81 F. 10 | 2d Cir. | 1897
The action was brought by the appellant, as the holder of 275 shares of the preferred stock of the New York & Northern Railway Company, in behalf of himself and all other stockholders similarly situated; and the alleged cause of action arises out of the purchase by the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad Company of a majority of the second mortgage bonds and stock of the said Northern Railway Company, and the subsequent foreclosure of the mortgage securing such bonds. It is averred, with great detail, that the purchase was made and foreclosure effected in pursuance of a conspiracy between the defendants whereby the said New York & Northern Railway Company was to he forced into insolvency, and its property sold out, ostensibly in satisfaction of its bonded, indebtedness, but really in the interest of the New York Central & Hudson road, which acquired title to the property upon foreclosure through a new corporation created by it solely for the purpose of taking such property and leasing it to the Central & Hudson. The same issues were raised in the state court upon the intervention of stockholders of the New York & Northern Railway Company other than complainant. It will he unnecessary to set forth in detail the facts averred in the complaint. A sufficient statement of them will be found in the decision of the New York court of appeals in the state court case. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. New York & N. Ry. Co., 150 N. Y. 410, 44 N. E. 1043.
It is next objected that the bill is multifarious. The facts pleaded make out a case where the New York & Northern Railway Company, through alleged improper and fraudulent conduct on the part of defendants, has been stripped of its property. The bill sets forth a cause of action in favor of the New York & Northern Railway Company, which might be prosecuted either by it, or, if its directors failed to do their duty in that regard, then by one or more of its stockholders whose interest it is to have the corporation vindicate its rights. The pleader, it is true, uses language which seems to imply that he considers this a cause of action in favor of the complainant individually. The brief, too, speaks of the “confiscation of his [complainant’s] property,” asks that “there be restored to him the property which he had lost,” and asserts that he is bringing the suit purely on his own behalf, and not attempting to assert a right of the corporation. But manifestly this is a mistaken conception of the case made by the bill. The property covered by the mortgage, affected by the foreclosure, and which has passed to the new company, is not, and never was, complainant’s property. The acts of the conspirators of which he complains have not deprived him of any of his property. It is the property of the corporation which has been taken, and it is the corporation which is entitled to its return, or to an accounting for its proceeds. When the corporation succeeds, complainant’s share of stock will be worth more; and to that extent he has an interest in the result, which the courts have recognized to the extent of allowing a dissatisfied stockholder, upon a sufficient showing of unsuccessful efforts to induce action by the officers of the corporation, himself to bring the cause of action before the court for consideration. But, in whatever form or under
There is no force to the suggestion that the bill is defective in failing to “set forth with particularity the efforts of the plaintiff to secure such action as he desires on the part of the managing directors or trustees, and, if necessary, of the shareholders, and the causes of his failure to obtain such action.” In view of the averments that defendants obtained control of a majority of the stock and bonds on purpose to wreck the New York & Northern; procured, by resignation and election, a board of directors in harmony with thai purpose, and which board did in fact, by refusing profitable business and diverting traffic, accomplish such purpose, — it would be an idle waste of time to urge the board of directors, or the majority stockholders who initiated and consummated the fraud, to bring suit in order to secure judicial condemnation of their own actions.
It sufficiently appears from averments in the bill that the subject-matter of the suit, viz. the entire property of the New York & Northern, exceeds in value the jurisdictional sum of $2,000.
The only remaining ground of demurrer is that this court has no jurisdiction because the suit is “'virtually to annul the foreclosure proceedings and judgment rendered in the state court.” But Arrowsmith v. Gleason, 129 U. S. 86, 9 Sup. Ct. 237, is abundant authority for the proposition that the court may “lay hold of parties” whose ■’mudulent acts have put them into possession of property under a decree of the state court, and “compel them to do what, according to the principles of equity, they ought to do-,” The decree of the circuit court is reversed, with costs.