64 F. 49 | 2d Cir. | 1894
The complainant appeals from a decree of the circuit court for the southern district of New York dismissing- Ms bill, filed to restrain the prosecution of a suit at law pending in that court, brought against him by John Glenn, trustee, etc. In the suit at law the present complainant is alleged to be a stockholder of the National Express & Transportation Company, a Virginia corporation, which became financially embarrassed in September, 1866, and executed a deed of trust to Hoge and others, as trustees for the benefit of its creditors. It owed debts for borrowed money, services rendered, and other obligations, amounting to about $273,000, and its principal assets consisted of unpaid subscriptions from stockholders, amounting to over $3,000,000. Its stockholders, at a meeting assembled for considering the situation, adopted a resolution instructing the directors to make a call upon the unpaid stock for the purpose of extricating the company and paying its debts. This was the last meeting ever held, and nothing was done to carry the resolution into effect. The trustees under the trust undertook to collect some of the assets, but accomplished little. In November, 1871, a creditors’ suit was brought by W. W. Glenn, in chancery court of the city of Richmond, in Virginia, in behalf of himself and such other creditors of the company as might become parties, to obtain a construction of the deed of trust, ascertain the indebtedness of the company, compel the board of directors to make a call upon the stockholders for enough of their unpaid subscriptions to satisfy the debts, to appoint a receiver to collect the assets, and to have the moneys collected brought into court, and applied to the payment of the debts. Although the trustees and some of the directors were made parties, the corporation was not served with process in the suit, nothing of practical value was accomplished, and the efforts of the attorneys for the creditors seem to have been spent in a vain attempt to induce the officers to appear for the corporation and co-operate in the purposes of the suit. In 1879, however, an amended and supplemental bill was filed, and the corporation was served with process by service upon Anderson, a director. The Baltimore & OMo Railroad Company, the Bank of Commerce of Baltimore, and the Philadelphia, Delaware & Baltimore Railroad Company, creditors of the express company, intervened, upon petition, asking to be made coplaintiffs in the suit, and their petitions were granted. A decree pro confesso was made, and an order of reference to a commissioner to take an account of the debts of the company. The claims of a large number of creditors were proved before the commissioner. The suit then proceeded to an interlocutory decree, which was made December 14, 1S80. That decree adjudged,.among other things, that the deed of trust made by the company was valid, and passed to the trustees and their successors all the property of the corporation, including the amount unpaid on the stock and not called; that the trustees, nevertheless, had no legal right to sue for or recover the same until called by the company or by the court on default of the company; that there was due certain indebtedness specified in the report of the commissioner, to whom it had been referred to ascertain the debts of the company,
“But this decree is to be without prejudice to any subsequent application of the petitioner or other stockholders to reopen tlio decree entered in this cause on the 14th da.y of December, 1880, so far as may be necessary to inquire into the validity of any of the debts against said company recognized in said decree; such application to set out sufficient reasons to justify the court in reopening the decree for said purpose, and to be accompanied with a tender of adequate security to pay all the costs awarded to any party, and all damages sustained by any party by reason of such application, and in other respects to abide the judgment of this court.”
Subsequently, decrees were made in the cause for further calls upon the stockholders for unpaid subscriptions. December 13, 1880, Glenn, the trustee appointed by (lie decree, brought suits in the circuit court of the 'United States of the southern district of New York against a number of alleged stockholders, among them one against the complainant, to i-ecover the judicial calls made by the
Great industry and astuteness on the part of counsel have been displayed in presenting by the bill and proofs every circumstance which can in any conceivable way militate against the good faith and the legal effect of the proceedings in the Virginia suit, but there is such a manifest want of equity in the attempt made by the bill to transfer to a foreign forum a litigation which1 properly belongs to the courts of Virginia, — the state where the corporation was domiciled, and in reference to whose laws the stockholders contracted, — which is still pending in the court of original jurisdiction, and when that- court remains open to the complainant and other stockholders for all necessary redress of their grievances, that a few controlling considerations will suffice to dispose of the case without any extended discussion of collateral questions.
