51 N.J. Eq. 40 | New York Court of Chancery | 1893
This is an application for an injunction. The application is resisted on the ground that the complainants have, by their laches, lost all right to either temporary or permanent relief, the contention being that they are not entitled to an injunction now, nor can any relief be given to them on final hearing. The only question, however, before the court at this time is, whether or not an injunction should issue. The facts to be considered in deciding this question are almost entirely free from dispute.
The particular property which the complainants ask to have protected is shares of stock issued to them by the Lake Hopatcong Land and Improvement Company, a corporation organized under the laws of this state, in August, 1885, with a capital of $50,000, divided into five hundred shares of $100 each. Only two hundred and forty-nine of the five hundred shares appear to have been issued, and of these one of the complainants holds five shares and the other six. The principal purposes for which the corporation was organized were to buy and sell land and erect buildings on and about Lake Hopatcong. Some of the persons
Almost immediately after the enactment of this statute, the
It is at this point in the history of the new corporation that the complainants, for the first time, ask for judicial protection of their rights, and the relief they now seek is of the most destructive kind to every right and interest standing opposed
That the conveyance by the complainants’ corporation, of all of its property to the new corporation, for the purpose of appropriating it to new and different purposes from those for which the grantor corporation held it, was without power or right and ¿ plain misappropriation of the property, as against non-assenting stockholders, is a proposition that was not disputed on the argument. It cannot be; it is incontestable. The-stockholders of a corporation have an indisputable right to have the property of the corporation applied and used exclusively for the purposes specified in its charter, and any attempt by its managers to appropriate it to any other purpose is a usurpation of power and a violation of the rights of the stockholders. No rule of law is better settled than that which declares, that a corporation created by statute, either special or general, can exercise no power and has no rights except such as are granted by express words or fair implication. And in the construction of such grants the rule is well settled that it must be held that what is fairly implied is as much granted as what is clearly expressed. By the charter of the complainants’ corporation its managers are given no power
But stockholders, to be entitled to the summary interference of the court in cases where they seek protection against acts which are merely in excess of the power of the corporation, and are not prohibited by law, must be diligent; they must apply so recently after the doing of the act of which they complain that the court may stop or undo the wrong to them without doing equal or greater wrong to some other person. The principle which must control the action of a court of equity, in cases where the defence is laches, was laid down by Lord Camden, many years ago, in these words: “ Nothing can call forth the activity of a court of equity but conscience, good faith and reasonable diligence. Where these are wanting the court is passive and does nothing. Laches and neglect are always discountenanced, and therefore from the beginning of this jurisdiction there was always a limitation to suits in equity.” Smith v. Clay, reported in a note to Deloraine v. Brown, 3 Bro. C. C. 639
This principle must control the decision of the present application. No argument is required to show its pertinency. When the leading facts of the case are recalled it applies -itself. Whether the complainants remained inactive to speculate upon the chances, intending to abide by the consolidation if it resulted in benefit, and, if not, to try to undo it, it is manifest that they acted precisely as they would have done if such had been their intention. Although they were fully informed of each step in the consolidation scheme from its inception to its completion, and also of the fact that the new corporation had been organized and was actively engaged in the prosecution of the several enterprises which had previously been carried 011 by the four corporations separately, yet, for over three years, they remained passive and inactive and did nothing, and it is not until the new corporation has become insolvent, and all of its property is about to be sold to pay mortgages, which were made and accepted while they were apparently assenting to the amalgamation and all its consequences, that they seek to have the consolidation broken up and the property of the corporation in which they are interested restored to it. They laid by until the new venture proved disastrous, and then, for the first time, they ask the court to undo what for over three years they had, by their inaction and delay, been apparently assenting to. Acquiescence or tacit assent, in such cases, was defined by Judge Folger in Kent v. Quicksilver Mining Co., supra, to mean neglect to promptly and actively condemn the unauthorized act by suit. More than a year elapsed between the formation of the new corporation and
The complainants’ application will be denied, with costs.