91 Mich. 166 | Mich. | 1892
The bills in these case are filed to enjoin the further prosecution of two actions at law brought by the defendants Miller and Haslett as plaintiffs against the complainant as defendant. In each case the plaintiff sued as assignee of defendant Bancroft.
The complainant is charged as the successor of the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company in each action. In the Miller case the action was for moneys expended for the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company in building fences, station-houses, freight-houses, water-tanks, semaphores, and for work, labor, and material provided and money paid by Bancroft for that company. In the Haslett case the action was for moneys claimed to be due to Bancroft upon a contract made by Bancroft with the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company, by the terms of which Bancroft was to receive $1,000 per mile for right of way furnished by him to said company.
Before the organization of the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company, which road extended from the city of Flint to the city of Lansing, a distance of about 50 miles, a railroad had been built and put in operation
On the 10th day of November following defendant .Bancroft entered into a contract with the company, •through William E. Bowes, its fiscal agent and secretary, to construct the railroad from the city of Flint to the city of Lansing, its entire length. By the terms •of this contract Bancroft was to build complete that part of the road from Flint to its crossing with the Detroit & Milwaukee Eailroad within one year, and to •complete the balance within two years from that date. The work was to be done in conformity with the speci•cations which were annexed to the contract; and in payment therefor Bancroft was to receive $1,250,000 in its first-mortgage bonds, and the further sum of $997,-.500 in is common stock, the bonds to be delivered from time to time as they might be called for by him, and the stock to be delivered, $600,000 upon the signing of the contract, and the balance upon the completion of the road to the city of Lansing. The contract further provided that,' unless the company should procure the right of way on or before the first day of February following, Bancroft might, at his option, procure the same, .and be paid therefor at the rate of $1,000 per mile in cash. It was further provided in the contract that Ban■croft should be entitled to all notes and subscriptions to capital stock that might have been or might be made by any party or parties as donations or otherwise, to the company to aid in the building of said road. The secretary or treasurer of the company, by the terms of- the
After the execution of this contract Mr. Bancroft entered into a contract with Clarke Bros, to construct 25 miles of road, commencing at Lansing and extending-east, by the terms of which Clarke Bros, were to furnish a large quantity of the iron, for which work and iron; they were to receive $125,000 in cash, $130,000 in bankable paper, and $130,000 in first mortgage bonds of the-company. These bonds, by the terms of the contract,, were accepted by Clarke Bros, at their face value. In this same contract with Clarke Bros, it was contemplated that work not specified would be done under the contract, it being expressly provided that one-fourth of the-amount to be paid for extra work should be paid in bonds of the company, fixed at 80 cents on the dollar.
Under these contracts the road was completed about January 1, 1877. Mr. Bancroft, during the time he-was engaged in constructing it, received the entire-amount of the bonds and the whole amount of stock of
Before Mr. Vanderbilt acquired such interest in the
At the time Vanderbilt purchased the stock and bonds, the books of the company did not show any indebtedness for the items claimed in these two suits. Mr. Bancroft did not keep any books showing that the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company was indebted to him. He did keep upon his receiver’s books a statement of .moneys paid out in doing the work for which claim is made in the Miller case, which items were afterwards transferred from such books to other books of his own, and which is simply a statement of moneys paid out, but not appearing on the books as a charge against the •company. These books are in evidence, and marked “Exhibits 51, 52, and 53.”
