19 F. 283 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1884
This cause has been before heard on a motion for a preliminary injunction. 17 Eed Rep. 273. It has now been beard on demurrer to the bill. The question then was whether the defendants should be restrained pending the litigation; it now is whether there is anything in the bill which they ought to answer. The bill is brought by a stockholder to restrain the corporation from employing its assets in excess of its corporate powers; the other defendant is joined as president of the corporation for discovery merely, and no bad faith is alleged or charged. The prayer is that the corporation and its officers and agents be restrained, and for further relief. Any relief for the orator here must be wholly preventive. He could not, and does not ask to, undo what has been done. The avails of it, if held by the corporation, can only be reached through dividends common to all stockholders; if by others, only by proceedings against those who have them.
According to the bill, which is now to be taken as true, the corporation is made up of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, the Kansas Pacific Railway Company, and the Denver Pacific Railway & Telegraph Company. The Union Pacific Railroad Company, before the consolidation, having a definite line of road, exceeded its powers if what is now sought to be restrained is an excess, and in the same manner, by lending and advancing moneys to other railroad companies to be used in the construction, maintenance, and operation of their roads, and entered into obligations to furnish further amounts, and received in payment of moneys furnished from time to time stocks and bonds of such roads. Since the consolida
The orator could not, and does not claim to, have any right to relief on account of his former ownership of stock. Having jparted with that and all rights belonging to it, he gained this as a new acquisition, and has-such rights as appertain to him as the owner of it as he acquired it. There is no doubt, and no question is really made, but that a stockholder or partner in an enterprise has the right to prevent taking his interest into another and different enterprise without his consent. In corporation's within the scope of the corporate authority the majority rules; beyond this they have no right to go, and one-may insist upon stopping at the limits. Colman v. Eastern Cos. Ry. Co. 10 Beav. 1; Salomons v. Laing, 12 Beav. 339; Beman v. Rufford, 4 Eng. Law & Eq. 106; Stevens v. Rutland & B. R. Co. 29 Vt. 545. This right to stop the majority at the bounds of corporate power rests-upon the control which every one has over his own property. Those who become members of a corporation, consent to the rule of the majority within the powers of the corporation, but not beyond. As the right to restrain going beyond depends upon the want of consent, if
It does not distinctly appear that the transactions in question are outside of the powers of the corporation. The Kansas Pacific Bail-way Company was a Kansas corporation, with powers amply sufficient, under the laws of that state, to do within that state all that is complained of as being done somewhere by the defendant. Comp. Laws Kan. § 4091. This ^corporation was consolidated with the others as it was, and as they were, and it is not easy to see any reason why the corporate powers of each were not carried into the consolidated company. County of Scotland v. Thomas, 94 U. S. 682. Not that the consolidated company has powers in all the states and territories where it exists co-extensive with those of the Kansas Pacific in Kansas, but it may have in Kansas all the powers which the Kansas Pacific had there. If it has, all these transactions may be, so far as
All these statements and allegations áre in very general terms. Excess of chartered powers, in progress or intended, is in no particular pointed out. A decree according to the prayer of the bill would be scarcely, if any, more than a general injunction against going outside of the charters. Something more specific, and so specific that the court can see that it is unwarranted by the law of the existence of the corporation, and wrongful to the orator as a member of it, should be pointed out distinctly. The bill, as now considered, does not appear to be sufficient to require an answer.
The demurrer is sustained, and the bill adjudged insufficient.