180 A.D. 325 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
The plaintiffs, as stockholders of the Federal Mining and Smelting Company (hereinafter referred to as the Federal Company), have brought this action to set aside a contract dated October 16, 1905, entered into between said Federal Company and the American Smelting and Refining Company (hereinafter referred to as the Smelting Company), whereby the Federal Company sold to the Smelting Company all the lead-silver ores, slimes and concentrates that might be produced from its properties, for a period of twenty-one years from August 31, 1909. Plaintiffs represent a holding of twenty-four one-thousandths of the common stock of the Federal Company and forty-eight ten-thousandths of its preferred stock; or a holding of eleven one-thousandths of both classes of stock. The action is based upon allegations of fraud and bad faith upon the part of the Smelting Company, its officers and agents, and the officers and directors of the Federal Company who participated in the making and ratification of the contract, and upon further allegations that the individual defendants now constituting the board of directors of the Federal Company in office at the time of the commencement of the suit were continuing the fraud. It was further alleged that the approval of the contract in question was done at the behest of the Smelting Company and contrary to the interests of the Federal Company and with the intent to give
An effort is made to attack the independence of action and good faith of Charles Sweeny, the president of the Federal Company at the time of the transactions complained of. But the proof establishes that he was never in any way connected with the Smelting Company, either officially or financially. He was an experienced mining man, thoroughly acquainted with the Coeur d’Alene district and its mining operations and whose activities in that region extended over a period of nearly twenty years. He appears upon this record to have intelligently and honestly represented the Federal Company in its contractual relationship with the Smelting Company, and to have acted in the best interest of the former throughout. His evidence shows the inadvisability of the Federal Company engaging in smelting operations on its own account (which no one then deemed advisable), nor is it suggested where the $12,000,000 could be procured which would be required to establish a suitable plant for its operations. Though he sold his common stock to Daniel Guggenheim at $120 per share, bought back into the Federal Company, paying as high as $180 a share for some of the common stock and bought considerable quantities of both common and preferred stock, after the making of the contract in question, his account of purchases and sales of both classes of stock being in evidence down to April 1, 1907, I believe that defendants have established not only the good faith of Sweeny, and that his actions in reference to the contracts in question were solely in the interest of the Federal Company and prompted by his best judgment therefor, but that they
I have discussed the merits of the plaintiffs’ claims herein, although I believe there were two objections raised to the maintenance of this action which were sufficient to prevent a recovery. The first is that plaintiffs have been guilty of laches in having waited nearly eight years, with opportunities at each annual meeting of stockholders to question the validity or good faith of the contract now attacked, but never indicating any opposition thereto until this late day and allowing the officers of the corporation to continue to perform the agreement. No stockholder made any objection as long as dividends were being paid, though the alleged grounds of attack upon the contract existed at all times. This is not a case of an agreement secretly or surreptitiously made, but any claim of concealment was disavowed upon the trial and no contract could well have been more openly and fairly made known to those interested as stockholders. It would be manifestly unfair to allow a minority stockholder to remain silent and take for a period of years the profits of a contract which he claims afterwards to have been made in fraud of his rights, and then to seek to avoid it when, for reasons outside the contract itself, it has ceased to prove so attractive to him. This unfairness has repeatedly led the courts to refuse relief where the lapse of time was much less than in the case at bar, and in cases where the period was from two to four years. (Sheldon H. B. Co. v. Eickemeyer H. B. M. Co., 90 N. Y. 607; Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. Bankers & Merchants’ Telegraph Co., 119id. 15; Twin-Lick Oil Co.v. Marbury, 91 U. S. 587; Hoyt v. Latham, 143 id. 553.) Furthermore, plaintiffs have failed to allege, or prove, any demand made upon the Federal Company or its board
The judgment appealed from will, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Smith, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.