This is an action to recover damages for a refusal to deliver preferred stock of the defendant road to the holder of certain bonds of the Highland Street Railway, upon demand at maturity. The bonds are not convertible into stock upon their face, but after they were issued the Highland Street Railway was “ authorized ” to increase its stock to a million dollars, by St. 1879, c. 151, and by § 2 of the act it was provided that “ three hundred thousand dollars of said stock shall be applied to the payment or redemption of ” certain bonds, including these, “ and the issue of said bonds is hereby legalized and made valid, and the holders thereof may convert them into stock as said bonds mature.” The company voted to issue the new stock, but before it had issued the stock appropriated to this set of bonds, it consolidated with the Middlesex Street Railway, under St. 1886, c. 229, the new company being “ subject to all the duties, restrictions, and liabilities” to which the old one was subject. The stock for these bonds never was issued. Subsequently this new company was bought up by the defendant corporation, under St. 1887, c. 413, the defendant being subject to “ all the duties, restrictions, and liabilities ” of the selling company.
The plaintiff’s claim is based upon the above mentioned St. 1879, c. 151, and the cases of John Hancock Ins. Co. v. Worcester, Nashua, & Rochester Railroad,
When an option is given to take stock instead of receiving payment of a bond, the contract is not exactly what it was supposed to be in the argument for the plaintiff. Even when embodied in the contract, it imposes no restriction upon the obligor in regard to the issue of new stock, although the issue may be upon such terms as to diminish the value of the right. It leaves the management of the company in accordance with its other interests unhampered. It is simply an option to take stock as the stock may turn out to be when the time for choice arrives. The bondholder does not become a stockholder by his contract in equity any more than at law. Pratt v. American Bell Telephone Co.
However this may be, the contract does not prevent the corporation from consolidating with another in such a way as to make performance impossible, any more than it prevents the issue of new stock in such a way as to make performance valueless. Still more clearly is this true when, as here, the right to take stock is created, not by a contract of the company, but by a subsequent act of the Legislature, and is a pure gratuity as between the company and the obligee. The bondholder’s right, if he had
Perhaps we rather should say, not that the present case is to be decided on the particular facts, but that it is to be decided on the absence of particular facts, such as in the other cases were thought to show that the scheme of union contemplated the plaintiff’s demand. Leaving on one side the first consolidation between the Highland and Middlesex roads, the second one, by which the West End bought up the consolidated road and others, was to be - effected by exchanging the preferred stock of the West End for the stock of these roads, whereupon the rights and liabilities of the other roads were to be transferred to the West End. Or the preferred stock might be sold for cash for the purchase of the same property, first offering it to the West End stockholders at par, as usual when stock is increased. The preferred stock could be used for no other purposes. The West End was authorized to issue an amount of preferred stock equal to the stock of these roads, and no more. The West End was a stranger to the Highland Street road. The consolidation was under an act applicable to all the Boston roads. Every circumstance of intimate connection which was relied on in the other cases, and which it is unnecessary to repeat, (see
We do not mean to change or qualify the general views expressed in the former cases, but we are driven to the conclusion that in the case at bar there is no indication that the Legislature, when it authorized this consolidation, kept the identity of the Highland Street Railway so far alive under an altered name as to impose on the West End the duty of giving its preferred stock in a different ratio for the Highland Street bonds, when it imposed no such duty upon the West End toward the stockholders of the consolidated road, and expressly limited the uses of the West End preferred stock to purposes of which this was not one. It simply has extinguished the Highland Street Railway in this respect, and that is an act of which the plaintiff cannot complain. Judgment for the defendant.
