98 Tenn. 1 | Tenn. | 1896
Lead Opinion
Powell’s Valley Railway Company was chartered under the laws of this State, July 22, 1886, for the purpose of constructing- a railway from Knoxville to Cumberland Gap. No amount of capital stock was prescribed in the charter, but the corporation was, by the charter, authorized to “fix upon the amount of capital to be invested in the enterprise, ’ ’ by and through its ‘1 by-laws, ” to be thereafter adopted. In pursuance of that authority, the company was capitalized at 11,000,000 of common stock, in shares of $100 each, August 6, 1886. The name of the company was changed to “Powell’s Valley Railroad Company,” by amendment of its charter, made August 10, 1887.
The directors of the railroad company adopted a resolution, on the twenty-third of November, 1887, increasing its capital stock to $1,575,000. Thereafter, on the twenty-ninth of May, 1888, the name of the railroad company was changed to ‘£ Knoxville, Cumberland Gap & Louisville Railroad Company,” and the directors of the corporation, under the last name, by resolution passed September 12, 1889, resolved to issue $1,300,000 of preferred stock, in shares of $100 .each.
November 21, 1890, the Knoxville, Cumberland Gap & Louisville Railroad Company, claiming that the railroad had been constructed according to contract, made application to the Board of Mayor and
Thereafter the original bill was amended and the Cumberland Gap Construction Company, as the acknowledged owner of the defendant’s subscription, was made a joint party complainant with the railroad company.
The Chancellor, on final hearing, was of opinion that the construction company, “as assignee” of the railroad company, was entitled to the relief sought in the bill, and he therefore adjudged that the city issue and deliver $225,000 of its bonds,- and that it accept therefor the $225,000 of preferred stock tendered with the original bill.
The city appealed to this Court, and here impeached the Chancellor’s decree upon several grounds.
After' hearing and considering the cause in all of its aspects, this Court, on the twentieth day of November, 1894, by its decree, adjudged that “the complainant, the Knoxville, Cumberland Gap & Louisville Railroad Company, and its predecessor, the Powell’s Valley Railroad Company, complied in all respects with its contract with the defendant city,
. . . and that it was entitled to demand and receive from the defendant city the issuance of its bonds or payment in cash of the amount of its subscription, on November 21, 1890, on delivering to the defendant city, by the complainant, of the $225,000 of common stock, as provided in the contract between the said railroad company and the defendant city, if at that time said railroad company was and now is able to deliver to said city the stock for which it subscribed.” The decree continued: “But because the Court is not satisfied with the proof now in the record that the complainants were able to deliver the stock provided for in the contract at the date of the filing of the bill (De
On being remanded to the Chancery Court, the cause was referred to the Master for proof and report ‘1 upon the point and as directed by the decree ’ ’ of this Court, without other directions. The Master heard additional proof, and filed a report, subdivided into five parts. In the first of these he reported ‘ ‘ that the complainants were able to deliver to the defendants, on December 26, 1890, the $225,000 of stock in the Knoxville, Cumberland Gap & Louisville Railroad Company subscribed for by the defendants, and that complainants were also able to deliver said stock on November 20, 1894, and that complainants are still able to deliver said stock to the defendants.” Of the other four subdivisions of the report, it need only be said, at this time, that the3r dealt with the details of the creation, issuance, disposition, and ownership of the two kinds of corporate stock alluded to in the record.
The Chancellor overruled all exceptions, confirmed the report, and pronounced a decree adjudging that the construction company, as assignee of the rail
The defendant appealed from that decree to this Court, and the cause was assigned to the Court of Chancery Appeals, under Chapter 76, Acts of 1895. That Court reversed the decree of the Chancellor, and dismissed the suit.
Both sides have appealed from the decree of dismissal, the complainants on account of thirteen alleged erroneous findings of law and fact by the Court of Chancery Appeals, and the defendant on account óf the alleged error of that Court in failing to make five additional findings of law and fact.
