101 Ala. 607 | Ala. | 1893
This bill is exhibited by C. S. Lee and Fannie M. George, citizens of Alabama, and stockholders in the . Mobile & Girard Railroad Company, against
On September 10, 1886, the bill alleges, the Girard company, attempted to make, execute and deliver to the Central company a lease of its road and other property and franchises, a copy of which is exhibited with the bill. This lease was for a term of ninety-nine years, and embraced the railroad, and all extensions thereof, which might thereafter be constructed; and all property, assets and franchises of every description of the Girard company, with the right to the possession and enjoyment of the same. In consideration of the lease, the instniment contains many covenants on the part of the lessee company not necessary to be mentioned here. The bill charges that the Girard company had no power to make
The Central company went into possession of the leased property under the lease and used and operated it until June, 1891. It appears that the Central company became insolvent and its property and rights passed into other hands. On June 15, 1891, it, the Central company, executed a lease of all its property, for a term of ninety-nine years, to the Georgia Pacific Railroad Company, but it seems that that company never went into possession, having on June 19, 1888, executed a lease of its own road to the Richmond & Danville Railroad Company ; and the bill avers that the Central company delivered possession of the Girard road, its property and assets, to the Richmond & Danville company, who operated it until it abandoned possession thereof, at a time, to-wit, sometime after March 3, 1892, when it repudiated the lease of June 15, 1891, of the Central company to the Georgia Pacific company. The bill, nevertheless, states in another place, in the 18th paragraph thereof, that the “Central company has operated said road, from Columbus to its terminus, ever since it went into possession under the lease of 1886 by the Girard company to it.” There were sundry suits, in equity, instituted in the federal court of Georgia and state court of Alabama, involving the Central company and its property, viz., a suit filed by Rowena Clarke on March 4, 1892, in the federal court, at Savannah, against the Central company, the Richmond & Danville company and others, ancillary to which was a bill filed in the state court at Montgomery, Alabama, on April 11th, 1892; a suit filed by the Central company itself against other companies on the 4th of July, 1892, in the federal court, and on April 11th, 1892, it also filed a bill in the state court in Montgomery, Alabama. We deem it unnecessary to set out the nature and purpose of these several suits, except to say
In the lease of 1886, by the Girard to the Central company, assailed as void in this suit, it is stipulated that said railroad might be extended at any time by the Central company, the consent of the Girard company being first obtained ; and in the event of an extension beyond its then terminus, at Troy, Alabama, or any further extension thereof, the Girard company, would, at any time, upon the request of the Central company, its successors or assigns, issue such bonds as might be necessary to build such extension or extensions, not exceeding the ratio that the then bonded debt of the company bore to the number of miles of said railroad, and would secure the payment of such new bonds by a mortgage on the whole of its railroad ; and the bill alleges that, in March, 1890, the Girard company entered into a written contract with the Central company, by which the latter agreed to build an extension from Troy southwestward to Andalusia, Alabama, a distance of towit, fifty, miles ; and the Girard agreed to issue and deliver to the Central its first mortgage bonds, at the rate of not exceeding $ 12,781 per mile, when and as soon as the extension was completed and in operation ; that the Girard also paid to the Central company $142,500, which was the purchase money of the lands granted by Congress to aid in building said railroad, on account of the building and equipment of said road; that under said contract, the Central company constructed and equipped thirty-seven miles of said extension, and graded, and procured the necessary cross-ties to complete the remainder ; that, by said contract, the Central was to complete the extension by April 30, 1891, which was afterwards extended to September 30, 1891; which promise it has failed to perform . The bill charges this violation of the contract on the part of the Central company, and complains that notwithstanding it, the Central company has obtained
The bill further alleges that during the period of the Central’s possession of the Girard property, it was claiming the same as lessee, while at the same time it was the holder and owner of $690,000 of .the bonds of the Girard company; and also owned and controlled, as before
The bill shows that complainants made no effort to induce the governing body of the Girard company, or the stockholders, to institute this suit; and, as excuse for such omission, rely upon the facts hereinabove mentioned, alleged as showing .the Central’s ownership of a majority of the stock and its actual election, support and supreme control of the present officers and directors. It is also averred that five of the seven directors, and the president, secretary and treasurer are residents and citizens of the State of Georgia.
The bill prays for the appointment of a receiver of the Girard road and property, with authority to complete the extension and operate the road, defend suits and generally to preserve and protect the interests of the company ; that said lease of 1886 be declared void ; that the Girard stock held by the Central be decreed to -be purchased and held in violation of law, and the Central company perpetually enjoined from using the same in any manner, and that the Girard company be perpetually enjoined from paying any interest or dividends thereon; it prays for an accounting between the Central and Girard companies as to all transactions and accounts heretofore or now subsisting between them, and for a decree in favor of the Girard company for such a sum as may be found due ; that said Girard company be put in possession of all its property as soon as the stockholders shall have met and elected directors and officers whose election was not brought about, controlled or dictated, in any wise, by the Central company, and for general relief.
The defendants demurred to the bill, the material grounds of which may be condensed and thus stated :
1. It is not alleged that complainants were not parties to said lease, or did not consent thereto after it was made.
2. The lease is not contrary to the laws of Georgia and Alabama, nor in contravention of the public policy of said States..
