72 Md. 220 | Md. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an Alleghany County case, and the questions are mainly questions of fact, involving charges of bad faith and fraud against high railroad officials, against presidents of coal companies, and against leading members of the bar. The record is a voluminous one, with no less than five hundred pages of testimony, a good deal of which is conflicting and contradictory, painfully so, we may add, and it is a difficult matter to get at the truth of some of the transactions closely connected with the .questions at issue.
The bill is filed by the administratrix of Maurice A. Healey, to set aside a transfer by him to the defendant Loveridge of 352 shares of stock, being a majority of the entire number of shares of stock of the Pennsylvania
In the early part of 1878, the $65,000 Cumberland City bonds were delivered to Healey, the president of the road, and were sold by him through Col. Schley at 90 cts. of their face value. With the proceeds arising from the sale of these bonds, the work of construction began, under a contract with Messrs. Wingate, Saxton & Co., and progressed satisfactorily, apparently so at least, till about the middle of November of that year, when for reasons satisfactory to themselves, Win-gate, Saxton & Co., abandoned their contract. Healey, then attempted to carry on the work, hut being unable
Now, a great deal was said about the authority of Williams to transfer the 352 shares of Healey’s stock, but in view of the subsequent agreement of the 26th of April, between Healey himself and Loveridge, this seems to us to be an immaterial question. Whether, strictly speaking, he had the authority, under the power of attorney, to transfer Healey’s stock, all will agree, that
No sooner, however, was this agreement made, than Healey returns to Cumberland. The completion of this road, which seemed almost hopeless when he left, was now through the agreement of April 2nd assured. He was riot, however, it seems, satisfied with it and denied the authority of Williams to transfer his stock, and said he “would go to New York, and see Loveridge, and get $5000." The result of their interview in New York, led to the execution of the agreement of April 26th, between Healey and Loveridge, by which the former transferred to Loveridge, the 352 shares of stock, and Loveridge on his part agreed to negotiate a loan of $5500 for Healey by the 1st of July, on his note secured by the pledge of his stock as collateral security, and also agreed that Healey should be paid a fair compensation for his services as president of the company, the amount to be agreed upon, and all accounts between him and the
1st. Upon the failure to negotiate the $5500 loan.
2ndly. The failure to adjust the accounts between Healey and the company, and to agree upon the compensation to be allowed him as president.
3rdly. Upon the election of Schley to succeed him as president.
4th. The sham and pretended sales of the 352 shares by Loveridge to Stewart, and by the latter to Gardner P. Lloyd, President of the American Coal Company.
There is a good deal of testimony, and much of it is contradictory, but after a careful consideration of all of it, we are of opinion that this contention cannot be sustained. We are unable to find any proof to justify us
1st. The failure to negotiate the $5500 loan. And here it must he borne in mind, that this loan was to he made by 1st of July, on Healey’s note, with his stock pledged as collateral security; and, further, the number of shares to he pledged was to be determined by Beall and Loveridge. All agree that the note was never presented to Loveridge, nor were the number of shares of stock to he pledged as collateral security ever determined, nor was Loveridge ever requested by Healey or •any one else to advance the money. 'Nor does the proof show any unwillingness on his part to negotiate this loan. On the contrary, the proof is all the other way. Beall himself says, that Loveridge was ready to advance it, and requested him so to inform Healey, and this the witness did. Williams says the same thing. And when Lynn, at Loveridge’s request, told Healey that the loan was ready for him at any time, he replied by saying, he didn’t want it.” And as late as June 80th, Love-ridge telegraphs to Healey, that he was ready to honor a sight draft for the money, accompanied with his note, and 248 shares of stock as collateral. This offer, it was argued, was not made in good faith, because Loveridge knew it was said, that Healey had only 148 shares of stock which he could pledge. But the proof does not support this. In the agreement of the 2nd of April, it was expressly stated that Healey was the owner of 600 shares, and, if so, he still had 248 shares, after the
Now, there cannot be, it seems to us, any difficulty in understanding why this loan was not made, and why Healey never tendered his note and stock as collateral. On the very day on which the agreement was made, Healey spoke to both Beall and Williams of the large sum of money that could be made by the sale of his stock and the transfer of the road to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad; and it was not till Williams had denounced such a purpose in the most earnest and emphatic manner, as a flagrant breach of faith with the people of Cumberland who had loaned $65,000 to the company, upon the pledge of Healey himself and the directors, that the road should be built as a competitive road, that he promised to abandon the scheme and never think of it again. And later in the day, when the agreement between Loveridge and himself was made, by which he transferred 352 shares of stock to Loveridge, he had concluded no doubt to stand by his pledge, and to stand by the agreement. But he was unable, it seems, to resist the temptation. In the early part of June he tells Clary that he has had “an offer of $25,000 for the stock of the Pennsylvania railroad in Maryland, and he had a notion to let it go. ”
About the same time he tells Lynn he “has a big thing on hand, that he could make thousands of dollars out of it” and then spoke of selling out his stock to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad instead of to Loveridge. And when the witness asked him how he was to get over his
Ten days after this, he reneAvs the subject with Williams, and solicits his co-operation and begs him to use his influence with Beall, not to come to any settlement with Loveridge under the agreement of the 26th of April. And in the latter part of the month, we find him in conference with the officials of the Baltimore and Ohio, as to the terms and conditions 'on which he was to transfer his stock and the control of the Pennsylvania Road in Maryland to that company. So, whatever may have heen his intention at the time the agreement of the 26th of April was made, and although he may have been willing at that time to have accepted the loan of $5500 on the balance of his stock as collateral security, we are satisfied he had fully made up his mind a few weeks afterwards to sell his stock and hand over the control of the road to the Baltimore and Ohio, provided he could get rid of it, or, to use his own language, “burst up,” his agreement with Loveridge. And this is why he did not want the $5500 loan negotiated, and Avhy it was not in fact made.
2ndly. The failure to adjust the accounts between Healey and the company.
These accounts were not adjusted, it is true, but it was not from any unwillingness or want of co-operation on the part of Loveridge. Beall, who was to represent Healey in the audit of these accounts, went to Texas immediately after the execution of the agreement of the 26th of April, and did not get back till the last week in May. After his return, in the early part of June, he called on Healey for his account, but it was not ready. As a matter of fact, there were no data from which an account could be made. He was the president of a company
We come, then, to the election of Schley as president in the place of Healey.
We are fully satisfied that the agreement of Loveridge on the 2nd of April, that Healey should remain president, was made in perfect good faith, and that he fully intended to carry out this agreement. Accordingly,
And this brings us to the last ground relied on in support of this hill, namely, the sham and pretended sales of this stock by Loveridge to Stewart, and by Stewart to Gardner P. Lloyd, President of the American Coal Company. And here we are obliged to say, and we say it reluctantly, that these pretended sales are far from being creditable to the parties concerned. Loveridge
Decree affirmed.