution be granted, “ propose to continue to labor in and operate this business ”.
It is, then, undisputed and indisputable that the stockholders are not able to elect a board of directors. In addition, it is manifest, on the facts alleged, that the Supreme Court could find that the stockholders are hopelessly deadlocked vis-a-vis the management of the corporation; that the corporation cannot long continue to function effectively or profitably under such conditions; that petitioner’s resignation as president and manager — which he contemplates — will be highly detrimental to the interests of both corporation and stockholders and can*11not help but result in substantial loss; and that petitioner is not responsible for the deadlock that exists. In such circumstances, the requisite statutory hearing may well establish that dissolution is indispensable, the only remedy available. As the high court of New Jersey recently declared, in applying to somewhat comparable facts a statute similar to section 103 of our General Corporation Law (Matter of Collins-Doan Co., 3 N. J. 382, 396), “ In the case at hand, there is a want of that community of interest essential to corporate operation. Dissolution will serve the interests of the shareholders as well as public policy. * * * And, if the statutory authority be deemed discretionary in essence, there is no ground for withholding its affirmative exercise here, for there is no alternative corrective remedy. * * * The dissension is such as to defeat the end for which the corporation was organized.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Here, too, the asserted dissension, the court could find, permits of no real or effective remedy but a section 103 dissolution. And that is confirmed by a consideration of the alternatives seemingly open to petitioner. He could remain as president and manager of the corporation, without compensation, completely at odds with his embittered sister — certainly neither a natural nor a satisfying way in which to conduct a business. Or he could carry out his present plan to quit the enterprise — and thereby risk a loss, to corporation and stockholders, far greater than that involved in terminating the business. Or he could, without quitting, set up a competing enterprise — and thereby expose himself to suit for breach of fiduciary duty to the corporation. (Cf. Duane Jones Co. v. Burke, 306 N. Y. 172.) It is difficult to believe that the legislature could have intended to put one in petitioner’s position to such a choice. Reason plainly indicates, and the law allows, the reasonable course of orderly dissolution pursuant to section 103.
Respondent, however, suggests that, in view of the fact that petitioner is managing the business profitably, he should continue to do so, defend against the stockholder’s suit which she brought attacking his honor and integrity and himself start an action for the compensation denied him for more than three *12years. But, it seems self-evident, more and further litigation would only aggravate, not cure, the underlying deadlock of which petitioner complains. (See Saltz v. Saltz Bros., 84 F. 2d 246, certiorari denied 299 U. S. 567.) And, if he were to bring the suggested suit for salary due him, the question arises, whom should he sue, and who is to defend?1 The mere proposal that petitioner embark on a series of actions against the corporation, of which he is president and half owner, indicates the extent of the present impasse, as well as the futility of perpetuating it. The same is true of the other alternative suggested by respondent, namely, that the third of the three directors, required by section 5 of the Stock Corporation Law, be appointed by an impartial party. The deadlock of which petitioner complains is between the stockholders, not the directors, and, when stockholders are deadlocked, section 103 calls for dissolution, not arbitration. Beyond that, and even if the offer to elect an impartial director were relevant, it would still be necessary to inquire when it was made and under what circumstances. It does not justify, alone or in conjunction with the other facts, a summary dismissal of the proceeding without a hearing.
Although respondent relies on the fact that the corporation is now solvent and operating at a profit, it is manifest that, if petitioner carries out his plan to resign as president and quits the business, there may be irreparable loss, not alone to him and respondent, as the owners of the corporation, but also to the corporation’s creditors. Quite apart from that, however, the sole issue under section 103 is whether there is a deadlock as to the management of the corporation, not whether business is being conducted at a profit or loss. (See Benintendi v. Kenton Hotel, 294 N. Y. 112,118; Matter of Acker & Jablow, Inc., supra, 124 N. Y. S. 2d 298, affd. 282 App. Div. 941; Matter of Gotham Tissue Corp., 269 App. Div. 922; Matter of Bob’s Fashion Furrier’s, 52 N. Y. S. 2d 279; Saltz v. Saltz Bros., supra, 84 F. 2d 246, certiorari denied 299 U. S. 567; Bowen v. Bowen-Romer Flour Mills Corp., 114 Kan. 95; *13Matter of Collins-Doan Co., supra, 3 N. J. 382; Post-Standard Co. v. Evening Journal Assn., 15 N. J. Super. 58, 67; Nashville Packet Co. v. Neville, 144 Tenn. 698; Boothe v. Summit Coal Min. Co., 55 Wash. 167; Matter of Yenidje Tobacco Co., Ltd., [1916] 2 Ch. 426; see, also, Israels, “ The Sacred Cow of Corporate Existence Problems of Deadlock and Dissolution ”, 19 U. of Chi. L. Rev. 778; Note, 50 Col. L. Bev. 100.) Whether the petition should or should not be entertained surely cannot he made to turn on proof that the corporation is on the verge of ruin or insolvency.