It will not be necessary to consider all of these objections and criticisms in this opinion. Only such questions as must control the decision of the cause need be determined, and, in considering these, it will not be important to state all the contentions made on the one side and on the other. No rule of practice is better settled or merits more universal application than that the concurrent findings of the Master and Chancellor upon questions of fact have the same weight in this Court as the verdict of a jury in civil cases. Turley v. Cooley, 3 L. R., 193; Brown v. Dailey, 85 Tenn., 218; Turley v. Turley, Ib., 251; Fitzsimmons v. Johnson, 90 Tenn., 418;
Therefore the concurrence of the Master and the Chancellor upon questions of fact will not be disturbed in this Court or in the Court of Chancery Appeals, if there is any evidence to sustain it.
The Court of Chancery Appeals filed an elaborate opinion in this cause. In that opinion, after considering the record at large and stating as a conclusion entirely free from doubt, that neither the railroad company nor the construction company, at any time subsequent to September' 15, 1890, had any of the common stock of the railroad company to deliver to the city of Knoxville, the Court went further and found, additionally, that the record contained no legitimate evidence to sustain the concurrent finding of the Master and Chancellor to the contrary.
It should be observed at this point, that “find
Some of the findings of the Master and some of the findings of the Court of Chancery Appeals in this cause are findings of fact, and some of them are findings of law. Those of the former class, • and those only, fall within the rules just announced as to the weight of the concurrent findings of the Master and Chancellor, and as to the conclusiveness of the findings of the Court of Chancery Appeals.
Since the ability contemplated by the order of reference involves the legal status of the parties and of the stock, and not a mere physical situation, the question whether or not £ £ the complainants were able to deliver the stock provided for in the contract,” at the dates specified in the decree of this Court, is a question of law, arising upon the facts as found, for the ultimate decision of this Court, untrammeled by the mere affirmative answer of the Master and Chancellor, or the mere negative answer of the Court of Chancery Appeals. Were that question held to be one of fact, and not of law, the finding of the Court of Chancery Appeals would be conclusive, and, as a consequence, the controversy would then be at
The object of the reference was to get a report showing £ £ the amount and kind of stock issued, when and by whom, and under what authority issued, what disposition was made thereof,- and what amount, if any, was unissued and is authorized to be issued,” so that the Court might apply the law to the facts shown, and decide the legal controversy between the parties.
As has been stated, the entire capital stock of the railroad company was $1,000,000, divided into common shares of $100 each, at the time the city of Knoxville became a subscriber for $225,000, and three months thereafter (November 23, 1887) the -directors increased the common stock of the company to $1,575,000. All of this stock was subscribed for as follows: Ten shares, one each, by Clarence Cary and nine associates; 750 shares by the American Association, Limited; 2,250 shares by the city of Knoxville; and the residue, 12,710 shares, by the Cumberland Gap Construction Company — -in all, 15,750 shares.
Certificates were issued in this order, namely: January, 1887, to October, 1888, Nos. 2 to 11, inclusive, to Clarence Cary and his nine associates, for $100 each, aggregating $1,000; September 1, 1887, No. 12, to the American Association, Limited, for $75,000; December, 1888, to August 19, 1889, Nos. 13 to 25, inclusive, to the Cumberland Gap Con
By some means certificate No. 26, intended for the city of Knoxville, after being severed from the stub, was lost or mislaid before delivery; and, on the twenty-third of August, 1889, certificate No. 28 was written in its room and stead, for the same amount and to the same party. No. 26 was subsequently found by the railroad company and canceled. No. 28, though written in the name of “The Board of Mayor and Aldermen of the city of Knoxville,” and covering the last of the common stock, was never delivered or tendered to the city.
On the fifteenth of November, 1889, Nos. 28 and 12 were canceled, and the stock represented by them — $225,000 and $75,000, respectively — was combined and “reissued” in certificate No. 31, to ‘‘ The Cumberland Gap Construction Company ’ ’ for $300,000. Soon thereafter, January 27, 1890, the construction company procured a reissuance of the stock covered by its certificate No. 31, in certificates Nos. 32 to 60, inclusive, for different amounts, and in the names of different persons, in London, to whom it sold the stock, and from whom there has
The resolution authorizing the issuance of $1,300,-000 of preferred stock was .passed (September 12, 1889) between the filling out (August 23, 1889) and the cancellation (November 15, 1889) of certificate No. 28, originally designed for the city of Knoxville.
