116 Ga. 337 | Ga. | 1902
In the year 1869 the Southwestern Railroad Company, hereinafter called the “ Southwestern company,” under legislative authority leased Its railroad to the Central Railroad & Banking Company, hereinafter called the “ Central company.” By the terms of the contract the lessee was to pay to the stockholders of the lessor a semi-annual dividend upon their stock of 3 1/2 per cent., these dividends being due in June and December of each year. They were regularly paid up to and including the month of June, 1892. Previously, on the 3d day of March, 1892, the property of the Central company had, upon a bill filed against it and others in the United States court by Rowena M. Clarke and others, been placed in the hands of E. P. Alexander as temporary receiver. Later, what is termed a dependent bill was filed by this company against the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. and others; and finally all of the property of the Central company passed into the hands of H. M. Comer and R. Somers Hayes as permanent receivers, to be administered under the bill last mentioned. The latter was appointed receiver in October, 1893. This receivership terminated on the 31st day of October, 1895. No payments of dividends were made by the receivers to the stockholders of the Southwestern company after June, 1892.
On January 19, 1893, H. M. Comer as receiver, under an order of court and for the purpose of securing the payment of a certain sum of money which he was authorized to borrow in order to carry on the business with which he had been entrusted, pledged to the Mercantile Trust Company various assets of the Central company,
Comer, the receiver, and his associate, Hayes, continued to operate the railroad of the Southwestern company until, under a plan of reorganization approved by the court, the Central of Georgia Railway Company, hereinafter referred to as the “new Central company,” became the owner of the lines of railroad and other properties of the Central company. Before the reorganization took, place, the receivers, under the order and approval of the court, sold the assets pledged as above stated. The Mercantile Trust Company was the purchaser, and the proceeds of this sale were credited upon the debt which these assets had been pledged to secure. Th& plan of reorganization, to which the Southwestern company was a. party, embraced the following stipulation: “The new company will obtain new leases of the Southwestern and Augusta & Savannah railroads at a rental of 5°/o upon their respective capital stocks. Any arrears of rental due to these railroad companies, respectively,, shall be adjusted- on this basis.” In a contract between the Southwestern company and Samuel Thomas and Thomas F. Ryan it was-among other things agreed that these men were to purchase all the- “ railroads and property ” of the Central company, organize the new company, and deliver to it all that was so purchased; and that to-this company the Southwestern company would lease its railroad under a contract similar to that made in 1869 with the Central, company, except that the rental was to be upon the basis of five per cent, per annum instead of seven, and was to be payable to the-Southwestern company as a corporation and not directly to its stockholders. In the contract between this company and Thomas and Ryan was a stipulation in these words: “ Said purchasers will cause-to be paid to the said Southwestern Railroad Company, through R. T. Wilson, its president, the rentals in arrears due the Southwestern Railroad Company under the existing lease from July first,, eighteen hundred and ninety-two, up to the date of the execution and delivery of the new lease herein provided for, at the rate of five-
Several other persons wore upon their own application made parties plaintiff. The petition was on demurrer dismissed as to all of them, and they are here excepting to this action of the court.
1. As will have been perceived, the theory of the original plaintiff was that the large fund received from the new Central company all belonged to the persons who were stockholders of the Southwestern company at the end of each six months when the dividends would have been payable under the old lease; that the
2. The effect of that order was to practically abrogate the original lease, at least from the time the Southwestern company elected to allow its property to remain in the hands of Comer as receiver. Certainly, from that time to the end, neither the Southwestern company nor its stockholders could demand the seven per cent, per annum, or, indeed, anything under the old lease contract. Undoubtedly, we think, it was no longer operative or effectual, but the company, by allowing its property to remain in the hands of the receiver, did obtain “ the right to claim from [the] court the net results of the operation ” of its property. This right was clearly given to the company and not the stockholders.
4. As to the persons who were made parties plaintiff while the case was pending, it is sufficient to say that their right of action, if any they had, was barred by the statute of limitations. They were not made parties till November 14, 1901, which date is, of ■course, that upon which the action as to them began, and it was about six years-after the Southwestern company received the fund in controversy. The four years bar applies. The written contract •of lease between the Central company and the Southwestern company was in no sense a contract between the latter company and its stockholders, and it certainly embraced no promise by .that company to pay them anything. The fact that this contract provided that the Southwestern company should maintain during the lease its corporate organization “ to the fullest extent necessary to preserve its charter and protect the rights of its stockholders ” does not, as contended, amount to a covenant under seal which brings this case within the twenty years limitation.. The ten years limitation provided for in the Civil Code, § 3772, applies to technical trusts, and not to a case like the present. Southern Star Co. v. Cleghorn, 59 Ga. 782; Schofield v. Woolley, 98 Ga. 548; Tiedeman v. Imperial Fertilizer Co., 109 Ga. 661; Teasley v. Bradley, 110 Ga. 498, 504. Moreover, the Southwestern company was not undertaking to act as trustee for the stockholders with respect to the fund it received from the new Central company for the “back rentals.” According to the petition, the defendant immediately set up the claim that the money was its own, and from the beginning held it adversely to the stockholders. If this fund really belonged to them, it was simply the case of an agent collecting money for his principal and keeping it. This being so, the suit should have been begun within four years from the time the adverse claim
Judgment on main bill of exceptions affirmed ; cross-bill of exceptions dismissed.