58 F. 644 | 8th Cir. | 1893
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
It is made apparent by an inspection of the bill of complaint that it states no ease entitling the complainants to any form of equitable relief, unless the right thereto can be maintained on the strength of the allegation that the shareholders’ extraordinary general meeting of July 1, 1891, was an unauthorized meeting, because it was convened and held on insufficient notice under the charter and by-laws of the company. Unless that averment is sustained, we are unable to see that the complainants had any fair pretense for invoking the aid of a court of chancery to restrain the proceedings that were about to be taken by the English liquidator, in conformity with English laws, for the purpose of disposing of the property of the company, and winding up its affairs.
The corporation owed its existence to the laws of Great Britain. It held all of its property and franchises under and subject to the laws of that kingdom relative to the “incorporation, regulation,
The jurisdiction that a court of equity may lawfully exercise over the affairs of an ordinary business corporation, in the absence of any statute conferring extraordinary powers, is likewise well defined. A court of chancery may, at the instance of a stockholder, and if the company itself refuses to move, lawfully entertain a bill to depose or to restrain the officers or directors of a corporation, when it appears that in their capacity as agents or trustees of the stockholders they have committed, or are about to commit; acts” that are tantamount to a breach of trust, whether such acts consist of fraudulent dealings with the corporate property or funds, or whether they consist in engaging the corporation in enterprises that are beyond the scope of its chartered powers. In more general phrase, it is sometimes said that a court of chancery may grant equitable relief against a corporation, at the suit of an individual, “whenever a sufficient case for relief is shown upon ordinary principles of equity jurisprudence.” Mor. Corp. § 1042, and citations; Dodge v. Woolsey, 18 How. 331, 341; Zabriskie v. Railroad Co., 23 How. 381, 385, 386; Peabody v. Flint, 6 Allen, 52; March v. Railroad Co., 40 N. H. 548; Robinson v. Smith, 3 Paige, 222. But a court of equity has no power to interpose its authority for the purpose of adjusting controversies that have arisen among the shareholders or directors of a corporation relative to the proper mode of conducting the corporate business, as it may do in case of a similar controversy arising between the members of au ordinary partnership. Coiporations axe in a certain sense legislative bodies. They have a legislative power when the directors or shareholders are duly convened that is fully adequate to settle all questions affecting their business interests or policy, and they should be left to dispose of all queslions of that nature without applying to the courts for relief. A stockholder in a corporation cannot successfully invoke the power of a chancery court to control its officers or board of managers, or to wrest the corporate property from their charge through the agency of a receiver, so long as they neither do nor threaten to do any fraudulent or ultra vires acts, and so long as they keep within the limits of by-laws which have been prescribed for their governance. If in either of the cases last specified a stockholder is nevertheless dissatisfied with the business policy that is being pursued, or the methods of corporate management, he must seek redress within the corporation, in
It is hardly necessary to remark that if courts of equity, at the suit of a shareholder, and in the absence of a statute, have no jurisdiction to dissolve a domestic corporation, and to wind up its affairs, much less can they exercise such powers with respect to a foreign corporation. It has, indeed, been held on much consideration that the courts of a state have no visitorial powers over foreign corporations doing business within the state, unless such power is expressly conferred by local statutes; and for that reason it was ruled by the supreme court of Maryland that it would not entertain a proceeding by a citizen of Maryland, who was a shareholder in a foreign company, to compel it to annul an alleged wrongful forfeiture of his stock, and to reinstate him as a stockholder. Mining Co. v. Field, 64 Md. 151, 20 Atl. 1039. See, also, Wilkins v. Thorne, 60 Md. 253.
In view of the foregoing principles, it is evident, we think, that the decree of the circuit court was erroneous in so far as it contained provisions which contemplated a sale of all of the defendant company’s property in the state of Colorado, and a general liquidation of its affairs. As we have already shown, the circuit court had no inherent power, as a court of equity, to dissolve the company, and to wind up its business operations. It had no authority to enter a decree of that nature under any existing statute of the state of Colorado to which our attention has been directed, and it can hardly be pretended that it derived or could derive any such power or jurisdiction from the act of parliament under which the corporation was organized. The trial court appears to have been of the opinion that the resolution to wind up the company which was adopted at the meeting of June 16, 1891, and was confirmed at the meeting of July 1, 1891, was void, for the reason that the latter meeting was held on insufficient notice; but, if we accept that view as sound, it is nevertheless apparent that there was no occasion for the appointment of a receiver to hold and dispose of the company’s property, or for the order directing
It is insisted, however, that the resolution to wind up (.he company was neither void nor irregular, but was passed in strict conformity with English laws; and this contention on the part of the appellants compels us to malee a brief reference to the company’s articles of association, and to some provisions of the act of parliament under which the defendant company was organized. It is not denied that the act of parliament last referred to permitted the defendant company to go into voluntary liquidation in the manner contemplated by the resolution adopted at the shareholders' meeting of June 16,1891, which was subsequently confirmed. The act of parliament provides that a company organized under the act maybe wound up “whenever the company has passed a special resoluiion requiring the company to be wound up voluntarily;” it further provides, in substance, that the liquidator appointed by the shareholders to wind up the company may be authorized to transfer the business and property of the company to another company, and in payment therefor receive shares in such other company for distribution among the shareholders of the company whose affairs are being liquidated. Vide Companies Act 1862, §§ 129, 161. The act further defines a special resolution to wind up a company to be, in substance, one which has first been passed at a general meeting of shareholders, and has been confirmed at a subsequent general meeting, “of which notice has been duly given and held -at an interval of not less than fourteen days nor more than one month from the date of the meeting at which such resolution was first passed.” Vide Id. § 51. The resolution over which the controversy arises in the present case appears to have been passed and to have been subsequently confirmed in strict conformity with the provisions of the companies act above cited, both as respects the method of calling the meetings at which the resolution was proposed and adopted and as respects the notice given to shareholders of said meetings and the lime within which they were to be held. It is contended, however, that although the second meeting was held within the period prescribed by section 51 of the companies act, to whicli we have alluded, — that is to say, not less than fourteen days nor more than one month from the dal e
We have not overlooked the charge contained in the bill that the two meetings held in London were intentionally called by the English shareholders on short notice for the express purpose of preventing the American shareholders from taking part in such meetings. With reference to that charge, and without deciding whether it is true or false, it is sufficient to say that the company’s articles of
The result is 1hat we have been constrained to disapprove of all of the provisions of the decree from which the present appeal was taken. The decree of the circuit court is accordingly reversed, and' the case is remanded to that court with directions to discharge the receiver, and to vacate its former decree, and to enter an order dis-, missing the bill of complaint at the complainants’ costs.