35 F. 161 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of West Virginia | 1888
The pleadings and proofs in this case disclose that the Grafton & Greenbrier Railroad Company had constructed a railroad from Grafton to Philippi in this state, which was completed about the 1st day of January, 1888. That during the construction of this railroad, it being represented to the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company that it would be an important feeder to their main line, at the request of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company the Baltimore & Ohio Company advanced it money, material, and property amounting to about $90,000. That on the 19th day of October, 1883, the Grafton & Greenbrier Railroad Company executed a deed of trust or mortgage “on its railroad from Grafton to Philippi, and on all other property between these points then owned and thereafter to be acquired by it on this portion of its road,” to secure 175 of its negotiable bonds of $1,000 each, making a sum total of $175,-Ó00, which were to bear date the 1st day of January, 1884, due in 30 years after date, interest payable semi-annually. After the execution of this mortgage, the Grafton & Greenbrier Company, finding it difficult to negotiate their bonds, made an application through their officers or agents to the Baltimore & Ohio Company to take a portion of the bonds secured by this mortgage. As a result of the negotiations by the officers of the two companies, the Baltimore & Ohio Company concluded to take $120,000 of the first mortgage bonds of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company at-90 percent, of their par value; that is tp say, $120,000 in bonds at the price of $108,000, which was to cover and liquidate the advances already made by the Baltimore & Ohio Company, leaving a balance of $18,000 to be accounted for, and which, it is conceded, was accounted for in their future settlements. That afterwards the Grafton & Green-brier Company desiring to extend their road from Philippi to Belingfcon, a distance 17 iniles south of Philippi, at a stockholders’ meeting of their company on the 28th day of December, 1886, they decided to borrow a sum of money for that purpose, not exceeding $250,000, and to issue its coupon bonds at 6 per cent., to run 30 years, upon which to raise money. At the same meeting it was determined also to extinguish the existing mortgage upon the property, and take up the bonds secured by it with the bonds to be issued under the new mortgage, which was to' be known as the “first consolidated mortgage.” This mortgage was executed on the 20th day of January in the year 1887, and placed upon record on the 10th day of March following. That prior to the execution of this mortgage a committee of directors of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company, composed of John W. Mason, Mr. Hall, and Mr. Whitescarver, applied to the Baltimore & Ohio Company again, to secure further aid to construct the proposed extension to Belington; and in . an interview between the committee and Mr. Spencer, vice-president at that time, of the Baltimore & Ohio Company, the propriety of the Grafton & Green-brier Company making a consolidated mortgage to cover not only its ex
The complainants filed their bill on the 8th day of December, 1887, in the circuit court of Taylor county, in this state, and upon this state of facts they prayed, among other things, that the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, and its officers and agents, be restrained from voting, or otherwise using or transferring, 1,160 shares of stock of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company, and that the company be enjoined and restrained from collecting or negotiating all the bonds received by it upon that settlement, and asking for general relief, and the injunction as prayed for was allowed by the judge of the circuit court of Taylor county in chambers. Shortly after this, and before the cause was matured for hearing, the defendants, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, the Grafton & Greenbrier Railroad Company, and Samuel Spencer, filed their answers to this bill, and at the same time the defendant the Baltimore & Ohio Company filed its petition, with proper affidavit and bond, to remove the cause into this court. And upon its motion this case was docketed on the 11th day of January, 1888. Issue was joined on the •5th day of March upon the answ’ers filed.
Upon this state of the pleadings and proofs in the cause the plaintiffs moved to remand this cause—First, because this is not a controversy between citizens of different states, claiming that the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company is a domestic corporation, and as such a citizen of the same state in which the plaintiff, as well as the Grafton & Greenbrier Company, the codefendant of the Baltimore & Ohio Company, are citizens; second, if the Baltimore & Ohio Company is a citizen of another state, still this is not a separable controversy, which can alone be heard as between the plaintiff and the defendant the Baltimore & Ohio Company, for the reason that the Grafton & Greenbrier Company is a material and necessary party to this suit, as important questions are presented by the pleadings litigating rights existing between the two companies.