Before Mr. Hickson purchased in the interest of the stockholders of the Grand Trunk Railway, Mr. Meddaugh, of Detroit, who was acting for Mr. Hickson, and as the American counsel for the Grand Trunk interest, was referred by Mr. Vanderbilt to James M. Turner, of Lansing, for information respecting the indebtedness of the Chicago & Northeastern road and as to the condition •of its right of way. Mr. Meddaugh went to Lansing and had a conference with Mr. Turner, and was there assured by him that the right of way had all been acquired and paid for, and that there was no indebtedness of any kind .beyond that embodied in the statements which Mr. Turner
It also appears that Mr. Turner, as president of the company for the years 1875, 1876, and 1877, made a sworn statement each year of the financial condition of the road to the Railroad Commissioner of the State, as required by law, in which, for the year 1875, he stated that no unfunded indebtedness had been incurred for the-construction, equipment, or purchase of property, and that no debt had been incurred for any other purpose, and that there was no debt then outstanding against the company. In his report for the year 1876 he states, the total indebtedness at $1,250,000, which is also stated to be the total amount of the funded debt. He also states that there is no unfunded debt incurred for construction, equipment, or purchase of property, nor for any other special purpose, and that there are no other debts, current credit balances, etc. At page 511 of the-report he states, under the head of “ Cost of Road and Equipment,” that grading and masonry, bridging, superstructure, including rails, land, land damages, and fences,, passenger and freight stations, wood-sheds, and water
It also appeal’s that when Mr. Vanderbilt proposed to purchase the stock and bonds he sent Judge Mason and John Newell to Lansing in his behalf to inquire into the property and its financial situation. They called upon Mr. Turner, as Turner himself testified. They examined the books, as Turner says, and “were there to inspect the propex-ty, the financial- condition, and standing.” At this time, which was in 1878, as has already been stated, the books of the company did not show any indebtedness to Mr. Bancroft; and the three reports had then been made by Mr. Turner to the Railroad Commissioner. It is evident that the agents of Mr. Vanderbilt did not find any other indebtedness than shown on the books, and Mr. Turner admits that he did not tell them of the Bancroft claim. At-least their report was satisfactory to
The only excuse made, or attempted to be made, by Mr. Turner for these statements to the Commissioner of Railroads and the agents of Mr. Vanderbilt when he purchased, and to the agents of Mr. Hickson when he made his purchase, is contained in a letter subsequently written by him to Mr. Meddaugh, and in his testimony, in which, not denying the representation he had made, he says he thought that Mr. Meddaugh had Bancroft so thoroughly surrounded that he would never be heard of again;” so that Mr. Vanderbilt and Mr. Hickson, as trustee, seem, from the testimony of Mr. Turner, to have purchased in full confidence that there was no outstanding indebtedness of the company, except in small amounts, aside from the bonded debt, and that entirely covered the cost of construction, and every item contained in the Miller and Haslett accounts. Not one word was ever said to the agents of Mr. Vanderbilt or of Mr. Hickson by Mr. Turner about the Bancroft claim until long after the road went into the hands of the stockholders of the Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway Company; yet, during the existence of the Chicago & Northeastern road as a company, Mr. Turner was its president, and in the sale of its stock and bonds to Vanderbilt represented a majority of the same.
We think the record contains abundant evidence that Mr. Bancroft was cognizant of these facts and of the conduct of Mr. Turner in the premises. Mr. Bancroft's attention, on his cross-examination, was called to the reports made by Mr. Turner to the Railroad Commissioner. He was asked:
“Q. Do you know who made those reports?
“A. I do not know who made them.
*179 “Q. Did you know of their being made at the time of their being made?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You remember of the fact of seeing them at the time of their being made?
“A. I presume, in the ordinary course of business, I saw them and knew of them; but, as to recollecting the time and place I saw them, I could not do it.
“Q. Then all you can say is, at the time when they were made you knew of their being made, and knew what they contained at that time?
“A. I must have known so; yes, sir."
By his own admission Mr. Bancroft knew that Mr. Turner, as president of the company, had made sworn reports to the Railroad Commissioner, stating that the oonstruction account had all been paid for by the entire issue of stock and bonds, and that this indebtedness included the value of the land, land damages, fences, passenger and freight stations, water-tanks, engine-houses, otc., and which would include every' item of the claim made in the two suits at law by Miller and Haslett.
Sir Joseph Hickson, president "of the Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada, testifies that in September, 1877, he looked into the books of the Chicago & North-eastern Company and found that no claims were there recorded in favor of Mr. Bancroft, and that prior to that time he had received assurances from Mr. Bancroft, ■on various occasions, that there were> with some insignificant exceptions, no outstanding liabilities of the company, and that these assurances were confirmed by an ■examination of the books of the company; that he purchased the stock and bonds of that company on behalf of the stockholders of the Grand Trunk Railway -Company of Canada; and that before the purchase Mr. Meddaugh had reported to him that he had received assurances that the title to the right of way was perfect. The interview between Sir Joseph Hicks, and Mr. Ban
We find, then, Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Turner, prior to these purchases, both making representations that there was no indebtedness against the Chicago & Northeastern Bailroad Company, except a small amount for current expenses, etc., and that the right of way, and every other
It is contended upon the part of the complainant,—
1. That William L. .Bancroft organized the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company, notion the purpose of building and operating the railroad as contemplated by the general railroad law, but for the sole purpose of ■enabling him, said Bancroft, to construct a road between Flint and Lansing under cover of the corporate organization known as the “Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company;” that no one contributed a dollar to its capital stock, and that the corporation existed merely on paper; that the corporation and Bancroft were one and the same, and what purported on its face to be a contract between the corporation and Bancroft was in fact .a contract by William L. Bancroft with himself.