The averment that the corporation was never made a party to the Virginia suit can be safely disregarded. If true, there was no occasion for the bill, and an appeal to a court of equity is unnecessary, because the fact would nullify the proceedings and the decree in the Virginia suit, and afford a simple and perfect defense to the suit at law. Notwithstanding the testimony of Anderson, who is in doubt whether he was ever a director, but is confident that, if he ever was, he had resigned before service of process upon him, we think that he was a director when served, and consequently that the corporation was regularly made a party to the suit. Lewis’
The theory that the trustees or directors colluded with the creditors to deprive the stockholders of an opportunity to be represented cannot be accepted. At the inception of the suit, the counsel for the creditors labored with Perot, the president, to induce him to have the corporation appear and answer; and, when process was íinaily issued against the corporation, attempts were made to serve it in every practicable method. Although the corporation and stockholders were not heard in the proceedings, this was not by the procurement or purpose of the creditors, but because of the neglect of the agents of the stockholders, the officers of the corporation, who seem to have preferred to disclaim any responsibility as directors or liability as stockholders, and trust to the chances of litigation for immunity. If the corporation had appeared and contested the suit, it is entirely plain that the decree could not have properly been other than it was, except in a single particular. This is shown by the judgments of the court of appeals of Virginia in Lewis’ Adm’r v. Glenn, 84 Va. 947, 6 S. E. 866, and Hamilton v. Glenn, 85 Va. 901, 9 S. E. 129. It may be that there were valid defenses to some of the claims, in whole or in part, which were established by the creditors against the corporation, and consequently that the decree erroneously fixed the aggregate of indebtedness upon which: the assessment was based; but in all other respects the decree is not subject to any just criticism; and if it is true that as to some of these claims there were valid defenses known to the creditors who proved them, and concealed in order to mislead the court, it is beyond doubt that many of the claims proved were in all respects honest and valid obligations of the company, and the creditors who proved them had no interest in promoting the invalid claims, and did not participate in doing so. The attempt to infect the valid claims, and impute to the creditors proving them knowledge and participation in the proof of the dishonest or invalid ones, because all the claims were represented by the same solicitors, and the solicitors knew of the defenses which might have been made, is a violent use of the doctrine of presumptive fraud. The considerations presented tousto show that there was no good defense to these claims, if they have not fully convinced us, were probably sufficient to convince these solicitors. Under these circumstances a court of equity is asked to annul a decree of another court of equity in a pending cause, to which court and cause the stockholders can now resort to redress any errors of which they can reasonably complain.
The circuit court of the United States are not precluded from exercising in proper cases the inherent jurisdiction of courts of equity to restrain the prosecution of unconscionable actions at law, notwithstanding the particular action may he based upon the judgment of a state court. Payne v. Hook, 7 Wall. 425; Barrow v. Hunton, 99 U. S. 80; Johnson v. Waters, 111 U. S. 640, 4 Sup. Ct. 619; Marshall v. Holmes, 141 U. S. 589, 12 Sup. Ct. 62; Mississippi Mills
The provision made in the interlocutory decree reserving the privilege to any stockholder of the company to apply to reopen the decree, and contest the validity of any debt against the company recognized by it, was accompanied with just and reasonable conditions, and was in all respects a wise exercise of judicial discretion. The complainant was informed as early as in July, 1883, of the pendency and nature of the Virginia suit. From that time until the commencement of the suit at law to recover the assessment, he had an opportunity to acquaint himself with the proceedings, and intervene to reopen the decree, — a privilege which was given by the court
We are of the opinion that the court below properly dismissed the’ complainant’s bill. To sanction his suit would be to countenance similar suits on behalf of each stockholder who may be sued for an assessment in any of the courts of the score of states in which the stockholders are to be found. The spectacle of a multitude of courts sitting concurrently in review of an interlocutory decree of a Virginia court, and assuming to control its proceedings, would be a reproach and disgrace to our jurisprudence. The decree of the circuit court is affirmed, with costs.