72 W. Va. 221 | W. Va. | 1913
Plaintiffs, Smiley, Scarborough, Deegans, MacDonald, Sr., and MacDonald, Jr., suing on behalf of themselves and all other stockholders of The New River Company, who may join in the prayer of the bill and contribute to the costs of the suit,
On the hearing of the motion for an injunction and the appointment of a special receiver, on bill, demurrer and answer thereto by The New River Company, and by each of said subsidiary companies, and on ex parte affidavits and depositions taken in court, the court below, awarded the injunction prayed for and appointed Samuel Dixon, .W. E. Deegans and Eugene P. Carver, special receivers, with the powers and authority prayed for, basing its action on its conclusion from pleadings and. proofs, that “The New River Company has been, and is, managing the properties and business of each of the defendants, its subsidiary Companies, * * * * in an improper and illegal manner, and in violation of its charter powers, by the diversion of moneys belonging to one subsidiary company to the uses and benefit of another subsidiary company, which said subsidiary companies do not wholly have common stockholders, and which said management, in the opinion of the Court, is not only operating a fraud upon those stockholders in said defendant subsidiary companies who are not stockholders in the defendant The New River Company, to which fraud The New River Company, by such continued management, is making the plaintiffs herein particeps criminis, against their objection, contrary to their will and over their protest, but by such method of doing business and handling the funds of said subsidiary defendant companies is in the opinion of the Court, and as shown by the proof in this cause, rendering said subsidiary defendant companies, or some of them, unable to pay-
Many other grounds for relief are alleged, but- the decree is predicated solely on the grounds recited therein. The other grounds relate mainly to disagreements between plaintiffs, a small minority of the stockholders of The New River Company, and the other stockholders and directors of the holding and subsidiary companies, as to the proper conduct of the business, and particularly as to who shall be manager of the several corporations. It is not pretended that the holding company or any of the subsidiary companies are insolvent] indeed it is alleged that the properties of each are very valuable, and under proper management would be profitable to the stockholders.
While it is sought to support the bill as one for an accounting, for fraud alleged, to prevent a forfeiture of some of the leaseholds, and for discovery, it is quite evident that the only matter really relied on is that on which the court below based its finding and decree. All other matters are met by the demurrers and answers, and if any of them constitute good grounds for relief, they are not supported by proper or sufficient proof. One of these, a subject also of the protest to the stockholders of June 12, 1912, hereafter alluded to, relates to the proposed sale or pledge of the $1,500,000, residue of $4,000.000, of bonds of The New River Company, authorized in July, 1909, under the administration of said Dixon, and covered by the injunction in the decree appealed from. The bill in the sixth paragraph admits the sale of $2,500,000, of these bonds about the time of their issue, at seventy-five cents on the dollar; but in the protest of June 12, 1912, to stockholders, and in the bill with which it is exhibited, it is complained that the sale of the residue of the bonds at not less than seventy cents on the dollar, the terms on which protestants say they are informed it is proposed to dispose of.the same, will result in a waste of the properties of the subsidiary companies, and in foreclosure of the mortgage securing the same, and in the destruction of the value of the.stock of protestants in The New River Company,
The ninth paragraph of the bill was intended to coyer the matter upon which the decree below appointing receivers was predicated. That paragraph and the replies thereto present the concrete case, and may be best shown by quoting them in full, as follows:
“IX. They further say that the manner in which the sub-sidary Companies have been managed and controlled by The-New Eiver Company, and their mining operations and business-conducted, has been, and is, as follows:
“The White Oak Coal Company is the sales agent for all of the mining subsidiary Companies, and each one of such Companies turns over the output of its mine to the White Oak Coali Company, to be marketed by the latter. The White Oak Coal'! Company sells all of these coals mined by the various subsidiary: Companies, and turns the money derived from such sales into-its own treasury, and, instead of settling with each one of the-subsidiary Companies whose coal it has sold, it applies the proceeds of such sale to the wants or needs of any other subsidiary Companies that it may choose, or The New Eiver Company may direct. Whenever one of the subsidiary Companies has a pay roll to meet, it is met out of the treasury of the White Oak Coal Company, whether there is any money on hand to the credit, of the particular company or not, and, in this way, wherever one-mine may be run at a loss, its shortages and indebtedness are-met out of the sales of coal from other mines that are operating, at a profit.
“The plaintiffs further say that they are informed and believe, and here charge, that the two mines of the defendant the-Stuart Colliery Company, the two mines of the defendant the-Great Xanawha Colliery Company, and perhaps other of the mines of certain of the subsidiary Companies have been, and' are now, operated at a great loss, and that the moneys earned' at the mines of the other subsidiary Companies have been turned' over to the losing mines, in order to keep them going, thereby-destroying the profits of the subsidiary Companies as a whole, arid denying dividends to the stockholders of the holding Com-
“That the business of the mining subsidiary Companies has been conducted in the manner aforesaid through the White Oak Coal Company, and under the control of the defendant The New Eiver Company, until the White Oak Coal Company has become, and is now, indebted, on account of coal delivered to it by said subsidiary defendant Companies, and by it sold and 'unaccounted for, to said subsidiary mining companies in an aggregate sum of more than $425,000. This indebtedness is distributed among said defendant Companies as follows: To the Beeldey Coal <Sr Coke Company, $17,111.67, to.tbe Cranberry Fuel Company, $25,664.65, to the Collins Colliery Company, $76,834,64, to the Dunnloop Coal & Coke Company, $110,-275.63, to the Great -Kanawha Colliery Company, $19,069.02, to the Harvey Coal & Coke Company, $23,887.93, to the Mab-seott Coal & Coke Company, $17,665.81, to the Macdonald Colliery Company, $45,433.58, to the Price Hill Fuel Company, '$7,229.19, to the Stuart Colliery Company, $49,284.56, to the White Oak Fuel Company, $37,758.98, total $430,215.66.