2. That William L. Bancroft organized the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company in fraud of the statutes •of the State; that the alleged contract or contracts, under which he claims, were made in furtherance of the fraudulent scheme, and are therefore tainted with it, and void.
3. That the contract in the Haslett case is void on its face, because contrary to public policy.
4. That the construction of the road did not cost to exceed $700,000, and the complainant is entitled to have Bancroft account to it for the stock and bonds issued to him at their par value, and to have a decree against him for the payment of the amount thereof, less the actual sum expended by him in the construction of the road.
5. That Bancroft knew of the sale of the stock and bonds by Turner to Vanderbilt, and made no objections to the sale, but consented to the sale, and aided in making it, without disclosing to Vanderbilt, or to ■any one acting for him, that he (Bancroft) had any claim for the right of way, or had any other claim against the company; that he knew of the proceedings for consolidation, and gave no notice of such claim; that the shareholders in the several consolidating companies surrendered their shares, taking therefor shares in the complainant company, and at that time the books of the Chicago and Northeastern Company did not show any indebtedness to Bancroft either for right of way or for any other of the claims sued for in the two suits at law;
It is undoubtedly well settled that parties who deal, with a corporation de facto cannot collaterally deny the-legality of the corporate existence. By dealing with such company they are held to admit that it is a corporation, and the question of the legality of its organization is a question which is to be raised only by direct proceedings therefor in behalf of the State; but it does not follow that one who deals with it as such, under the circumstances here stated, shall be precluded from showing that the organization of the company was brought about for the very purpose of perpetrating a fraud undercover of ’it.
Morawetz on Corporations (section 1) says:
“It is essential to a clear understanding of many important branches of the law of corporations to bear in-mind distinctly that the existence of a corporation,, independently of its shareholders, is a fiction; and that the rights and duties of an incorporated association are in reality the rights and duties of the persons who oppose it, and not of an imaginary being.”
At section 227, he says:
“In equity the conception of a corporate entity is used merely as a formula for working out the rights and equities of the real parties in interest, while at law this-figurative conception takes the shape of a dogma, and is often applied rigorously, without regard to its true purpose and meaning. In equity the relationship between*183 the shareholders is recognized whenever this becomes necessary to the attainment of justice; at law this relationship is not. recognized at all.”
In Gas Co. v. West, 50 Iowa, 16, 25, it is said:
“Equity will not be bound by the technical rules of the law when these rules will permit fraud to triumph. The legal rules which regard a corporation as an artificial person, to be bound only by acts done in accord with its charter, which permit it to hold property as a natural person, and limit the interest of the stockholder therein to his shares, must all go down when they are attempted to be used as instruments of fraud by the dishonest, and stand in the way of equity.”1
By the statute permitting consolidations (How. Stat. § 3344), it is provided that—
“All and singular the rights and franchises of each and all of said two or more corporations, parties to such agreement, and all and singular their rights and interests in and to every species of property and things in action, shall be deemed to be transferred to and vested in such new corporation, without any other deed or transfer; and such new corporation shall hold and enjoy the same, together with all the right of way and all other rights of property, in the same manner and to the same intent as if the said two or more corporations, parties to such agreement, should have continued to retain the title and transact the business of such corporation; * * * that all the debts, liabilities, and duties of either company shall thenceforth attach to such new corporation, and be enforced against the same to the same extent and in the same manner as if such debts, liabilities, and duties had been originally incurred by it.”
