Court Opinion

ID: 3623054
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:04:24.28955+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:42:51.820474
License: Public Domain

This is a suit in equity brought by two creditors of the D.G. Yuengling Brewing Company, a dissolved corporation, suing in behalf of themselves and of all other creditors similarly situated, against the former treasurer of the corporation to impress a trust for the payment of the general creditors of the corporation upon certain property acquired by the defendant on a sale thereof by the receiver in voluntary dissolution proceedings. The amended complaint alleges that the defendant with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the creditors of the D.G. Yuengling Brewing Company, entered into a fraudulent conspiracy with the corporation to the end that the defendant should acquire all its property for an amount far less than the real value thereof; that pursuant *Page 156 
to such conspiracy the defendant represented to the creditors, including the plaintiffs, that he would assume and undertake the payment of the merchandise debts, that is to say, all the claims of the general creditors other than the bonds and debts secured by mortgage; that said representations were made with intent to induce the creditors to refrain from making themselves parties to the dissolution proceedings and to refrain from organizing or combining for the protection of their interest and to refrain from bidding upon the sale; that such representations were wholly false being merely part of the conspiracy aforesaid and that by means thereof the plaintiffs and other creditors were induced to forego all efforts to have the property of the corporation realize its fair value at the sale, and that at such sale all the personal property of the corporation being then reasonably worth $500,000 and not being subject to any valid mortgage or lawful lien, was without any competitive bidding purchased by the defendant for $75,500.
The amended complaint further alleges that all the real and personal property of the D.G. Yuengling Brewing Company was upon the sale thereof and pursuant to the aforesaid scheme and conspiracy delivered to the defendant, who thereupon went into possession of the same and has appropriated the same to his own use and has made large profits out of his use of the said property, but has wholly repudiated his promise to assume or pay the merchandise debts of the said corporation, and claims to hold the property free from all claims on the part of its creditors.
It is also expressly alleged in the amended complaint that the receiver in the voluntary dissolution proceedings was, by an order of the Supreme Court made on August 17, 1898, duly discharged as such receiver, having before his discharge exhausted all the assets of the corporation which came into his hands, and which assets were insufficient to pay the debts of the corporation.
Two questions are presented by the appeal: (1) Whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, *Page 157 
and (2) whether, assuming that it does state a cause of action, the receiver of the D.G. Yuengling Brewing Company, who was discharged prior to the commencement of the action, is a necessary party thereto either as a plaintiff or defendant.
The learned Appellate Division was of the opinion that the action could be maintained under sections 1781 and 1782 of the Code of Civil Procedure. We are unable to concur in this view. Subdivision 2 of section 1781 provides that an action may be maintained against one or more trustees, directors, managers or other officers of a corporation to procure judgment "compelling them to pay to the corporation, which they represent, or to its creditors, any money, and the value of any property, which they have acquired to themselves, or transferred to others, or lost, or wasted, by a violation of their duties." Section 1782 provides that an action as prescribed in subdivision 2 of section 1781 may be brought by a creditor of the corporation. It is to be observed, however, that the basis of the action authorized by subdivision 2 of section 1781 against the trustees, directors, managers or other officers of a corporation is "a violation of their duties." This, we take it, means a violation of their duties as such officers. We think that the phrase quoted can hardly be deemed to apply to such a cause of action as is attempted to be set forth in this amended complaint, the gravamen of which is not any official act or omission on the part of the defendant as a director or the treasurer of the D.G. Yuengling Brewing Company, but rather his promise to pay all the debts of the corporation in case he should be allowed to acquire its property at a judicial sale for less than its real value and his failure to keep that promise.
We think, however, that the amended complaint may be sustained irrespective of these provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure. The pleading is not a model of perspicacity or direct statement. It does, however, distinctly allege the fact that the defendant assured the creditors of the corporation, and among them the plaintiffs, that he would assume and undertake the payment of the merchandise debts of the corporation; *Page 158 
that he made this representation with intent to induce the creditors, including the plaintiffs, to refrain from making themselves parties to the dissolution proceedings and to refrain from organizing or combining for the protection of their interests, or from bidding upon the sale of the property; and that by means of his representations the plaintiffs and other creditors were induced to forego all efforts to have the property of the corporation realize its fair value when offered at public sale.
