Legal Research AI

Everett v. Phillips

Court: New York Court of Appeals
Date filed: 1942-06-04
Citations: 43 N.E.2d 18, 288 N.Y. 227
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Lead Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 229 The plaintiff is the owner of 100 shares of the "participating stock" of Empire Power Corporation. The issued and outstanding capital stock of the corporation consists of 77,000 shares of six per cent cumulative preferred stock with a stated value of $7,133,000; 400,000 shares of "participating" stock with a stated value of $3,150,000, and 400,000 shares of common stock with a stated value of $1,000,000. The directors of the corporation and members of their families owned all the common stock and large amounts of the preferred stock and the "participating" stock. At the same time they also owned or controlled, directly or indirectly, 1,500,000 shares, constituting a majority of the common *Page 232 stock of Long Island Lighting Company. In 1931 and 1932 the Empire Power Corporation loaned to Long Island Lighting Company large sums of money. Payment of these loans was from time to time extended and the loans are still unpaid. Claiming that these loans and the extension of time of payment were ultra vires and were "not made to promote any business purpose of Empire Power Corporation, but were made for the sole purpose of promoting the interests of the individual defendants and that of Long Island Lighting Company," the plaintiff has brought an action in behalf of himself and other minority stockholders in which he has asked that directors of Empire Power Corporation named as individual defendants be compelled to demand payment of the indebtedness by Long Island Lighting Company and that "in the event that the said indebtedness cannot be collected from Long Island Lighting Company, then that the individual defendants shall be directed to pay the same." At Special Term an interlocutory judgment was granted awarding substantially the relief which the plaintiff asked. The judgment was unanimously reversed by the Appellate Division on the law and the facts and the complaint was dismissed.

To establish his cause of action the plaintiff must show that the individual defendants in causing the Empire Power Corporation to loan the moneys to the Long Island Lighting Company and in failing to demand payment of such loans as they became due, have acted in disregard of the duties they owe Empire Power Corporation and that Empire Power Corporation has suffered, or at least may suffer, some detriment or loss. In a long line of decisions this court has held directors who control corporate action responsible for dereliction of duty where they have used the property of the corporation or managed its affairs to promote their own interests, disregarding the interests of the corporation. Power of control carries with it a trust or duty to exercise that power faithfully to promote the corporate interests, and the courts of this State will insist upon scrupulous performance of that duty. Yet, however high may be the standard of fidelity to duty which the court may exact, errors of judgment by directors do not alone suffice to demonstrate lack of fidelity. That is true even though the errors may be so gross that they may demonstrate the unfitness of the directors to manage the corporate affairs. *Page 233

The plaintiff here is asserting a cause of action for wrong done to the corporation of which he is a minority stockholder. In such an action it is immaterial whether the minority stockholder, who asserts it, has a large or a small interest; but in determining whether those who have power to control the corporation have committed a wrong either to the corporation or to its stockholders, the corporate capital structure, the certificate of incorporation, and the corporate constitution or by-laws may be factors of great weight; for, within limits prescribed by law, these define to whom the power of control is entrusted, its scope and the manner in which it must be exercised. Directors are elected by the holders of stock which has voting rights. Here the certificate of incorporation of Empire Power Corporation provides that only the holders of common stock shall have voting rights. According to the testimony of the defendant Phillips, who has been president of the corporation from its formation in 1924 and who with George W. Olmsted, its vice-president until he died in 1940, owned or controlled, either directly or indirectly, all of its common stock, the corporation was "formed for the purpose of financing and taking care of the various companies in which we were then interested and later became interested further." They invited the public to subscribe to the capital of the corporation which would be managed by directors in whose election no other stockholders would have any part, and those who might furnish the capital which these directors would manage were not left under any illusion that the directors, when acting for the corporation, would be free from other interests which might prevent an unprejudiced exercise of judgment. The certificate of incorporation contained a provision that "No contract or other transaction between the Corporation and any other corporation shall be affected or invalidated by the fact that any one or more of the directors of this Corporation is or are interested in, or is a director or officer, or are directors or officers of such other corporation, * * * and no contract, act or transaction of this Corporation with any person or persons, firm or corporation, shall be affected or invalidated by the fact that any director or directors of this Corporation is a party, or are parties to or interested in such contract, act or transaction, or in any way connected with such person or persons, firm or association, and each and every person who may become *Page 234 a director of this Corporation is hereby relieved from any liability that might otherwise exist from contracting with the Corporation for the benefit of himself or any firm, association or corporation in which he may be in anywise interested." It is against this background that the court must consider the claim of the appellant that he has established by the overwhelming weight of testimony that the directors were faithless to their trust.

The complaint of the plaintiff concerns, as we have said, loans made to Long Island Lighting Company. The defendants controlled that corporation. Their stock interest in it was large. According to the balance sheets of the corporation introduced in evidence by the plaintiff, the corporation, in 1931 and also at the time of the trial, had a very large surplus and was earning large profits, but needed money for the development of its business. Corporate balance sheets unfortunately do not always present a correct picture of the corporate finances. The Public Service Commission — on appropriate occasions — can and does make independent examinations of the balance sheets of utility corporations; a court can ordinarily consider only the evidence produced by the parties and no evidence was produced which would challenge the correctness of the balance sheets or which would enable the court to reconstruct them. We may not assume that the financial condition of the lighting company was not favorable, but the evidence establishes that unless it had succeeded in borrowing money it would have been obliged to discontinue payment of dividends, at least temporarily, and to use all its earnings for needed improvements, and that, perhaps, the earnings might have provided insufficient moneys for its needs. The evidence establishes, too, that the defendants expected to derive benefit not only as stockholders but also in other ways from the moneys which, as directors, they caused Long Island Lighting Company to borrow. The question remains whether in seeking benefit for themselves and for the Long Island Lighting Company, which they controlled through stock ownership, they caused Empire Power Corporation, which the defendants also controlled through stock ownership, to make a loan, which might work harm to the Empire Power Corporation. *Page 235