Insolvency may be a predicate for dissolution, hut not under section 103. By virtue of other provisions of Article 9 of the General Corporation Law — sections 101 and 102 — directors and stockholders may seek dissolution, when the corporation is insolvent, in order to prevent further loss to the owners and creditors. Section 103, however — which hears the title, “ Petition in case of deadlock” — was designed to serve a far different purpose. As amended in 1944, upon the recommendation of the Law Bevision Commission, that section provides for dissolution “ if the votes of its stockholders are so divided that they cannot elect a hoard of directors ”. Nothing in the statute itself or in its legislative history suggests that a “ petition in case of deadlock ” must wait until the corporation’s profits have dried up and financial reverses set in. Had the commission or the legislature intended to incorporate such a qualification into section 103, it could readily have done so. The only test envisaged by the commission, however, was that which the legislature enacted (see 1944 Report of N. Y. Law Revision Commission, N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1944, No. 65[K], pp. 5-7), and a court may not import any other.
Nor does section 117 require or suggest any contrary conclusion. That section provides that if — after a hearing (§ 116) — it shall appear “ that a dissolution will he beneficial to the stockholders * * * and not injurious to the public, the court must make a final order dissolving the corporation ”. It would certainly be “ beneficial ” to dissolve the corporation if the court were to find that there is a continuing, irreparable stalemate in the corporate management, for which petitioner is not primarily at fault. Indeed, in Benintendi v. *14Kenton Hotel (supra, 294 N. Y. 112, 118), this court did not even impose those limitations, when it declared that “ The Legislature has decided that a vote of a majority of the shares, or half of them in case of a deadlock, is sufficient to force a dissolution(Emphasis supplied.) Be that as it may, though, the issue here is, not the propriety of dissolution, but petitioner’s right to be heard on that question. (See, e.g., Matter of Acker & Jablow, Inc., supra, 124 N. Y. S. 2d 298, affd. 282 App. Div. 941; Matter of Gotham Tissue Corp., supra, 269 App. Div. 922.) In advance of that hearing and in the light of the plain language of section 103, we may not say that dissolution could, under no conceivable set of circumstances, be “ beneficial to the stockholders ”, unless it also appears that it would enable the corporation to avoid pecuniary loss.
Until there has been a hearing, it is impossible to decide that “ dissolution is not necessary ” or that “ there is no stalemate or impasse as to corporate policies ” (opinion, p. 6). In point of fact, petitioner expressly denies both of these allegations; and, despite respondent’s protestations, it is significant that she has not pointed to even one matter on which she and petitioner have agreed. Nor may we take at face value respondent’s claim that she is willing to defer to petitioner’s business judgment in the future. It is, to say the least, highly implausible that she is willing and even anxious to have her affairs managed by a person whom she has charged with deliberate fraud, conversion and mismanagement. As the court said in Matter of Yenidje Tobacco Co., Ltd. (supra, [1916] 2 Ch. 426, 431) — which also involved the dissolution of a deadlocked two-man corporation —1‘ When one of the two partners has commenced, and has not discontinued, an action charging his co-partner with fraud * * * is it likely, is it reasonable, is it common sense, to suppose those two partners can work together in the manner in which they ought to work in the conduct of the * * * business?” And, even if it is “likely” that these two persons, petitioner and respondent, can work together, the issue should not, and may not, be resolved before it has even been heard.
The court’s decision seems to compel petitioner to abandon the management of the enterprise as a condition to his seeking *15dissolution. I find no basis in the statute or elsewhere for requiring that irreparable injury must occur before resort may be had to the remedy designed to avert it.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and that at Special Term affirmed.
Conway, Dye and Van Voorhis, JJ., concur with Desmond, J.; Fuld, J., dissents in opinion in which Lewis, Ch. J., and Feoessel, J., concur.
Order affirmed. [See 307 N. Y. 701.]
. In this connection, it is, perhaps, of some moment that, according to petitioner, he is the sole officer and director of the corporation (cf. Civ. Trae. Act, § 228).