100 Ind. 341 | Ind. | 1885
This suit was brought by Robert A. Hill and George W. Shanklin, against Watkins F. Nisbet, Henry F. Blount, Frederick W. Cook, William Heilman, John E. Martin, Samuel Orr, Charles E. Bennett, Daniel J. Mackey, Robert K. Dunkerson, Francis Hopkins, The Evansville Local Trade Railroad Company, The Cincinnati, Rockport and Southwestern Railway Company, and The Evansville and Terre Haute Railroad Company.
It is charged in the complaint with much particularity and ■detail of circumstance, that the appellants Hill and Shanklin are stockholders in the Evansville Local Trade Railroad Company, and that the other individual defendants are, some of them, officers, directors and stockholders of the two corporations first named, and the others of that last named, and that the Local Trade Company, some time before the commence
It is charged, also, that some of the.appellees, directors of the Local .Trade Co., and of the Cincinnati, etc., Co., entered into a combination and conspiracy with others of the appellees, some of whom are interested in the Evansville and Terre Haute Eailroad Co., intending fraudulently to give the last named company some unjust advantage over the property of the Local Trade Co.; that the defendants, not corporations, got possession, and made themselves the directors, of the Cincinnati, etc., Co., by voting the stock owned by the Local Trade Co. (which was sixty per cent, of the whole), and that neither of them personally owned any stock, and made such of themselves as were directors of the Evansville and Terre Haute Eailroad Co. directors of the Cincinnati, etc., Co., and made the president and the secretary of the Terre Haute Co. the president and the secretary of the Cincinnati, etc., Co., and moved the Cincinnati, etc., Co. into the general offices of the Terre Haute Co.; that it is the design of the defendants, after defrauding all of the other stockholders of the several companies out of their stock, to connect the properties, making one property of great value, to wit, of the value of one million dollars, and then to own the same; that since this suit defendants are seeking to defeat the court in the equitable adjustment between the parties herein, and to that end have subscribed stock in the Local Trade Co., but not bona fide ; have made assessments upon the stock of the plaintiffs, not bona fide, but for the purpose of hindering the plaintiffs in this suit; that the Local Trade Co. is being run in debt to
The defences which the appellees set up to defeat the plaintiffs’ right to the relief demanded, and which are material to be stated, are pleaded in two affirmative answers. The substance of the first, stated in an abbreviated form, is, that
It is averred, that in all this Nisbet, Heilman, Cook and Blount derived no personal benefit whatever except to be relieved from their obligation to pay the $50,000, and that the Local Trade Company and its stockholders suffered no in
The next affirmative answer alleges that the plaintiffs had paid, one of them nothing, and the other substantially nothing on their stock, or on the subscriptions therefor. It also alleges, in particular detail, giving dates, etc., that various assessments, or calls, had been, from time to time, made on all the stock of stockholders of .the Local Trade Company, by its board of directors, of which the plaintiffs were duly notified, and that demand of payment had from time to time
To the second paragraph, which is the first affirmative an.swer, the plaintiffs set up, in substance, that the consolidation ■of the several railroad companies, as alleged in the answer, was illegal for want of proper notice, and that it was without •authority, and that no record of such consolidation had been made, etc.
To the answer alleging the assessment and forfeiture of their .stock, the plaintiffs replied as follows:
“ That the said Evansville Local Trade Railroad Company, in making the demand for the said calls mentioned in the said paragraph of said answer, did not state or intimate any intention whatever to forfeit either the payments heretofore made or the stock of the plaintiffs mentioned in said answer, upon the non-payment or in consequence of the non-payment of said calls, and that said plaintiffs have never had any notice of the intention of said 'board of directors to make said forfeitures, nor have they had notice of any time or place where said board of directors would meet to make said forfeitures:”
Both of these replies went out on demurrer, and, refusing to make any further'reply, judgment was rendered against the plaintiffs for costs, and from that judgment they bring this appeal;
The questions necessary to a proper determination of the uase may all be comprehended under the following statement:
1. Was the purchase of the two hundred and forty-four thousand dollars of the stock of the Cincinnati, Rockport and Southwestern Railway Company, by the Evansville Local
2. If the Evansville Local Trade Railroad Company, by the purchase of the stock in the manner and under the circumstances set out, acquired in it a right, either legal or equitable, was the sale of it by Nisbet and his associates to Bennett and his associates, under the circumstances and on account of their relations to the Local Trade Co., absolutely void, or only voidable ? and,
3. If it was voidable only, do the facts presented in the-whole record show such equities in favor of the appellants, and such injury to them, as entitle them to a decree of the court avoiding it?
