29 Vt. 93 | Vt. | 1856
The opinion of the court was delivered by .
The plaintiffs being a railway company, (whose road extends from Lake Champlain to Connecticut River with the usual franchises and immunities, and under the ordinary limitations and restrictions,) in order to compete in business, and to improve the profits of their road, in all probability in good faith, purchased the boats and accessories of the Champlain Transportation -Company, a corporation created for carrying passengers and freight upon Lake Champlain. Subsequently they sold one of these boats and the furniture to the defendants, and after sale, at the defendants’ request, repaired the boats and its furniture at one of the machine shops, formerly belonging to the Transportation Company. This action is brought to recover the value of such furniture and repairs.
The defense is, that the contract of purchase by which the plaintiffs’ company acquired the title of this boat and furniture, sold the defendants, and of the shop at which- the repairs were done, was beyond their powers, or as denominated in the books, ultra vires. It does, not appear that the stockholders of the plain
If we regarded the question properly before the court for determination, we should not at first view certainly, be inclined to question that such a purchase is beyond the powers of the company. And if the stockholders had applied to a court of equity at the time, to have the directors enjoined from making the purchase, the current of English decisions would probably have justified the injunction. And possibly had the state interfer’fed by way of scire facias or quo warranto, the excess of power thus exercised by the company, might be regarded as sufficient reason for revoking their charter. We say this may possibly be so regarded, but it is not common in practice for the courts to declare the forfeiture of a railway charter when the directors have proceeded in good faith, and the property of the company is not brought in peril. But no such step has been taken, nor is this an action by which the company are sought to be charged for a contract beyond the fair scope of their charter.
The defendants seek to make this defense upon the ground that the excess of power thus assumed by the company is illegal, and renders all contracts connected with the transaction inoperative by reason of such illegality.
If there had been a positive prohibition of entering into a particular class of contracts, and especially if such contracts had been declared void by the charter of the company, or the general laws of the state, most unquestionably no action would lie upon the prohibited contract.
But when no such prohibition exists, and it is only by construction of the charter that a class of contracts are declared to be beyond the power of the company, and when upon this point there is such reasonable ground of doubt as to induce a court to suppose the directors may have acted in good faith, and where the question is raised by one haying no interest in it, except for purposes of unjust advantage, courts have never been inclined to listen to the objections.
In the present case, the most favorable view for the defendants; as it seems to us, is that the directors of the plaintiffs’ company
The only wrong in the directors is in having exceeded their powers, and the transaction with the defendants, so far as it goes, will tend to restore a portion of the money to its rightful proprietor; and of this the defendants ought not to complain, as they are confessedly solicitous to bring the directors of the plaintiff’s company back to their legitimate functions. And if they should dispose.of all the property purchased *in this mode, in the manner this is sold to the defendants, it will go far to restore them to their appropriate place — the treasury of the-plaintiffs — for the benefit of the company and its stockholders.
Judgment affirmed.