The question presented upon this appeal is whether, as a matter of law, the board of directors of the defendant Pande Basin Gold Placer Company had the authority and power under its charter to make the lease which is involved in the present controversy. The learned justice at Special Term continued the injunction pending
The plaintiff is a stockholder in the defendant the Pande Basin ■•Gold Placer Company. This company was organized under the laws of West Virginia'for “ the purpose of acquiring and holding by purchase, lease or otherwise, mineral land and other real property on Baranoff Island, Alaska, and elsewhere in the United ¡States and Territories.” In April, 18.98, Maurice L. Muhleman, who had ' gained control of the property which it is now proposed to lease, entered into a negotiation with the company by which, in consideration of the issue to him of 2,499,900 shares of stock of the company, and the making of a certain agreement with the original owners of the property, he undertook to furnish capital for the development of the mines and to give a deed of the said property to the company. This proposition was accepted. Mr. Muhleman raised some money and made certain tests of the ore, etc., of the property. Subsequently, and in January, 1899, the plaintiff in this action learned that the directors of the company were about to make a lease of the property to one Henry L. Sprague, whereupon he served a notice upon the directors, warning them that the proposed lease was illegal and improper. Later this action was commenced, the court granting an injunction restraining the directors from making the said lease, with an order to show cause why the same should not be continued. It subsequently developed that a lease had been made to one Voorhees, who had assigned the- same to the Sitka .Developing Company, whereupon the plaintiff procured an order discontinuing the action against Sprague, and an order was afterward made bringing in the said Voorhees-and the Sitka Developing Company, and allowing plaintiff to amend to comply with the order. The motion to continue the injunction was heard upon the affidavits,-and the learned justice at Special Term held-as above stated, continuing the injunction.
We are unable to concur in the conclusion reached at Special Term on the question of law presented. In actions by stockholders, which assail the acts.of their directors or trustees, courts will not
There is no doubt that the corporation might make a contract with the Sitka Develojfing Company to work these mines, paying them a percentage of the product; and the case is not materially different because the contract takes the form of a lease of the property for the purpose of carrying out one of the objects of the corporation, in the benefits of which, in so far as appears upon the record, the stockholders share equally. The doctrine of ultra vires originated at a time when nearly all corporations were created for public purjmses, and there is no reason why it should ever have been applied to private corporations any more than to the powers of individuals in a partnership. (Holm v. Claus Lipsius Brewing Company, 21 App. Div. 204.)
There would be no good reason why this lease might not be made by an individual in a partnership; there is no consideration of public policy to forbid such a contract, and, in the absence of fraud, collusion or other misconduct on the part of the board of directors going to the merits of the question, we are unable to see that the plaintiff has suffered any injury which justifies the continuance of the order of injunction, or that the board of directors have exceeded the discretionary power vested in them by the laws of West Virginia.
The order appealed from should be reversed, and the injunction dissolved. -
All concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and injunction dissolved, with ten dollars costs.