There are several collateral questions more or less involved,, but the settlement of the controversy between the parties will depend upon the conclusions which shall be reached upon the-questions stated.
The Evansville Local Trade Railroad Company was organized under the general statute of the State for the organization of railroads, with the purpose in view of constructing a railroad from the city of Evansville to some point of connection with, or intersection of, the Cincinnati, Rockport and. Southwestern Railway, and from the whole record it may be gathered that it was within the object of the organization to> become ultimately consolidated with the latter company. The: general purpose being to promote the commercial interests of the city of Evansville, and to create a railroad corporation; whose business would prove remunerative to its stockholders..
As, under the statutes of the State, ra-ilroad corporations-may be organized, and after organization they may acquire by purchase, or consolidate with, other connecting or intersecting' lines, it can not be said that the organization of a railroad corporation, with a view of ultimately becoming consolidated, upon equitable terms and in accordance with the provisions of the statute, with one already existing, is against public; policy.
It does not appear whether its line had been located or not, but if this was done it seems to be granted that no further progress had been made. It,seems to be conceded on all hands, too, that the accomplishment of the end had in view by its projectors would be greatly facilitated by the acquisition by it of a controlling interest in the Cincinnati, etc., Co., with the ultimate purpose in view of consolidating the two properties, thereby making one of more value to the stockholders and of more efficiency for public good.
The proposition is stated broadly in many cases, that one corporation can not, without express statutory authority, become the owner of any portion of the stock of another corporation.’ Pearce v. Madison, etc., R. R. Co., 21 How. 441; Mutual Savings Bank, etc., Ass’n v. Meridian Agency Co., 24 Conn. 159; Franklin Co. v. Lewiston Savings Bank, 68 Maine, 43; Central Railroad Co. v. Collins, 40 Ga. 582; Sumner v. Marcy, 3 Wood. & M. 105; Franklin Bank v. Commercial Bank, 36 Ohio St. 350 (38 Am. R. 594).
It is said that if this were not so, a banking corporation could become the operator of a railroad, or a railroad corporation might engage in the banking business. It must be said at once, that where the purchase of stock in one corporation by another amounts to engaging in a business other than that authorized by its charter, such purchase is ultra vires, and this is so, not because the purchase is stock, but because the business is outside the scope of its charter.
Whether the purchase of stock in. one corporation by another is ultra vires or not, must depend upon the purpose for which the purchase was made, and whether such purchase was, under all the circumstances, a necessary or reasonable means of carrying out the object for which the corporation was created, or one which under the statute it might accomplish.
Keeping in view the averments in the complaint, from which the purpose for which the stock was purchased may be fairly inferred, and considering the broad and comprehensive powers, conferred by the statutes on railroad corporations, authorizing them to acquire real and personal property “ necessary to accomplish the objects for which the corporation is. created,” and to acquire the property of, and consolidate with uncompleted connecting and intersecting lines, and we cannot say that the purchase of the stock was unauthorized. R. S. 1881, sections 3903, 3951.
The presumption must be indulged that the purchase of the stock of the Cincinnati, etc., Co. by the Local Trade Co.,, was a necessary or i’easonable means to the accomplishment of the object which the corporation had in view, and that that object was within some one of its statutory powers. Ryan v. Leavenworth, etc., R. W. Co., 21 Kan. 365. The facts in the case cited were that the Leavenworth, Atchison and Northwestern Railway Company was organized to construct a railroad from Leavenworth to Atchison, and the Missouri River Railroad Company owned a railroad running from Leavenworth to Wyandotte. ‘ The company first named purchased from the county and city of Leavenworth $250,000 of the stock of the last named company, with a view of having a con
Church, J., in City of Bridgeport v. Housatonuc R. R. Co., 15 Conn. 475, said: “It has long been an established principle in the law of corporations, that they may exercise all the powers within the fair intent and purpose of their creation. * * * In doing this, they must have a choice of means adapted to ends, and are not to be confined to any one mode of operation.”
