204 F. 779 | 2d Cir. | 1913
We agree with Judge Hough that the record shows no evidence of intended fraud or bad faith upon the part of any of the defendants; also, that the complainant has not made out a ease against either the Central Trust Company or the Morgan firms.
It will not be necessary to inquire whether the Richmond Terminal Reorganization Committee, the remaining defendant, was under an implied trust to protect the minority holders of the Georgia Company’s bonds, as Judge Hough has found and the complainant contends. Conceding that this is so, any cause of action which the complainant had arose not later than 1896, and is barred as stale. We follow the analogy of the statute of limitations. Code Civ. Proc. N. Y. § 388. The committee never acted or pretended to act for the benefit of these minority holders. Its attitude was quite adverse. We discover no excuse for the delay of more than 10 years in filing the bill. If the claim had been promptly presented, the defendants composing the committee would have had the benefit of testimony of which they are now deprived by the death of two of its members. They would also have had the benefit of the testimony of other active
The decree is affirmed.