"When certificate No. 12, owned by the American Association, Limited, and certificate No. 28, intended for the city of Knoxville, were amalgamated, and the stock represented by them was reissued in certificate No. 31, it was the purpose of the railroad company to substitute like certificates of preferred stock for certificates Nos. 12 and 28, and all the railroad company could do toward the actual accomplishment of that end was done.
No. 12 was marked ‘Canceled,” and on its stub were written these words: “Reissued No. 31. Same as No. 3, preferred stock; that certificate issued instead.” No. 28 was marked “Canceled; not xised,” and on its stub were written these words: ‘ ‘ Reissued No. 31. Preferred stock to be issued instead; this certificate not delivered.” The railroad company’s ledger of common stock shows, on separate pages, the number sof shares taken by each subscriber. Below the entry of shares- subscribed for by the American Association, Limited, appears this indorsement: “ 1889, Nov. 15. Canceled. Preferred stock takQn in its stead,” and below the entry of shares
The name of the American Association, Limited, and that of the Board of Mayor and Aldermen of the city of Knoxville were by the railroad company transferred to its ledger of preferred stock, and there entered as subscribers to that stock in the same . amounts, respectively, as those originally put down for them as subscribers to common stock.
As the final step in the scheme of transmutation, the railroad company wrote certificate No. 3, for $75,000 of preferred stock, in the name- of the American Association, Limited, and certificate No. 4, for $225,000 of preferred stock, in the name of the Board of Mayor and Aldermen of the city of Knoxville. The former of these certificates was accepted by the American Association, Limited, in lieu of its
The foregoing facts are undisputed in the record. They appear in more elaborate form in the report of the Master, and documentary evidence referred to by him, as well as in the findings of the Court of Chancery Appeals. From them it follows, as a matter of law, that the railroad company and the construction company had converted the common stock subscribed for by the city of Knoxville before the commencement of this action, thereby rendering themselves unable to deliver the same, and to compel specific-performance on- the part of the city of Knoxville.
It may be conceded that the railroad company had the legal right to cancel the certificate of common stock intended for the city of Knoxville, before delivery, and thereafter replace it by another certificate for a like amount of the same stock, provided it had a sufficiency of said stock, not issued to other subscribers. That is not this case, however. All the common stock had been subscribed for, and all, except that reserved for the city of Knoxville and covered by certificate No. 28 in its-name, had actually been issued and the certificates delivered to other subscribers, when that certificate-was canceled and the stock represented thereby ‘ ‘ reissued ” in certificate No. 31 to the construction company. All of the common stock, except that, had been rightfully appropriated before that time; and
The railroad company so recognized the situation, and, as has been seen, took such steps as it deemed essential for the complete substitution ’ of preferred stock, and, having done so, it made out a certificate of preferred stock and tendered that in lieu of common stock. Even the ledger entry of Knoxville’s subscription to the common stock was canceled, and the same shares were added to the subscription of the construction company and marked ‘ ‘ full paid, ’ ’ like the rest of its stock. Moreover, certificate No. 31, which embraced those shares, was issued, like the rest, to the construction company in its own name, and by it sold, after subdivision, and the proceeds were applied to its own use and benefit.
Before a corporation can recover in an action for subscription, it must show itself to .be in a position to issue a proper certificate. 11 If certificates for the whole capital stock have already been issued, the defendant subscriber, by this fact, may defeat the action to collect his subscription.” 1 Cook S. & S., and Corp. L. (3d Ed.), Sec. 192; 1 Spelling Pri. Corp., Sec. 312; citing McCord v. Ohio & Mississippi Railroad Co., 13 Ind., 220; Burrows v. Smith, 10 N. Y., 550, and James v. Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Railroad Co., 2 Disney (Ohio), 261.