Aside from the conclusion already reached as to the power of the Local Trade Co. to purchase the stock of the other corporation, there can be little doubt that the appellees who make this question are in no position to-insist upon the want of power of the corporation, in which they were at the time a majority of the directors, to make the purchase.
The stock having been actually purchased by the corporation while they were its directors, and it being charged that they have improperly disposed of it, it must be held as to them, however it might have been as to others, that the purchase was valid.
At the time the stock was purchased by or for the corporation, some, if not all, of these appellees were on its board of directors, and while the stock was purchased in its name and for its ultimate benefit, the title to it was very properly transferred to Heilman as an indemnity against loss on account of
At this juncture, Bennett and his associates agreed to purchase the stock provided the legal title in Heilman, and the equitable right of the company could be transferred to them, and a contract was accordingly negotiated between Nisbet, for the company on the one hand, and Bennett, for himself and associates on the other.
Bennett and his associates were making the purchase of the stock in the Cincinnati, etc., Co., with a view to a reorganization of the Local Trade Co., which seems to have been abandoned by its friends and existed only in name. Ultimately, they intended to, and did, consolidate the two corporations, built and equipped the road in a substantial manner, and this was their known purpose in making the purchase.
The board of directors of the Local Trade Co., embracing all its stockholders except the plaintiffs, entered of record an order for the transfer of the stock in question to Nisbet, Heilman, Cook and Blount, they agreeing to pay the $50,000 and interest, which was the full purchase-price, all of which was still owing by the company. This order was made so as to enable Heilman and his associates to carry out the contract negotiated by Nisbet with Bennett and his associates, who agreed, in effect, to pay exactly what the corporation paid, or what was to be paid by Heilman and his associates. Heilman was, at the time of these several transfers, a director in the Local Trade Co., and was also interested with Bennett and his associates in the purchase of the stock, and this fact is relied on to make the transaction void so far as the stockholders of the Local Trade Co. are concerned.
The argument, in effect, is, that because of the relation in which Heilman and some of those associated with him stood to the corporation and the transactions involved, the purchasers of the stock are trustees for the benefit of the Local Trade Co. and its stockholders, and that they must be held to account as such.
That the directors of a corporation are as to it, and its property and stockholders, trustees, can not be disputed, and that their dealings with the corporate property confided to their care will be subjected to the severest scrutiny when challenged in a court of equity, is a doctrine resting on the highest principles of public policy, and one which has often been recognized by this and other courts, but neither this nor any other court, so far as we are aware, has ever held that a transaction such as this is shown to be, having upon it no impress of unfairness or characteristic of actual fraud, was void.
That the transaction was not void is maintained in the case of Twin-Lick Oil Co. v. Marbury, 1 Otto, 587, which in its facts is strikingly analogous, and which in principle conclusively settles the point we are considering.
The case of Kitchen v. St. Louis, etc., R. W. Co., 69 Mo. 224, is an authority directly in point'; as is also Merrick v. Peru Coal Co., 61 Ill. 472. In the case of Kitchen v. St. Louis, etc., R. W. Co., supra, it was held that although the trustees who made the sale were also members of the association which made the purchase, this fact did not render the sale void, but gave the company the right to redeem, provided the right was exercised within a reasonable time and before the intervention of new equities. See, also, Bristol Milling, etc., Co. v. Probasco, 64 Ind. 406; Ward v. Polk, 70
The contract of sale here involved was negotiated by Nisbet, on behalf of the corporation, with Bennett, and the principle that an agent or trustee can not contract with himself is thereby avoided, as in the case of Twin-Lick Oil Co. v. Marbury, supra.
