
    Collis P. Huntington, Resp’t, v. Henry Y. Attrill and William K. Soutter, App’t.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, Second Department,
    
    
      Filed December 14, 1886.)
    
    Corporations—Liability of directors for false certificate—Laws 1875, chap. 611.
    The R. B. I. Co., a business corporation, formed under chapter 611, Laws 1875, on February 6, 1880, elected defendants and others directors for the first year, and April 1, 1880, bought of defendant Attrill certain property, which Attrill had bought less than a year before for $80,000, paying $8,000 and giving a purchase money mortgage for $73,000. The corporation took this property, less twenty-one acres, assumed the $72,000 mortgage, paying Attrill therefor in stock of the corporation, $700,000, all of which (the entire stock of the corportion) was issued to him. On June 15, 1880, plaintifE loanedthe corporation $100,000. After the consummation of the sale of said property to the corporation, on June 30, 1880, the defendants and others subscribed and swore to a certificate of full paid stock, in which they state that the amount of capital paid in full was the sum of $700,000, the full amount of the capital stock of the company: Held, that there was sufficient evidence to show that the property was purposely taken at an excessive valuation and that the certificate was intentionally false. That the verdict of the jury that the defendant was liable was right, under section 21 of said act.
    Appeal from a judgment entered upon a verdict in favor of plaintiff at the Kings county circuit, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial made upon the judge’s minutes.
    
      Stewart & Boardman, for resp’t; Billings & Cardoza, for appl’t, Attrill; Vanderpool, Green & Cuming, for app’lt, Soutter.
   Dykman, J.

The Rockaway Beach Improvement Company was constituted in pursuance of the provisions of an act of the legislature designed to provide for the organization of business corporations, and passed June 21, 1875.

The certificate of incorporation required by the statute to give life to the company was filed in the office of the Secretary of State on the 18th day of February, 1880, and on the 15th day of June, 1880, the plaintiff in this action loaned to the company the sum of $100,000.

As an evidence of the debt and a promise for its payment the plaintiff received a promissory note for the full amount made by B. E. Smith, payable to the Rockaway Beach Improvement Company (Limited) on demand, with interest at six per cent per annum, and endorsed as follows: “The Rockaway Beach Improvement Company (Limited), by B. E. Smith, General Manager, 189 Broadway.”

The money was received by the corporation and expended for its benefit.

As security for the payment of the loan the plaintiff received $200,000 of the bonds of the company, for which it would seem he realized the sum of $932, and this action is brought for the recovery of the balance due on the loan, and it is based on the following facts: In the month of July, 1879, the defendant Attrill purchased from Littlejohn a plot of land containing about 140 acres for the consideration of $80,000. He paid $8,000 of that sum in cash, and executed a purchase-money mortgage upon the property as security for the payment of the remainder.

The amount of the capital stock of the company was $700,000,. and the defendant Attrill sold and conveyed the premises purchased by him of Littlejohn, minus twenty-one acres, subject to the mortgage of $72,000 which the company assumed, for the consideration of $700,000, and received his pay in the stock of the corporation, all of which was issued to him.

His deed of conveyance to the corporation bears date April 1, 1880; it was acknowledged on the tenth day of April and recorded on the seventeenth day of the same month.

On the 13th day of April, 1880, it was resolved by the company to purchase the property for the sum of $700,000, payable one-half in the stock of the company and the other half in cash, although Attrill testified that he knew nothing of that proposition to pay him one-half of the purchase money in cash until after the delivery of his deed.

No question arises upon these unimportant details, and the counsel for the appellant says in his points that no part of the capital stock of the company was paid in cash, and that it was all issued to the defendant Attrill in payment for the land conveyed by him to the company. So that fact is to be taken as settled.

On the 26th day of February, 1880, the defendants and others were elected directors of the company for the first year.

After the consummation of the sale to the corporation, and on the 30th day of June, 1880, the defendants and others subscribed and swore to a certificate of full paid stock, in which they stated that the amount of capital paid in full was the sum of $700,000, the full amount of the capital stock of the company.

Although that certificate was not literally true, yet it would have been constructively true and permissible under the statute if the property conveyed by the defendant At-trill to the company was received for the use and legitimate purposes of the corporation at its fair value. Section 14 of the law.

So conversely the certificate was false if the property at the time of the conveyance to the company was not fairly worth the sum of $772,000, and that is the claim of the plaintiff; nay more, the charge against the defendants is that they made an excessive valuation of the property intentionally and purposely, and so brought themselves under the condemnation and penalty prescribed by the twenty-first section of the law, reading as follows: “If any certificate or report made, or public notice given, by the officers of any such corporation shall be false many material representation, all the officers who shall have signed the same shall be jointly and severally liable for all the debts of the corporation contracted while they are officers thereof.”

These defendants are brought precisely within that section, and if they wilfully and intentionally fabricated a false certificate of full paid stock, as the plaintiff insists they did, then this action against them may be maintained on that ground.

So the question upon which the liability of the defendants was suspended was the intentional falsity of the certificate, and that depended upon the question in its rear, whether the property was purposely taken in at an excessive valuation. Most of the evidence adduced on the trial was aimed at that question, and a review of the testimony discloses but little encouragement to the defendants.

It would seem to require a jury possessed of almost infantine credulity to find that these defendants and their associates, endowed with intelligence and under control of their faculties and their experience, could honestly believe that the property conveyed was fairly worth the enormous sum of $772,000.

The charge of the trial judge was favorable to the defendants, and imposed upon the plaintiff a burden which was heavy almost beyond the requirements of the law-, but which he sustained so successfully as to obtain the verdict of the jury under the pressure of its heavy weight, and the verdict is well supported by the evidence.

The scheme conceived by these defendants and their associates, and partially carried into execution, is almost beyond the imagination of prudent men and verges on to folly, and if courts and juries fail to allow them credit for honest motives the failure results from inherent difficulties which seem to be insurmountable. The result may be unfortunate for these defendants, but their difficulties seem to be radical and beyond remedy.

We cannot interfere with this judgment. We have examined all the exceptions of the defendants disclosed by the record, with a care commensurate with the importance of the case, and we discover no error.

The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.

Barnard and Pratt, JJ., concur.  