{after stating the facts).
“The word ‘consolidation’ is used to denote any conjunction or union of the stock, property, or franchises of two or more corporations, whereby the conduct of their affairs is permanently, or for a long period of time, placed under one management, whether the agreement between them be by lease, sale, or other form of contract, and whether its effect be the dissolution of neither of the companies, or whether one of them be dissolved and its existence be merged in the corporate being of the other, or whether it result in the dissolution of both companies, and the creation of a new corporation out of such portions of the original companies as enter into the new.” 1 Beach, Priv. Corp. § 326.
We are of the opinion that each transaction was a consolidation in fact, or, as it is termed in England, an “amalgamation.” The law will not permit the creditors of two corporations to be deprived of the assets of such corporations in payment of their debts, and turn them over to suits in equity against the stockholders, when the union or consolidation with another corporation is effected with
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■out the passage of a dollar or other valuable consideration between the corporations themselves. The effect here is precisely the same as though the stockholders of the Ann Arbor Street-Railway Company and of the Ann Arbor & Ypsilanti Street-Railway Company had united to form the electric company, and had pooled their stock and bonds into the one company. The purpose and result of both proceedings would have been the same. Chicago,
etc., R. Co.
v.
Ashling,
“A corporation cannot sell all of its property, and take in payment stock in a new corporation, under an arrangement that has the effect of distributing the assets of the vendor among its stockholders, to the exclusion and prejudice of its creditors.”
Even if this were a purchase, it was a purchase under similar circumstances to those in the Grenell Case, wherein we held that the purchase was subject to the rights of ■creditors.
The judgment is affirmed.
