36 F. 54 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1888
This is a creditors’ bill to subject the amount due to the defendant- railway company from the defendant E. L. Harper and his co-defendants'upon their subscriptions to the capital stock of said company, to the payment of complainants’judgments against said company, amounting to$255,938.48. The railway company was incorporated and organized in the latter part of the year 1881. On. the 10th of December of that year defendant E. L. Harper subscribed for 2,500 shares of its capital stock of the par value of $100 each, and caused eight co-defendants —as he states in his answer — to subscribe for one share each, to enable them to become directors. Subsequently certificates representing 3-,000 shares of the capital stock were issued by the company to defendant W. D. Lee, at the special instance and request of defendant E. L. Harper, and for his use and benefit. No money was paid upon any of the subscriptions, nor for the 3,000 shares issued to Lee for account of Harper, but they were regarded by him and by the company as fully paid for in the manner following: At the date of the organization of the company Harper was the owner of a narrow-gauge railroad which had been bought fern an insolvent railroad company by purchasers who sold it to him, as he testifies, for “about scrap-iron price.” It was some 20 miles in
The condition of the road is best stated by Ralph Peters, superintendent of the Little Miami Railroad, an experienced and thoroughly competent railroad manager. In August, 1883, his company having been solicited to operate the road, he, with his general manager, passed over and inspected the entire line. He testifies that they “found a very poor road, — badly constructed, with heavy grades, only temporary work in
The complainants charge that Harper is indebted to the company for the 2,500 shares of the capital stock for which he subscribed, and for the 3,000 shares issued to the defendant Lee for his use and benefit, and they pray that this indebtedness may be subjected to the payment of their judgments. In Branch v. Jesup, 106 U. S. 468, 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 495, it was held that a railroad company having authority to purchase a railroad may pay for the same in paid-up stock. “ But, ” says the supreme court of the United States in Coit v. Amalgamating Co., 119 U. S. 343, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 231, “where full-paid stock is issued for property received, there must be actual fraud in the transaction to enable creditors of the corporation to call the stockholders to account. A gross and obvious overvaluation of property would be strong evidence of fraud.” There is no doubt that the defendant railroad company had authority to purchase Harper’s road; and, this being so, the authorities cited make it clear that the complainants are entitled to the relief'sought, unless the defenses made by and on behalf of Harper — all the other defendants who have been served with process being in default — are well taken.
• Harper’s defense is that the contract of October 12th was a contract of compromise and settlement with the complainants, fully performed on
Waiving all technical questions made with reference to these pleadings, the short answer to both is that there is absolutely no testimony in the record in support of either the answer or the cross-hill. Harper testifies that the parties claimed, “after absorbing some four hundred thousand dollars in cash of margins on wheat in Chicago,” that he owed them a balance of over $200,000, which he disputed, but finally settled and compromised. On the examination of Preston, he was asked by Harper’s counsel whether the consideration claimed to have been received by Harper for the bonds which ho agreed to transfer to complainants did not grow out of dealings between Harper and complainants on the Chicago board of trade. To the question complainants’ counsel objected, and instructed the witness not to answer, and he did not answer. He was not pressed, but Harper’s counsel stated, as appears by the record, that he proposed to show that the contracting parties had dealings on the Chicago board of trade; that the books of the complainant would not show the amount claimed; “that the entire transaction was disputed and repudiated by Harper as fraudulent;” that the claim was exaggerated; and that it was in settlement of this fictitious claim that he compromised with complainants. This is all that appears in testimony, or that it was proposed to shown Taking it altogether, it falls short of what is required to establish that complainants’ claims arose from a gambling transaction. Irwin v. Williar, 110 U. S. 499, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 160.
In support of Harper’s defense, Coit v. Amalgamating Co., 119 U. S. 343, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 231, is cited. But in that case the court found that there was no intentional and fraudulent undervaluation of the property in payment for which the stock of the company was issued; and the court said that, “Where the charter authorized the capital stock to be paid in property, and the shareholders honestly and in good faith put in property instead of money, in payment of their subscription, third parties have no ground of complaint.” But here neither Harper’s contract