The complainants, conceding that all the common stock had been issued when this suit was brought,
This insistence is in direct and positive conflict with the entries upon the books of the railroad company, and inconsistent with the tender of preferred stock made in the bill. The Master, however, reported that such was the intention of the two companies, and the Chancellor so . adjudged. The Court of Chancery Appeals found that there was no evidence to sustain the report on this point, and its finding is conclusive, the question being one of fact. But, had the delivery of the city’s stock been intended in the outset as complainants now insist it was, the legal result of the situation, soon established and still existing, would not be different from that already stated. Changing the stock on the ledger and in the certificate from the name of the city to that of the construction company as real owner, making an absolute sale thereof, as such owner, and appropriating the proceeds of that sale to the construction company’s own behoof, together constitute a clear case of conversion in law, whatever the design may have been in the beginning.
The full extent of the doctrine of the Farrington case, reported in 13 Lea, at page 333, is that a stock certificate, indorsed in blank, with power of attorney to transfer when delivered as collateral security, may be transferred upon the books of the
But complainants contend that the construction company continuously retained enough other common stock to meet Knoxville’s subscription, and, therefore, that the sale of that represented by certificate No. 28 should not be held to have been a conversion of the city’s stock.
To this contention there are two conclusive answers' — one that the city could not be required to accept such other stock if so retained; and the other,, that in fact it was not so retained.
(1) Such other common stock as the construction company may then have owned had been issued to. it as a subscriber, and the city, whose subscription was for original shares, and none other, could, in
The statements made in Sections 2642, 2643, 2644, 2645 of 2 Thompson on Corporations, to the effect that a bailee or pledgee of stock certificates may meet the object of the trust and acquit himself of personal liability by holding and surrendering at the proper time other certificates of similar shares, relates to instances in which the owner may deposit or pledge his certificates, and not to a case like this one, wherein the corporation, upon its own motion, and without the consent or knowledge of the subscriber, cancels his certificate before delivery, and reissues the stock to another person. As between the subscriber and the corporation, the subscriber is always entitled to original shares of the stock to-which he subscribed, and the corporation can never force him to receive shares previously and rightfully issued to another subscriber.
(2) The record, as found by the Court of Chancery Appeals, and as we find from abundant competent evidence, discloses the fact that the construction company long since parted with all of its other common stock, and has not regained any part of it.
On November 22, 1889, certificates Nos-. 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, and 20, and forty shares of No. 21 were combined and reissued to the same
Under these changes the construction company’s holdings of common stock subscribed for and issued to it in the first instance were as follows:
Certificate No. 25_$ 98,000
Certificate No. 29_ 788,000
Certificate No. 30_'_ 290,000
Certificate No. 62_ 86,000
Total__ 11,262,000
All of this stock was, by the construction company, hypothecated to the American Association, Limited, before the filing of the original bill in this cause; and, not being redeemed, was sold, and by that association purchased. That association in turn sold the stock to E. W. Whitridge, and he pledged it to the Continental Trust Company to secure a large loan. Upon default being made, the latter company had the stock sold for its debt, and Whit-ridge, with others, again bought it, and seemed to be its owners when last mentioned in this record.
January 28, 1895, Whitridge caused certificate
Notwithstanding the fact that preferred stock is generally more valuable than common stock, there are three reasons why the city of Knoxville will not be required to accept the preferred stock tendered to it in this cause. In the first place, the subscription contract calls for common stock, and, that being so, only common stock will meet the railroad company’s obligation. The city may rightfully refuse to receive anything except that which it contracted for. In the next place, the preferred stock has no validity as between the railroad company and the city. The first capitalization, that to which Knoxville subscribed, being of common stock only, and there being no express authority in the charter for the issuance of preferred stock at a subsequent time, the railroad company had no power to create other stock and give it preference as against any holder of common shares without his or its consent. 1 Mor. Pri. Corp. (2d Ed.), Sec. 463; 2 Thompson’s Com. on Corp., Sec. 2244.
