
    H. Randolph Whitman, Plaintiff, v. The Holmes Publishing Co. et al., Defendants.
    (Supreme Court, New York Special Term,
    November, 1900.)
    I. Corporation — Stockholder may sue to set aside fraudulent transfer made by directors — Code C. P., § 1781.
    Where directors of a corporation, which is practically a family affair, sell all its assets to a relative for an extremely inadequate price, a stockholder may sue to set aside the transfer and may obtain the relief contemplated by subdivisions 1, 2, 5 and 6 of section 1781 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
    3. Demand of too much relief not fatal.
    The fact that the stockholder also demanded, under subdivision 3, the suspension of the directors — a matter in regard to which the Attorney-General alone can sue (Code C. P., § 1782) — will not debar relief where the claim is abandoned upon the trial.
    Action by a resident stockholder against a foreign corporation.
    
      Charles Strauss, for plaintiff.
    Wilcox & Brodek, for defendants Bates and Byers.
   Blanchard, J.

This action is brought by plaintiff, a resident stockholder of the defendant Holmes Publishing Company, an Illinois coloration, against that corporation and its directors, Henry Brandenburg, Josiah Brandenburg and Erank Byers, and one Charles Austin Bates, whom, it was claimed, was the recipient of a fraudulent and collusive transfer of the assets of the Hblmes Publishing Co. The relief sought is as follows: First, that the directors of the Holmes Publishing Company account for their official conduct; second, that the directors and Bates pay to the corporation the value of any property acquired by them or transferred to others, or lost or wasted, in violation of their duties as such directors; third, that the directors be suspended from office; fourth, that the directors and Bates be enjoined from disposing of any property during the pendency of the action; fifth, that a receiver be appointed of the assets of the corporation, and that Bates be enjoined from disposing of property received by him, and, sixth, for such other relief as may be proper. The only defendants before the court are the corporation, which defaulted, and • the defendants Byers and Bates, who appeared by counsel and defended at the trial.

Defendants contend that the action cannot be maintained by the plaintiff, because it is one brought to suspend officers from performing the functions of their office, which, under sections 1781 and 1782 of the Oode, can only be maintained by the Attorney-General.

In my opinion, the point is not well taken. The action cannot be characterized solely as one to suspend officers because of the fact that such relief is asked in the complaint. That is but part of the relief prayed for, and this was abandoned by counsel for plaintiff, who, in the course of the trial, stated that he did seek such relief. Such relief could not be granted in the present case in any event. The defendants Brandenburg have not been served, and are not within the jurisdiction of the court, and the evidence discloses the fact that the defendant Byers is no longer an officer, having resigned prior to the trial. If the plaintiff has made out a case entitling him to relief at the hands of a court of equity, he ought not to fail because of having, in the prayer for judgment in his complaint, sought for more than he appears to be entitled to upon the trial. Watkins v. Watkins Lumber Co., 11 App. Div. 517, 519, 520. The action, otherwise, under the allegations of the complaint, seems to be maintainable under the authorities. Ives v. Smith, 19 N. Y. St. Repr. 556, 566, 567; affd., 23 id. 917; Stokes v. Stokes, 87 Hun, 152; Brinckerhoff v. Bostwick, 88 N. Y. 52.

I am satisfied from the evidence that plaintiff ought to succeed in this case. He purchased fifty per cent, of the stock in the Holmes Publishing Company from the defendant Bates in November, 1896, for $5,000. The company possessed certain assets, which, at that time, were valued by the defendant Bates at more than $15,000. The board of directors of the company consisted of defendant Byers, an employee of defendant Bates; Henry Brandenburg, Bates’ father-in-law, and Josiah Brandenburg, Bates’ brother-in-law. These directors were all under the control of the defendant Bates. In 1897, Bates acquired practically all the assets of the Holmes Publishing Company for- a consideration of $210. This transfer appears to have been effected by a correspondence between Bates and Byers, written and delivered on the same floor of a building where the defendant company and Bates had offices. The inadequacy of the consideration for the sale of these assets, valued but a few months previous by the defendant Bates at over $15,000, coupled with the facts and circumstances of the method in which the transfer was effected, and the relationship existing between Bates and the directors of the company, lead me to the conclusion that the transfer was collusive and fraudulent.

The other points raised by counsel for defendants have been given consideration, but they fail to affect the conclusion reached. The plaintiff should have judgment appointing a receiver of defendant Holmes Publishing Company; the defendant Byers should account to the receiver for his official conduct while a director, in such a sum as may be found due upon a reference, and the defendant Bates should account for the property of the company received by him, or pay the value thereof, as may be ascertained upon a reference, and the defendant Bates should be enjoined from making any disposition of the property of the company remaining in his possession.

Judgment accordingly.  