The Long Island Lighting Company at the end of 1930 owed banks approximately $10,500,000 on short term, unsecured notes. Though, according to the balance sheet of the Long Island Lighting Company, it had assets greatly in excess of its indebtedness, and had a net income of more than $3,000,000 a year, its financial position was not entirely safe or sound. The banks might press for payment of short term obligations at a time when Long Island Lighting Company might find it difficult to borrow elsewhere the money to pay such obligations. Moreover, the needs of the territory served by Long Island Lighting Company required constant extension of its plant. We may assume that prudent and conservative directors would, in such circumstances, have sought to obtain by an issue of bonds the money the corporation might require to refund its short term obligations and for new capital. We need not resort to doubtful inferences to find that the directors in their management of Long Island Lighting Company did not feel themselves restricted to conservative plans and methods. The evidence clearly indicates that.

Stocks, bonds, notes or other evidences of indebtedness "payable at periods of more than twelve months after the date thereof" could not be issued by Long Island Lighting Company without approval of the Public Service Commission obtained in accordance with section 69 of the Public Service Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 48). The Long Island Lighting Company did in 1932 apply to the Public Service Commission for permission to issue approximately $15,000,000 of refunding bonds. The directors of the Long Island Lighting Company preferred, however, to borrow the moneys under a plan which would not be subject to the restrictions which the Public Service Commission might impose as conditions to its approval. An inference that the directors were influenced by that consideration when they sought to borrow the moneys for Long Island Lighting Company upon notes payable within one year from that date might reasonably be drawn from the evidence in this case. The transaction would not be unlawful for that reason. The Legislature has in the public interest provided that bonds or notes evidencing loans for a longer period than one year may be issued only with the approval of the Commission. The Legislature has not decreed that the public interest requires similar safeguards *Page 236 for issues where the loans became due within the year. The Legislature has drawn the line, and "the very meaning of a line in the law is that you intentionally may go as close to it as you can if you do not pass it." (Superior Oil Co. v. Mississippi,280 U.S. 390, 395, opinion by Mr. Justice HOLMES.) True, the inference might reasonably be drawn that the directors of the Long Island Lighting Company arranged that Empire Power Corporation should loan the money on short term notes with the expectation that Empire Power Corporation, under their control, would continue to renew the loans as they became due, until the time arrived when it would be convenient for Long Island Lighting Company to repay them. The directors regarded these loans as "investments" rather than temporary loans which would be paid at maturity. Nevertheless, the lender could have insisted upon payment of the loans as they became due, and the defendants can be charged with no wrong to the Empire Power Corporation on account of repeated renewals of the loans nor on account of the way in which they were handled, without proof that in these acts the defendants willfully failed to protect the interests of Empire Power Corporation in order to serve better their personal interests and the interests of the Long Island Lighting Company. There may be difference of opinion as to whether these defendants as directors of Empire Power Corporation acted wisely in the handling of the loans. There are many matters disclosed by the record which cast doubt upon the prudence, the wisdom, and the concern for the public interest shown by these directors. We are constrained, however, to agree with the Appellate Division that there is little, if any, evidence to sustain a finding that they have violated their trust or have failed to protect the interests of the Empire Power Corporation according to the dictates of their judgment, be that judgment good or bad.

It is argued, however, that the transactions in which the defendants acted as directors both of the Empire Power Corporation and the Long Island Lighting Company should be set aside because the dual position of these directors precluded an unprejudiced exercise of judgment. The dual position of the directors making the unprejudiced exercise of judgment by them more difficult, should lead the courts to scrutinize these transactions with care. *Page 237 (Sage v. Culver, 147 N.Y. 241; Koral v. Savory, Inc.,276 N.Y. 215; Geddes v. Anaconda Copper Mining Co., 254 U.S. 590;United Copper Securities Co. v. Amalgamated Copper Co.,244 U.S. 261.) It does not, however, alone suffice to render the transactions void, and the provision of the certificate of incorporation of Empire Power Corporation expressly authorizing the directors to act even in matters where they have dual interests, has the effect of exonerating the directors, at least in part, "from adverse inferences which might otherwise be drawn against them." (Spiegel v. Beacon Participations, Inc.,297 Mass. 398, 417.) We may point out here also that if by reason of these loans Empire Power Corporation should sustain a loss, the loss would fall primarily upon these defendants as owners of the entire common stock. The proportion of stock of all classes owned by these defendants in Empire Power Corporation whose moneys they are claimed to have diverted wrongfully, is indeed, much greater than the proportion of the stock owned by them in Long Island Lighting Company, which received these moneys. The loans were not excessive in relation to the capital assets and the income of the borrower as shown in the borrower's balance sheet. The evidence demonstrates that the defendants acting as the directors of the Long Island Lighting Company borrowed moneys from Empire Power Corporation because in their opinion the loans promoted the interests of the borrower and the stockholders of the borrower; the evidence does not demonstrate that the defendants acting as directors of the Empire Power Corporation in loaning its moneys to Long Island Lighting Company did not decide upon sufficient grounds that the loans would also promote the interests of the lender and its stockholders.

The judgment should be affirmed, without costs.