
    In the Matter of the Election of Directors of the New York and Westchester Town Site Company. Robert E. Robinson and Others, Petitioners, Respondents, Appellants; Jacob Leitner and Others, Appellants; Nassau Securities and Holding Company, Respondent.
    (Appeal No. 2.)
    Second Department,
    June 29, 1911.
    Contempt — injunction restraining issue of stock •— reissuance- óf old stock — power of court.
    On a motion to punish a party for contempt in violating an order it belongs in the first instance to the court which made the order sitting at Special Term to construe its provisions, determine, the meaning thereof and to decide whether it has been violated.
    A subscriber to the stock of a corporation after having, made default in the payment of installments of the subscription -price transferred his stock to a securities company. Dpon proceedings being taken to forfeit the stock the securities company offered to exchange its certificate and a sum of money for a smaller amount of fully paid stock. This was done, the new certificate issued and the old one canceled. Later a contest arose over the validity of an-election of directors for the corporation- and the court issued an order restraining the officers from “ issuing any stock ” pending a new election. At about the same time certain bondholders protested against the transaction with the securities company and* that company itself demanded that the action be rescinded, accompanying the demand with an offer to pay in full the sum still due on the stock represented by the canceled certificate. Accordingly, after the service of the order, the cancellation on the old certificate was erased, and on payment of the money still due and the surrender of the second certificate it was redelivered to the securities company.
    
      
      Held, that an order refusing to punish the securities company and the officers for contempt should he affirmed;
    That a provision in said order restraining the defendants from voting on such reissued stock at the new election of directors which had been ordered should he stricken out as the court had no power to insert it.
    Appeals by Jacob Leitner and others, by the Railways Company General and by the New York and Westchester Town Site Company from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the Westchester Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of’Westchester on the 20th day of March, 1911.
    Also, an appeal by the petitioners, Robert E. Robinson and others, from certain parts of said order entered as aforesaid.
    
      R. Floyd Clarke [JRobert JR. Reed with him on the brief], for the petitioners. *•
    
      George S. Graham [J. Addison Young with him on the brief], for Jacob Leitner and others.
   Burr, J.:

On February 25, 1911, the petitioners made a motion in the above-entitled proceeding to. punish the individual defendants and the Railways Company General and the Nassau Securities and Holding Company for a violation of the injunction contained in the order entered herein on February ninth, directing that a new election should be held for directors of the New York and Westchester Town Site Company, as well as for other and furthei rehef. The court denied the motion to punish for contempt, but included in the order certain directions additional to those contained in the order of February ninth with regard to the time and manner , of holding the. election, and with regard to what stock should be entitled to vote thereat. The petitioners, appeal from so much of the order as denies the motion to punish for contempt the individual defendants and the acting directors and officers of the town site company unless they at once procure the delivery and cancellation of certain stock certificates delivered to the Nassau Securities and Holding Company as hereinafter described, and from so much of the order as refuses to declare that the proceedings and things done to reissue said stock to the Nassau Securities and Holding Company should be held void, and from so much of the order as refuses to punish for contempt the Nassau Securities. and Holding Company, the Railways Company General, and their officers respectively. The 'individual defendants and the New York and Westchester Town Site Company and the Railways Company General appeal from the whole of said order, including that part which denied the application to punish them for contempt. The order of February ninth entered in these proceedings contained this among other provisions: “Ordered that pending said new election the acting directors and officers of said company be and they hereby are restrained from ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ issuing any stock or voting bonds, or contracting therefor; Provided, that nothing herein shall be taken to adjudicate the question of the validity of the alleged settlement'of the stock of the Nassau-Securities Company.” Petitioners contend that this clause of the order was violated, and in this manner: Among the original subscribers to the capital stock of the New York and Westchester Town Site Company was'Ralph Polk Buell, who subscribed for 33,100 shares. At the date of the meeting of July 8, 1908, the proceedings in. which were considered on the previous appeal (Matter of N. Y. & Westchester Town Site Co., No. 1, 145 App. Div. 623), he was in default. Subsequently he transferred his stock to the Nassau Securities and Holding Company. This stock was not included in the resolution of forfeiture of September 14, 1908. Subsequently proceedings were taken to forfeit that stock,- and at a special meeting of the board of directors of the town site company, held bn December 29, 1908, a proposition was received .from the Nassau Securities and Holding Company substantially as follows: Reciting that $33,100 had been paid into the treasury of the company on account of -the stock subscribed for and held by it, said company proposed -to pay . $2,900 more, •making $36,000 in all. In consideration of this payment the Nassau Securities Company asked that its subscription to the 33,100 shares of stock be canceled, and that there be issued to it full-paid non-assessable- stock at par of the value of $18,000. This would represent 3,600 shares. The effect of this would be that while $2,900 was added to the cash in the treasury of the town site company, liability to it for the payment by the subscriber or the securities company of further sums ón the stock subscriptions would -be avoided. The proposition was accepted, the certificates representing the 33,100 shares were turned in to the company and marked canceled, and 3,600 shares of full-paid non-assessable stock were issued. This stock was subsequently transferred to the Railways Company General. At about the time that the decision was rendered in this proceeding setting aside the' election in October, 1910, a communication was received from the holders of certain voting bonds of the company, of the par value of $12,500, protesting against the action of the board of the town site company in attempting to release the Nassau Securities and Holding Company from its liability on its subscriptions, and demanding that' such action be rescinded. The Nassau Securities and Holding-Company seem at about the same time to have suddenly become impressed with the conviction that such action 'of the town site board was ultra vires and void, and the directors of that board seem likewise to have met with a change of heart. The Nassau Securities.and Holding Company, and the Railways Company General, its transferee, offered to return to the town site company the certificate for 3,600 shares of full-paid non-assessable stock, and demanded the return of the certificates for the 33,100 shares of stock upon which the subscription was only partially paid. This' demand was accompanied with an offer that upon receiving these certificates the full amount still remaining- unpaid upon such subscriptions should be paid. On the 10th day of February, 1911, the board of directors of the town site company adopted a resolution rescinding its action of December 29, 1908. Thereupon the certificate for 3,600 shares of full-paid non-assessable stock was returned to and accepted by the town site company, the certificate itself was stamped canceled, the words which had previously been stamped upon the certificate for the 33,100 shares of unpaid stock, indicating the cancellation thereof, were erased, and these certificates were returned to the Railways Company General and payment of $129,500, the amount remaining unpaid upon such subscription, was made by crediting that sum upon certain promissory notes of- the town site company held by the Railways Company General. Appropriate entries were made in the stock ledger of the town site company showing these transactions. It is. this action which was taken on February 10,1911, the day after the restraining order above referred to was finally settled and signed, which it is claimed by the petitioners was in violation of the injunctive provisions thereof. It belongs in the first instance to the court which made the order, sitting, at Special Term, to construe its provisions and determine the meaning thereof. It has decided that this transaction was not such an issue of stock within the meaning of the order of February ninth as to constitute a contemptuous violation of the order. In view of the form of the order and the language employed, we are not prepared to say that it vpas. In a sense it was hot the issue of new stock, hut a return to the holders thereof of stock improperly Surrendered and illegally canceled. So far,' therefore, as the order denies the motion to punish for contempt, it should be affirmed.

