117 F. 723 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado | 1902
After devoting the time necessary to make a careful examination of the bill of complaint, answer, and affidavits, 1 am unable to do more than state briefly the conclusions reached by the court, without going at length into the reasons upon which those conclusions are based.
This is an application for a preliminary injunction. In disposing of the questions presented, I shall disregard the order adopted by counsel in their argument, and notice first the objections raised to the by-law adopted by the board of directors on the 30th day of July, 1902. The bill asks that this by-law be declared and decreed by the order and judgment of the court to be fraudulent, and absolutely void and of no effect as against the complainants, and each of them, and the shareholders represented by them by proxies. As a basis for this portion of their prayer for relief, complainants allege upen information and belief, in an amendment to their bill, that it is the purpose and intention of the defendants to control the shareholders’ meeting, and to dictate the action taken thereat, by depriving certain stockholders there present, and especially the complainants, not only of the right to vote upon the temporary organization, but to deprive such shareholders of the right to vote in the temporary organization of said meeting in accordance with the number of shares of stock held by them, respectively; and that it is the purpose and intention of these defendants to pack the meeting of shareholders with such number of individual holders of small amounts of stock as shall in number of persons outnumber the complainants and those associated with them at such meeting. It is further alleged that, in pursuance of a conspiracy to in this unlawful manner control th* meeting, they, shortly before the closing of the books of the company, caused to be transferred upon the transfer books five shares of common stock to eighteen different persons, residents of Colorado, many of whom were employés of the defendant the Colorado Fuel & Iron Company, and all of whom are in sympathy with the individual defendants in their effort to control the organization of the company and to perpetuate the administration of the existing officers. It is further alleged that David C. Beaman, secretary of the company, acting in collusion with his codefendants, “has given out and claimed” that one of the complainants—Arthur J. Singer—had not established his right to vote at said meeting, for the reason that he had not shown
The court is further asked by this bill to enjoin the defendants from in any way hindering or obstructing the complainants in casting and having counted and considered votes of all shares of stock owned and
The allegations of the bill that the defends 's are conspiring together for the purpose of continuing and retaining their control of the corporate organization of the company, in violation of the rights of the complainants, by depriving certain shareholders, especially the complainants, of the right to vote, are, in my judgment, fully met by the answer and denied under oath.
The motion for a preliminary injunction will be denied.
. See Injunction, vol. 27, Cent. Dig. § 309.