7 F. 426 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1881
The defendant corporation having brought a suit in equity against this plaintiff, the principal object of which was to procure a decree adjudging void certain mortgage bonds of the Mississippi Central Railroad Company, a corporation formerly owning a railroad now belonging to defendant corporation, this plaintiff had leave of the court to file a cross-bill. In his cross-bill the plaintiff joined as a defendant, for the purposes of discovery, the defendant Osborn, the president of the defendant corporation. One of the defences set up in the cross-bill is that the title of the defendant corporation to its railroad is derived through the foreclosure, of a subsequent mortgage thereon; that by the terms of the mortgage so foreclosed, and also by the provisions of
The defendant, corporation, or rather another corporation, the Central Mississippi Railroad Company, which has, with still another corporation, been consolidated into the defendant corporation, became the purchaser of the railroad .'.Tom the committee of bondholders who bid off the property upon its sale in foreclosure, and, for the purpose of this demurrer, may he regarded as having been virtually formed of the bondholders under said foreclosed mortgage, as claimed by the learned counsel for the plaintiff. The defendant Osborn, who is the president of the defendant corporation, is alleged to have been one of the purchasing committee of bondholders, and is claimed from tin's circumstance to have been the agent of all the bondholders in the transaction which resulted in the foreclosure, including the Illinois Central Railroad Company, which was the holder of the largest part of said bonds, and is alleged to have joined in said agreement prior to foreclosure.
The defendant Osborn demurs, on the ground that lie is improperly joined as defendant.
The interrogatories put to the defendant Osborn are designed to discover what amount of said bonds was held by the Illinois Central Railroad Company, and whether that company, and, if any, what other bondholders, assented to the decree in foreclosure. The demurrer must be sustained.
It is proper for a defendant in a bill in equity, who files a cross-bill, to make defendants of parties not parties to the orig
No case has gone so far as to join an officer of a corporation for the purpose of a discovery of matters which were not within his knowledge as such officer, or learned by him while in the service, or as a member of the corporation, nor, as in this case, matters which took place before the corporation was formed, or in which it had no part, though it appears that by and through other sources of information the
Demurrer sustained.