
    Carr v. Risher.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
    
    November 23, 1888.)
    Corporations—Failure to Make Financial Report—Liability of Trustees—Repeal of Statute.
    Laws N. Y. 1848, c. 40, § 12, provided that every corporation organized under that act should annually, within 20 days from the 1st day of January, make, publish, and file a verified financial report, and for a failure so to do imposed a joint and several liability upon all the trustees for all existing debts. This act was so amended by Laws 1875, c. 510, in regard to preceding cases, as to require only that the report should be made within 20 days from the 1st of January of the year following the January of the year in which the company was incorporated; the word “annually” being omitted. The company of which defendant was trustee in January, 1867, was incorporated in 1865. Held that, by omitting the word “annually” from the act of 1848, no liability was left upon defendant, in a suit commenced after the passage of the act of 1875, for an omission to make, publish, and file a report in January, 1867; it not being shown that such report was not duly made in 1866.
    Appeal from circuit court, New York county.
    This was an action brought by John F. Carr against John C. Bislier, to enforce a statutory liability. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appeals.
    Argued before Van Brunt, P. J., and Beady and Daniels, JJ.
    
      Thomas G. Shearman, for appellant. John V. Arnold and Gilbert D. Lamb, for respondent.
   Daniels, J.

The verdict and judgment were recovered against the defendant for the amount owing on 11 bonds, of $1,000 each, issued by the Pitts-burg & Martinez Silver Mining Company on the 28th of September, 1865. The bonds were made payable on the 1st of October, 1868, with interest semi-annually, on the 1st of April and October, in each year. The company was incorporated under the manufacturing laws of the state of New York, in September, 1865, and the evidence tended to establish the fact to be that the defendant was a trustee of the company in January, 1867, and that no report was made or filed within 20 days from the 1st day of that month, as that was then required to be done by section 12, c. 40, Laws 1848. And it was on this ground, the defendant having been in the mean time a non-resident of this state, that he was held liable for the amount unpaid on these bonds.

A great variety of objections have been presented to the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action on the proof produced at the trial, but neither of these objections appear to stand upon any substantial foundation, except the objections that the debt was not due at the time of the alleged default, and that so much of the statute as created the liability was afterwards repealed by chapter 510 of the Laws of 1875, which was before this suit was commenced. In support of the first of these two objections the case of Nimmons v. Hennion, 2 Sweeny, 663, has been cited as controlling, but it is certainly extremely doubtful whether this case contains a correct exposition of the law; for all that the statute has required in this respect is that the debt shall be existing at the time of the failure to make and file the report; and these debts did so exist, although they were not due, and that was considered the true construction of the statute in Haight v. Naylor, 5 Daly, 219. And what was incidentally said upon the same subject in Garrison v. Howe, 17 N. Y. 458; Leggett v. Bank, 24 N. Y. 283; and Jones v. Barlow, 62 N. Y. 203,—is in the same direction. But to dispose of the action this point is not required to be actually decided, for the second objection, which has been mentioned, seems to be fatal to the right of the plaintiff to maintain it. As the law was orig- ' inally enacted in 1848 every company incorporated under it was required annually, within 20 days from the 1st of January, to make a report, which should be verified, published, and filed, stating the amount of capital of the company, the proportion actually paid in, and the amount of its existing debts. And for a failure to make, publish, and file such report all the trustees of the company were declared to be jointly and severally liable for all its existing debts, and such as should be contracted before the report should be made. By the act of 1875 this section underwent an important and material change. It was then amended so as to require the company to make the report within 20 days from the 1st of January, if a year from the time of the filing of the certificate of incorporation shall then have expired; and if so long a time shall not have expired, then within 20 days from the 1st of January in each year after the expiration of the year from the time of filing such certificate. This change, it is true, only repeals so much of section 12 of chapter 40 of the Laws of 1848 as it omitted to include. Moore v. Mausert, 49 N. Y. 332. But the omission which was then made had an important effect upon the liability of the defendant, for it left only so much of th,e act of 1848 applicable to the default or omission, relied upon in support of this action, as required the company to make the report within 20 days from the 1st day of January, without indicating what January was intended. By omitting in the amendment of the section the word “annually” the law was left, as to preceding cases, in such language as to require no more than that the report should be made within 20 days from any 1st day of January, without directing that to be done annually, or specifying any 1st day of January from which the time was to be calculated. And so much of section 12 of the act of 1848 as was continued in force by the act of 1875 directed no more than that every company formed under the act should make the report within 20 days from the 1st of January of the year following the January of the year in which the company was incorporated. To maintain the liability of the defendant in this case the word “annually,” as it was employed in the act of 1848, was essential. That is to be inferred from the use of that word in the act of 1848. Without it the obligation or duty intended then to be created was not complete. If it had been, the word would not have been used at all, and its omission in 1875 consequently so far changed the law in its application to this case as to dispense with annual reports. As it was left by the amendment in 1875, the law has been observed; for as there is neither averment nor proof that the report was not made in 1866, it may be inferred that it was then made, filed, and published, as that was the duty of the trustees. And that it was made, filed, and published after 1867 is conceded by the complaint. By omitting or repealing this word, as. that was the effect of the act of 1875, the penalty which had been incurred by the failure to make the report within the first 20 days of the month of January, 1867, was superseded and extinguished. This general subject was considered, in Printing Co. v. Beecher, 26 Hun, 48, and the change in the statute was held to relieve the defendant then before the court from liability. And this view' was further sustained by its affirmance in the court of appeals, (97 N. Y. 651.). Ho other failure to make, publish, or file the report has been alleged as a. ground of this action, but it was conceded that the report was made as it should have been after the year 1867. By omitting the use of the word “annually” from this section of the act of 1848 no liability was left upon the defendant for the omission to make, publish, and file the report in January, 1867, and the consequence is that the plaintiff was no.t entitled to' maintain th.e action, and the judgment and order should be reversed, and a new trial directed, with costs to the defendant to abide the event.

Van Brunt, P. J., and Brady, J., concur in the result.'  