As the contract was not void, it remains to be determined whether upon the facts stated the appellants may avoid it.
It was said in the case of Piatt v. Smith, 12 Ohio St. 561: “ It is always incumbent upon the party asking the interposition of a court of equity in his behalf, to show a perfect equity. That is to say, the party asking relief in a court of equity must present such a state of facts, as, in equity and good conscience, would, according to the rules of courts of equity, seem to require the granting of relief, to prevent an undue advantage being gained of him by another, or to prevent his suffering an irreparable injury; and that, without being chargeable to his own wrong, or even delinquency.”' Howard v. Babcock, 7 Ohio, 405.
The rule is well established that, unless under peculiar and exceptional circumstances, a court of equity will not intervene to set aside a transaction in itself voidable only, unless it appears that the complainant has sustained or.may sustain some damage. Besides, it appears here that new rights have been acquired apparently without protest or objection from. the appellants, and as was said in Samuel v. Holladay, 1 Woolw. 400, a stockholder in a corporation can not stand by and see an evil done which he claims to be illegal, and then hold the persons responsible who had been involved in it,
In the case of Busey v. Hooper, 35 Md. 15 (6 Am. R. 350), certain stockholders asserted that a fraudulent combination had been formed to deprive them of their rights'in the corporation. Having paid nothing on their stock, the court held they had no right to ask its intervention.
The appellees who sold the stock having been, by the
Assuming that upon the face of the bill a case is presented which entitles the appellants to invoke the interposition of a court of equity for their protection, as existing stockholders at the time it was filed, it may well be questioned whether during the progress of the cause the jurisdiction of the court to administer relief could be arrested by the alleged forfeiture of appellants’ stock. But a forfeiture having been declared, and that fact having been set up as an answer, the appellants asked the judgment of the court upon its legality as made.
The contention of the appellants is that the collection of assessments on stock, and forfeiture for non-payment of assessments, are cumulative remedies, and that as it is the primary duty of the directors of a corporation to enforce the collectiop of assessments, so as to replenish the treasury, a notice that an assessment has been made, and a demand of payment, do not imply, without further notice,' that a forfeiture may be declared in the event of non-payment. It is insisted that the defaulting stockholder, in addition to the notice of assessment and demand of payment, is entitled to express notice that non-payment will be followed by forfeiture.
Section 3896, R. S. 1881, governing the subject of assessments and forfeitures of railroad stock, may be conveniently and accurately paraphrased as follows :
“ The directors may call in and demand from the stockholders, respectively, any sums of money by them subscribed, in equal instalments of not exceeding ten per cent, per month, under the penalty of forfeiture of the whole of their stock subscribed, with all previous payments thereon, if such stockholders shall not pay any such monthly instalments within thirty days after demand for the payment thereof.”
The subscribers to the stock of a railroad must take notice of the acts of the directors as to calls, and when notice is given, or demand made, for the payment of an assessment they may conclude, without more, that a forfeiture may, at the election of the corporation, follow for non-payment of calls legally made.
The case of a forfeiture of the term of a tenant under a lease is in many respects analogous. In such cases, the landlord may elect to sue for rent due without notice or demand, but he may, instead of suing for rent in a proper case, give notice or make demand according to law, and then insist upon a forfeiture. Meni v. Rathbone, 21 Ind. 454; Jenkins v. Jenkins, 63 Ind. 415, and eases cited.
The statutory requirement must be strictly pursued, but the statute does not require that the demand or notice must be accompanied by a further notice that forfeiture will follow in case of non-payment.
Forfeiture of insurance policies for non-payment of assessments are also analogous in some respects, and it has been held that notice of the assessment is all that is required. American Ins. Co. v. Henley, 60 Ind. 515; Lycoming Fire Ins. Co. v. Rought, 97 Pa. St. 415.
Whether the consolidation of the several corporations was regularly made or not, was not material.
The appellees had answered a great number of interrogatories filed with the original complaint, which, with the accompanying interrogatories, were superseded by the amended complaint, which was subsequently filed. It was not error
Judgment affirmed, with costs.