Under the proofs in this case it is apparent that Mr. Bancroft was the company. He paid all that was paid in its organization, and then entered into a contract by which he took all its bonds and all the stock that was ever issued, which was the whole amount of stock, less 25 shares. The contract which he pretended to enter into with the company through Mr. Bowes, as its fiscal
The whole scheme of the organization is patent. Mr. Bancroft was receiver of the other companies, and to make a through line from .Port Huron to Valparaiso, and thence to Chicago, the line from Flint to Lansing must be built. He conceived the idea of building that link, and for that purpose organized the Chicago & Northeastern Company, keeping the organization in his own hands, and making a contract by which he should get all it had, bond it for $35,000 a mile, and then con. solídate it with the other companies for a through line by replacing its bonds by the bonds of the consolidated company. The Amsterdam agreement shows that it was his intention to take advantage of the exigencies of the other companies, and in that way to replace the bonds which he held of the Chicago & Northeastern Company. Under the contract he left nothing in the hands of the company by which it, as a corporation, could complete its road. The road which he was to build by the terms of the contract was not one which, under the statute, could be operated. It had no side tracks, turn-tables, station-houses, water-tanks, semaphores, fences; etc., necessary to operate the road, and not a foot of the right of way secured when the contract was entered into, and not a dollar in the treasury or a single bond to purchase the same with, no rolling stock even being provided for. He took all the company had, and now contends that the company is bound to pay him $1,000 per mile for securing the right of way, and for side tracks, water-
I think the proofs show clearly:
1. That the whole scheme was intended as a fraud upon the statute authorizing' the organization of railroad companies.
2. That the complainant company is not estopped from inquiring into it, under the circumstances of this case, for the reason that the indebtedness upon the claims now made was not known either to the Yanderbilt interest or the Grand Trunk interest at the time of their respective purchases of the bonds and stock of the company; and no such claim was made by Mr. Bancroft at or before the time of the consolidation of the Northeastern Company with the Chicago & Lake Huron Company, under the name of the Chicago & Grand Trunk Railway Company, the complainant in these cases.
3. It is also apparent that in equity Mr. Bancroft has been more than paid for all the labor and money expended by him, including the claims now made for right of way and the items involved in the Miller case. By the terms of the contract Bancroft was to receive the bonds whenever he called for them. The contract was executed November 10, 1874, but he did nothing under it until about the time he entered into a contract with Clarke Bros., June 10, 1876, though he was to commence at •once, and construct and complete the road from Flint to the crossing of the Detroit, Grand Haven & Milwaukee road at Durand within one year. The Clarke Brothers, under their contract, were to construct 25 miles of road, commencing at Lansing, extending east, and to furnish a large quantity of iron, for which work and iron to be
“The market value of bonds on such a road was not over 50 per cent, of their face value, while the value of the stock was merely nominal, and that defendant, in his estimate for the building of said road, so valued said bonds and stock, and that such a valuation was a reasonable and proper one, as compared with similar railroad undertakings, and as may be shown by an examination of price-lists of ordinary railr.ad securities, and in fact the complainant, or persons who acquired said bonds and stock for it, paid therefor, after the completion of said road, only 50 cents on the dollar of said bonds, allowing nothing to said Vanderbilt for a majority of its said stock."
It is admitted, therefore, by the answer that the bonds, at the time they went into Bancroft’s hands, were worth 50 cents on a dollar, or $635,000, and these bonds, in addition to the stock, $997,500 at its face value, went into Mr, Bancroft’s hands. A showing is made of the cost and expenses of construction of the road by Mr. Bancroft in the present suits by Exhibit 55, produced by him. The total expenditure is stated at $587,148.53. Afterwards he produced another statement, called “Exhibit 54," made up apparently of the same items as the other exhibit, and with some other items added at the
4. We think the defendants should be estopped from prosecuting their claims against the complainant company-in the suits at law by reason of the representations made-by Mr. Turner, and of which Bancroft must have been fully cognizant, and by reason of the representations-made by Mr. Bancroft to Mr. Hickson and others, that there was no such indebtedness as here claimed existing-against the Chicago & Northeastern Railroad Company. The stockholders of the complainant company apparently purchased in good faith, and without any knowledge or notice of these claims, and after an examination of the books of the company, and upon representations by Mr. Turner that no such indebtedness existed, and after repeated assurances by Mr. Bancroft to Mr. Hickson and others that the right of way was fully paid for, and that-
The court below found that the bringing of the two ■suits at law was against equity and good conscience, and that the suits ought not further to be prosecuted or maintained. Writs of injunction were issued .out of that ■court perpetually prohibiting the parties from further proceeding in both suits.
These decrees of the court below must be affirmed, with costs.
Above authorities were cited by counsel for complainant.