Certificate No. 1, to Construction Co_$ 700,000
^Certificate No. 2, to Construction Co. 380,000
Certificate No. 3, to Am. Association, Limited_ 75,000
Certificate No. 4, to city of Knoxville_ 225,000
Total written_$1,380,000
Deduct amount authorized_ 1,300,000
And there appears an excess of__80,000
The other three certificates being first written, they appropriated the stock to the extent called for, and left that written for Knoxville to cover the balance, which was only $145,000. Thus it is seen that the certificate tendered to the city, though calling for the true amount, actually included $80,000 of unauthorized excess.
The decree of the Court of Chancery Appeals is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING OPINION.
In the conclusion announced by the majority I cannot agree, as I think it is reached in the face of the rule so often emphasized by this Court, that the concurrent finding of facts by the Master and Chancellor is as conclusive as the verdict
This Court, after a careful and painstaking examination of the record. in this cause, at the September term, 1894, pronounced a decree in which every material issue was found in favor of complainants, and, among other things, adjudging that complainants had fully complied with the contract of construction, and were entitled to receive from the city of Knoxville the bonds with which it had agreed to pay off its subscription to the capital stock of the railroad company; but, as some question was made as to the ability of the complainants to deliver the certificates of stock to which the city would be entitled on payment, the cause was remanded to the Chancery Court in order that the Clerk and Master might ascertain and report whether, at the time of the filing of the bill and of the rendition of that decree, complainants were able to make such delivery. In response to the order of reference made upon the procedendo from this Court, the Clerk and Master of the Chancery Court of Knox County reported the fact to be that, at the two dates mentioned, the complainant, the construction company, had possession of and was able to deliver the 2,250 shares of
This was. the fact about which this Court desired information, and I insist that this concurrence was binding on this Court and the Court of Chancery Appeals, if there was any material evidence to support it. That there was such evidence is conceded in the opinion of the latter Court, to be found in the testimony of Mr. Whitridge, who was a director, vice president, attorney, and financial agent of the construction company, and who had particular and personal charge of the affairs of that company, as well as of this railroad company, from a very early period of this enterprise. They say: £CThe fact that Whitridge had in his possession the stock books, and actually brought in and had canceled certificate No. 29 for 2,250 shares, properly signed by the officers of the railroad company, taken in connection with his statements, would, uncontradicted and not changed by other facts as clearly proven, be evidence strongly supporting the findings,” etc.
It is only by sifting the record, balancing statements, and resorting to documentary testimony which I think was clearly incompetent, and by rejecting as unworthy of credit the testimony of the only witness who testifies from his own knowledge, that that Court reaches the conclusion, not that there is no material evidence in support of this finding, but that i£ Whitridge’s statement was a willful misrepresenta
It would serve no valuable purpose to go into this record, but I am satisfied that by so doing it could, upon competent and credible testimony, be made apparent that shares of both common stock and preferred stock (as to the lack of power to issue this preferred stock, I agree with the majority), sometimes ear-marked and at other times not, but never subscribed or paid for by anyone else, sufficient to deliver to the city of Knoxville, and kept with a view to such delivery, was always under the control of either the railroad company or of the construction company, to whom the subscription of Knoxville was, at an early day, assigned, or of an assignee of the latter company holding with full knowledge of the city’s rights and in subordination thereto, and that, at the dates mentioned in the decree of this Court of September term, 1894, the certificates evidencing the city’s share of common stock were in the possession of the construction company, with both physical and legal ability on the part of that company to deliver them to the city.
I also think that it could be made good as a fact that it was never the intention of either of those companies to abandon the contract of subscription of Knoxville, and as a matter of law, that nothing that was done by either amounted to a rescission of this contract or to a conversion of the shares of stock for which the city had subscribed.
This memorandum of dissent is filed largely for the reason that I fail to discover any legal ground for, or equities in, the defense, which, thus successfully prosecuted, relieves the city of Knoxville of a burden which her citizens voluntarily and by an overwhelming majority vote assumed, for the purpose of securing the railroad which the enterprise of complainants has brought to her doors, especially as when to maintain it, is at this late day to deprive complainants of the fruits of the decree pronounced by this Court, in which every material question was determined in their favor.