The question whether the Baltimore & Ohio Company is a foreign corporation created by the laws of Maryland, and as such a citizen of the state of Maryland, is no longer an open question in this court. It has been repeatedly held by this court that it is a corporation created under the laws of Maryland, and is not a corporation created by any enabling act of Virginia or West Virginia. The court, as now constituted, in June, 1870, held in the case of Railroad Co. v. Supervisors, not reported, “that the Baltimore & Ohio Company, was a foreign, and not a domestic, corporation, and that the Virginia act of 1827 conferred upon the company a mere license to transact business in this state.” This ruling was afterwards followed and adopted by the late Chief Justice Chase, and by the late Chief Justice Waite, while sitting on the circuit. For this position the court relies upon the cases of Railroad Co. v. Harris, 12 Wall. 65, and Railroad Co. v. Koontz, 104 U. S. 5. In Railroad Co. v. Koontz, Chief Justice Waite, speaking for the court, said: “That we held in Railroad Co. v. Harris that the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company was
As to the second ppint made by counsel, that this is not a separable controversy, the pleadings and proofs disclose that the main subject of controversy here is in the possession of 1,160 shares of stock, which the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company obtained from the Grafton & Green-brier Railroad Company under the agreement entered into on the 7tli day of April, 1887. It is conceded that the possession of this stock was obtained by the Baltimore & Ohio Company under an order passed by the hoard of directors of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company April 7, 1887. The prayer of the bill in this ease is threefold in its object: First, to restrain the Baltimore & Ohio Company from anywise using or transferring 1,160 shares of the stock; second, if the stock has not been issued b}' the Grafton & Greenbrier Company to restrain that company from issuing it; third, to restrain and enjoin the collection or negotiation of the bonds transferred by the Grafton & Greenbrier Company to the Baltimore & Ohio Company under the order of April 7, 1887. It appears from the pleadings and proofs that the Grafton & Greenbrier Company had issued the stock and transferred the bonds over six months before the institution of this action, and therefore it is unnecessary to take any notice of that prayer of the bill, inasmuch as the relief it seeks under it is based upon an executed contract entered into on April 7, 1887, with which it is conceded the Baltimore & Ohio Company has fully complied, and as a consequence there is no relief to be granted on that prayer of the bill. The answer of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company, upon which the complainants have taken issue, shows that they have no interest in the matter in controversy, and in fact adopts the answer of the Baltimore & Ohio Company as its answer, thus confining the controversy between the plaintiffs in this action and the Baltimore & Ohio Company, its codefendant. It is obvious, therefore, from the prayer of the bill of the complainants in this case, that all the relief the
The plaintiffs assigned as another ground why the court should remand this cause, that it was also removed under the fourth clause of the second section of the act of 1887, on the ground of local influence. Under this act this question is to be determined solely by the circuit court of the United States. The plaintiffs have tendered a plea in writing, which alleges “that it is not true that the Baltimore & Ohio Company has reason to believe, and does believe, that from prejudice and local influence it will not be able to obtain justice in the circuit court of Taylor county, or in any other state court.” This plea is manifestly insufficient upon its face. It alleges no fact, but merely a denial of the existence of such belief in the petitioning defendant, the Baltimore & Ohio Company, that it could not get justice on account of prejudice and local influence. The act of congress says “that a removal shall take place when it is made to appear to the circuit court that from prejudice or local influence it will not be able to obtain justice.” ■ Clearly this must appear from evidence, and not from belief. If the plaintiff's desire to raise an issue of this character, as to the existence of prejudice or local influence, the plea should affirm that no such local prejudice or influence exists that would prevent the defendant from obtaining justice in the state courts. But it does not so affirm. It makes no issue contemplated by the statute, and for this reason the motion of the defendant the Baltimore & Ohio Company, to strike the plea from the records of this cause, is sustained. It follows, therefore, for the reasons assigned, that the motion to remand this cause to the court from whence it came must bo overruled.
The next contention of the plaintiff is that the meeting of the directors of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company on the 7th day of April, 1887, which approved the proposition made by Mr. Spencer, on behalf of the Baltimore & Ohio Company, to the president of the Grafton & Green-brier Company, was illegal, for the reason that it was a special meeting of the board of directors, and that all of the members of the board of directors had not reasonable notice of the time and place of that meeting, as required by a by-law of the latter company. In the view the court takes of this question, it is unnecessary to decide as to the legality of that meeting. The fact, however, is, as disclosed by the evidence, that the board of directors of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company was composed of 12 directors, and that at that meeting at which they enacted the proposition submitted by Mr. Spencer, on behalf of the Baltimore & Ohio
Another point made by the plaintiffs is, that certain members of the board of directors of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company were personally interested in the action that was taken by the board on the 7th of April, 1887, for the reason that they were guarantors of some indebtedness of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company to some of its creditors other than the Baltimore & Ohio Company. The evidence shows that the Grafton & Greenbrier Company, being hard pressed, and having little or no credit, was compelled to negotiate loans for the further prosecution of its work, and to relieve it from present embarrassment. To secure the loans desired it became necessary for some of the directors lo become guarantors of the company for these loans, otherwise it would have been unable to negotiate them. It is not an uncommon thing that the directors of an important improvement are compelled to lend their personal responsibility to a company in order to give it credit and secure'means to carry on its operations. Many improvements would languish and die if this action upon the part of the directors was held by the courts of the country to be illegal, and to render them incompetent to act in that capacity. In this case the directors were not primarily liable. The company had already exhausted its credit, and they only became guarantors to the creditors to the extent that money was borrowed upon their per
In this connection it was suggested that under the Code of West Virginia the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, being a corporation, could not subscribe for or purchase the stocks, bonds, or securities of any other corporation; that all they could do would be to take it in payment, or in lieu, or in part of, any debt bona fide owing to it. The simple answer to this position is that the history of this case shows that the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company neither purchased stocks nor bonds. That it lent its aid in the way of advances in money, material, and other property, cannot be denied; and that that aid was furnished in good faith, for the reason that the Baltimore & Ohio Company regarded the construction of this work as an important feeder to its main line. That before it received any stock or bonds it had made advances in various ways, amounting to about $90,000, holding as security, only, for these advances, $120,000 of the first mortgage bonds of the Grafton & Green-brier Company as collateral. The Grafton & Greenbrier Company, finding that it was unable to redeem these bonds, and having defaulted in the payment of the interest, and desiring to extend its road 17 miles further, applied, through its officers, to the Baltimore & Ohio Company for further aid. The Baltimore & Ohio Company, after various interviews between the officers of the two companies, made a proposition in writing, by which it agreed to surrender the $120,000 of the first mortgage bonds for $120,000 of the first consolidated mortgage bonds, in lieu of those that it held. It agreed also to make, and also stipulated thac it would make, further advances, provided it was secured by the bonds and the stock of the Grafton & Greenbrier Company for these advances. The Baltimore & Ohio Company did not go out in the open market and pur
For the reasons assigned, wo are of the opinion that the injunction heretofore awarded in this cause must be dissolved, but this case is retained for any further action that either party may desire to take upon merits.