The other allegations of the amended complaint, to which reference has already been made, suffice to justify the inference that the defendant acquired personal property of the corporation for about $425,000 less than it was actually worth. Under these circumstances, if established by the proof upon the trial, the plaintiffs and such other creditors as may join with them in the prosecution of the action, seem to be entitled to a judgment in equity that the defendant holds the property thus acquired impressed with a trust for the payment of their just claims against the corporation. It is not necessary to such a cause of action that the plaintiff should allege the sale by the receiver to have been fraudulent or that they should seek to have it set aside. It may be said of the sale as was said of the judgment in the case of Decker v. Decker (108 N.Y. 128): "It does not alter the character of this fraudulent arrangement, or enable it to defy justice, that it was accomplished through the agency of a valid judgment regularly enforced. That often may be made an effective agency in accomplishing beyond its own legitimate purpose a further result of fraud and dishonesty, and may even be selected as the suitable means by reason of its inherent character. The complaint here is not of the judgment, but of the use which was made of it." The fraud alleged here is not in the conduct of the dissolution proceedings or the conduct of the sale, but in the action of the defendant in combination with the corporation inducing the creditors not to protect their interests at the sale.
Assuming, then, that the amended complaint states facts *Page 159 
sufficient to constitute a cause of action, we come to the question whether the discharged receiver in the voluntary dissolution proceedings was a necessary party, either plaintiff or defendant. We are clearly of the opinion that he was not. No authorities are cited by the learned Appellate Division in support of a contrary conclusion, and that conclusion finds no support in any of the authorities to which our attention has been called. Many of these are cited and discussed by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in the case of Archambeau v.Platt (173 Mass. 249), where it was held that an action could not be maintained against a receiver of a railroad after his discharge, and where Mr. Justice HOLMES cites McNulta v.Lochridge (141 U.S. 327) as necessarily implying that, when a receiver has handed over the funds in his hands and has been discharged by decree, his liability is at an end. This is the view which has been entertained by this court and the courts of last resort in many other states. Thus, in the case of N.Y. W.U. Tel. Co. v. Jewett (115 N.Y. 166, 169) it was said by EARL, J., writing the opinion of the court: "Obviously, after the receiver has been discharged, and the property, by the action of the court, has all been taken out of his hands, there can be no propriety whatever in any further proceedings against him, because thereafter he ceases to represent any one; he can no longer act for or represent the company or its creditors, or any other person interested in the property; and manifestly the court could not thereafter make an order that he should pay a creditor, he no longer having any funds out of which payment could be made." So, in Bond v. The State (68 Miss. 648, 652), it was said by the Supreme Court of Mississippi: "The final discharge of the receiver put an end to his official existence, and withdrew from his care and management the road and property of the company. The discharge having terminated the representative character of the receiver, we are at a loss to understand how any judgment could be rendered against him officially that would render liable to its satisfaction any property of the company — property in his hands when suit was brought, but *Page 160 
now finally withdrawn from him, by the extinction of his official character, before his plea was filed."
Many other decisions to the same effect might be cited, but one more quotation will suffice from a case arising in Texas, where this question concerning the liability of discharged receivers seems frequently to have been considered. "The sole liability of a receiver, except in cases in which he is personally at fault, is official; and when his official character ceases, and the property, through which alone his official liability may be discharged, has passed from his hands, in pursuance of the orders of the court that appointed him, and he has been by that court discharged from his trust, then no judgment can be rendered against him, for with the termination of his official existence ends his official liability." (Ryan v. Hays, 62 Tex. 42,47.)
Our conclusion is that the complaint in this case states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, but that the discharged receiver is not a necessary party. It follows that the order appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and that the first and second questions certified should be answered in the negative and the third question in the affirmative.