4. The court has no jurisdiction as the property is in the hands of a receiver.
5. At the time of filing the bill all the property of the Girard company was under lease to the Central company, and was then in the hands of a receiver of the Central company.
6. Complainants have not sued within a reasonable time, but, after full knowledge of all the grounds of complaint now complained of, or full opportunity to acquire such knowledge, acquiesced in such acts for more than six years, and have been guilty of laches.
7. The bill fails to show that complainants made any effort to procure the governing body of the Girard company to institute the suit, without which they have no right to sue. >
The Girard company also demurred to so much of the bill as seeks the appointment of a receiver, because it appears from the bill that the property of the Girard company was in the hands of a receiver appointed by another court. And as to so much of the bill as seeks to set aside the lease, on the same ground.
It would seem useless to remark that, in disposing of these demurrers, we must observe the princijfie, as old as the law of pleading itself, that the demurrer admits the material allegations, well pleaded, to be true; and the court can consider no fact outside of them. We must, therefore, pass unnoticed very much of the argument of appellees’ counsel, which seeks to bring to our view facts not found in the bill.
These demurrers will be considered in the order above stated.
1. The first is not insisted upon in the brief of appellees ’ counsel, and will not be further noticed.
2. It is well settled that, under the general law, a railroad corporation has no power to lease its road and other property to another, and that such an attempted lease is void as against public policy. — M. & C. R. R. Co. v. Grayson, 88 Ala. 572, 7 So. Rep. 122, and authorities there cited. But the Code of Alabama, section 1586,
It must be noticed also that the demurrer under consideration is directed to the whole bill. If for any other equity appearing in the bill, apart from the cancellation of the lease, the complainants are entitled to relief, the demurrer, on this ground, should have been overruled for that reason.
3. As we have seen, the bill alleges that the Central company holds a majority of the stock of the Girard company, acquired when, and as hereinbefore stated; and that the same was acquired with the intent and purpose of getting, by the use of such stock, the management and control of the Girard company, in order to defeat or lessen competition in the respective businesses of the two companies, or to encourage monopoly. We have seen what use the bill avers has been made of the stock by said Central company and the abuse which that company has committed of the property and rights of the Girard company, and its present condition and relation to its own property and that of the Girard company, all of which, so far as concerns the alleged ruinous consequences which resulted to the Girard company, resulted from the ownership and use of said stock by said Central company; and the bill prays, upon these allegations, that the further use of said stock in stockholders’ meetings be enjoined. We had occasion to consider a similar demand for relief in the case of M. & C. R. R. Co. v. Woods, 88 Ala. 630, 7 So. Rep. 108, and we have in that case, an ample discussion of the whole subject, reviewing a number of authorities. We could add nothing to
4. It may be enough to say of this ground of demurrer, viz., that the court is without jurisdiction because the property is in the hands of a receiver, that the bill distinctly avers-that the Girard company’s property has never gone into the hands of any of the receivers. But were the fact otherwise, it would furnish no cause why this bill should not be maintained to restrain the use of the stock as prayed. The granting of this relief would not interfere with the possession of the receivers, or the authority of the courts appointing them, over .the property in their hands. — Gay, Hardie & Co. v. Brierfield Coal & Iron Co., 94 Ala. 303, 11 So. Rep. 353.
5. This ground of demurrer, as well as the two grounds assigned to parts only of the bill, fails, under the influence of what has already been said.
Ü. The complainants have not sued within a reasonable time, bht, after frill knowledge of all the grounds of complaint now complained of, or full opportunity to acquire such knowledge, acquiesced in such acts for more than six years, and have been guilty of laches. We will consider this with reference to the acquisition and use of the Girard stock. It is our opinion so far as it relates to that cause of complaint, that the contention of appellees cannot be supported. Let it be assumed that complainants were fully aware of the ownership of the stock by the Central company, from the time it was acquired, and of that company’s use of it in the past, and acquiesced in such ownership and use, this fact furnishes no reason why they should be obliged to submit to further improper uses of the stock. The abuses committed in the past are the very grounds and causes of their present interposition, to the end that future similar abuses may be prevented. The use of the stock is continuing, and we can conceive of no just reason why a party interested, and otherwise entitled to interfere, may not interfere, at any period of such use, and object to its continuance. As well might it be said that a person who
There is no demurrer raising the question of complainants' right to an accounting, assuming the validity of the lease, or its invalidity; or the effect upon the right to an account of the allegation that the Central company is a mortgage creditor of the Girard company, and its possession of the latter's property that of a mortgagee in possession. Those questions are left to be properly presented for decision to the court of chancery.
We entertain no doubt that the fact that the Central company owns and controls a majority of the Girard stock, and itself practically created and controls the managing and governing bodies, two or more of the officers and five out of seven of the directors being residents of the State of Georgia, dispenses with the necessity for a demand upon the governing body to institute this suit. Taking the facts stated in the bill to be true, the demand would be fruitless — Mack v. DeBardelaben, 90 Ala. 400, 8 So. Rep. 150; M. & C. R. R. Co. v. Woods, supra, and cases cited on page 647.
The chancery court erred in its ruling, and its decree is reversed, and a decree here rendered overruling the demurrers and remanding the cause for further proceedings. The defendants will plead to or answer the bill within sixty days, with power in the chancex-y court, or chancellor in vacation, to extend the time on sufficient showing.
Reversed, rendered and remaxxded.