But the order appealed from went much further. While refusing to punish the parties for contempt, or to'adjudicate the question of the validity of the alleged settlement of the stock of the Nassau Securities and Holding Company, under tire resolution of December 29, 1908, the court did assume to decide that the proceedings to revoke such attempted settlement, and the return of the stock in the manner above described, was in violation of the order of February ninth, and it enjoined all the officers, directors and stockholders of. the New York and Westchester Town Site Company, the Nassau Securities and Holding Company and the Railways Company 'General from voting at the new election to he held upon 29,500 shares of said stock, and enjoined and restrained the inspectors at such election from receiving or counting any vote or ballot, in person or by proxy, based thereon. If the surrender of the new and the return of the old certificate was in violation of the order of the court at Special Term, it should have punished the offending parties for contempt. It is seemingly inconsistent for the court to say that no contempt has been committed, and yet assume to construe the conduct of the parties as if in violation of its order. But beyond that, in assuming to decide in this proceeding that stockholders who, upon the .face of the records contained in the stock books, have the right to vote at snch election shall not he permitted to vote thereon, we think the court exceeded its power. This is a special proceeding, brought for a particular purpose, namely, to review the validity of an election held for directors of the town site company in October, 1910. At the present time we express no opinion upon the validity of the transaction of December 29, 1908, or the subsequent one of February 10, 1911, and this for the reason that in this proceeding the court has jurisdiction neither of the parties nor of the subject-matter. The validity of these transactions can only be determined either in an action brought for that purpose, to which all persons interested or affected by thé decision thereon shall be parties, or possibly by a proceeding taken to review the new election, provided the inspectors of election shall err in their determination as to whether such stock is votable. (People ex rel. Putzel v. Simonson, 61 Hun, 338; Matter of Argus Co., 138 N. Y. 557; Matter of Utica Fire Alarm Telegraph Co., 115 App. Div. 821; Matter of Glen Salt Co., 17 id. 234; affd., 153 N. Y. 688.) It may be that at the new election the Railways Company General will not attempt to vote upon the reissued stock. If it does, its right so to do must be determined in appropriate proceedings.

It follows that so much of the order as passes upon the rights of the holders of such reissued stock to vote thereon at the new election must be reversed, and as thus modified the said order appealed from should be affirmed, without costs to either party as against the other.

Jenks, P. J., Hirschberg, Thomas and Carr, JJ., concurred.

So much of the order as passes upon the rights of the holders of the reissued stock to vote thereon at the new election reversed, and as thus modified affirmed, without costs to either party as against the other.,  