191 Mass. 240 | Mass. | 1906
This is a bill in equity, filed in its amended form on February 24,1905, by the holder of voting trust certificates of John P. Squire and Company, a New Jersey corporation, to compel the defendants, who are the trustees under
The bill avers that in December, 1899, John P. Squire and Company and other allied concerns made an assignment for the benefit of creditors. The property assigned included a large pork packing plant, and the assignee took possession of this and continued the business. Subsequently, on July 12, 1900, the defendants with one Tuckerman made a declaration of trust whereby they agreed to hold all claims against John P. Squire and Company and the other assignors for the purpose of accomplishing united action for the protection and promotion of the interest of their depositors. This declaration of trust further provided that the trustees might become parties Go any reorganization plan which they might decide most advantageous, and might themselves formulate and promote a plan of reorganization. The trustees issued a circular inviting creditors to join the trust under this declaration; and in accordance therewith a large majority of the creditors, including the plaintiff, who was a creditor of John P. Squire and Company in the sum of $70,000, deposited their claims with the depositary appointed by the trustees, and took temporary receipts therefor. The trustees used these claims in purchasing the assigned property from the assignee, and, in pursuance of the plan of reorganization which had been adopted by them, caused this property to be conveyed to a new corporation incorporated under the laws of New Jersey and called John P. Squire and Company. The capital stock of this corporation was fixed at $7,500,000, of which $1,500,000 was preferred stock, which was provided for the purpose of procuring working capital, leaving $6,000,000 of common stock, with which the claims of the creditor depositors under the declaration of trust should be paid. This transaction and the plan by which it was carried out were stated in a report issued by the trustees to their depositors.
The bill further avers that on March 4,1901, the trustees, for the purpose of protecting the interests of the creditor depositors and in pursuance of the plan of reorganization, declared a new trust called the “Voting Trust Agreement,” by which it was provided that they should deposit in a trust company all the shares of the common stock coming to them as trustees, retain
The bill then avers that since the execution of the voting trust agreement and the deposit of stock thereunder, the trustees, except Tuckerman, who resigned, have continued to act as trustees, have voted the stock held under the agreement, have elected themselves and their nominees directors of the new corporation, and have controlled and directed its management; that they have not secured a satisfactory management of its
The defendants have filed an answer containing certain matters by way of plea. The case was argued before a single justice on the sufficiency of the pleas, a replication which had been filed being withdrawn for that purpose; and an interlocutory decree was entered adjudging the pleas good. The plaintiff then again joined issue, refiling his replication by leave of court; and the case was heard on the issues of fact raised by way of plea in the defendant’s answer and amended answer. These matters were found to be true; and a final decree was entered dismissing the bill. The plaintiff has appealed from both these decrees.
The averments of fact of the pleas may be summarized as being, first, that the only duty imposed upon the defendants by the voting trust agreement referred to in the bill was to vote
As on full hearing the facts averred in the pleas have been proved, the only question raised is whether these facts are a bar to the plaintiff’s bill; and it is plain that they are. Nothing is averred or shown to avoid the effect of the release given under seal by the plaintiff to the defendants; and accordingly the plaintiff is not entitled to any relief for the acts of the defendants done under the first or reorganization trust.
As to the mismanagement of the new corporation charged in the bill, it has been found that all that has been done by the defendants in the management of the company’s affairs has been done by them, not as charged in the bill as trustees under the voting trust, but solely as members of the board of directors, of which all of them were not members, of which those of them who were members constituted only a minority of the board, acting with their co-directors. For such misconduct of the directors as is charged in the bill, the plaintiff must seek his remedy in a different way. Weitze v. Burrage, 190 Mass. 267, and cases there cited. And see Warren v. Para Rubber Shoe Co. 166 Mass. 97, 103, in which the converse of this proposition
Decree affirmed.