“And has become, and is indebted, in addition to the foregoing, to the subsidiary railway companies of The New Eiver Company, on account of money borrowed, as follows: To the Piney Eiver & Paint Cr. E. E. Co., $13,682.55, to the White Oak Eailway Company, $12,244.23, total $25,926.78.
“That the manner aforesaid of conducting the business of the subsidiary defendant Companies by and under the control of the defendant of The New Eiver Company constitutes a gross mismanagement of the business and properties of said subsidiary Companies, as well as of The New Eiver Company itself; that the sales agent, the White Oak Coal Company, has been, and is entitled to only 8%' as a commission upon the sales of coal made by it for the subsidiary Companies, and this sum, and only this sum, it was entitled to receive for its services upon such sales,
“The following of the subsidiary Companies; that is to say, the defendant the Beckley Coal & Coke Company, the Collins Colliery Company, the Cranberry Fuel Company, the Dunnloop Coal & Coke Company, the Great Kanawha. Colliery Company, the Harvey Coal & Coke Company, the Mabscott Coal & Coke Company, the Macdonald Colliery Company, the Price Hill Fuel Company, the Stuart Colliery Company and the White Oak Fuel Company, are mining upon leased lands, and in their leases, and in the contract of lease of each of them, there is a forfeiture clause, forfeiting the leasehold upon the failure to pay royalties according to the terms of said lease when due, and giving the landlord in each lease the right to re-enter and take possession of the property embraced in. the particular leasehold, together with the improvements thereon..
“That, as these plaintiffs are informed and believe, and so charge upon such information and belief, each of the last named Companies is now indebted to its respective landlord for royalties which have been for sometime, and are now, long past due, and the leasehold of each is, at the present time, subject to and in clanger of forfeiture according to the terms of the lease, in consequence of the non-payment of royalties. This state of affairs has been brought about, as hereinbefore recited and alleged, through the mismanagement of said Companies by the improper
Preparatory thereto, and a few days before the filing of the bill, formal protests and objections to the management were presented in stockholders’ meeting, by Samuel Dixon and a few other stockholders, holding a small minority of the stock, some of them plaintiffs in this suit, the first in the form of a resolution, offered at the meeting held at Macdonald, West Virginia, on-June 5, 1912; the other held in the City of New York, on June 12, 1912. The resolution, which was voted down, is as follows: “That the stockholders view with alarm the results of the management of the company’s property for the past year as disclosed by the annual report now submitted, and we condemn the Foard ol: Directors and the management in charge of the operation of the company’s properties for this result.’’ The formal protest to the stockholders, of June 12, 1912; was signed by John Faulkner, S. Dixon, J. W. Smiley, W. E. Deegans, Wm. Frown, and Symington Macdonald, Jr. It contains some twelve grounds of protest and objection to the management, substantially those covered by the bill, and as does the bill, they mainly relate to professed disagreements between protestants and the managing officers; directors and other stockholders, as to the management of the holding and subsidiary companies. Deference is made to the protest of June 5, 1912, which is re-affirmed. The eleventh paragraph of that protest, and the only one presenting real ground relied on for equitable jurisdiction, and the one covered by the ninth paragraph of the bill, is as follows: “11. They further charge that the management by The New Fiver Company of its subsidiary • companies has been such as to appropriate the profits of successful subsidiary Companies to the carrying of the unsuccessful ones, thereby defrauding and causing a loss to fall upon those stockholders of the profitable subsidiary Companies who are not stockholders of The New Fiver Company.”
The matter of the ninth paragraph of the bill, including the
“1. Investment made by said Dixon on behalf of said. White Oak Coal Company, originally without authority on the part of the Board of Directors in land for a coal yard at Washington, D. C. in which about $40,000.00 has been expended in the purchase of a property and the extension of a bridge over a public street to tracks of the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Eailroad, and in legal expenses incident to litigation which has arisen in reference to said bridge.
“2. To a loss of approximately $65,000.00 incurred in the establishing of yards at Chicago, Ill., on the recommendation of said Dixon that the establishing of such yards would be greatly to the benefit and profit of the White Oak Coal Company and through it to The New Eiver Company. Said yards were after about two years sold on the recommendation of said Dixon after the business so conducted showed the loss hereinbefore stated.
“3. To the tying up of $49,091.88 in coal shipped within the last few months to the Greát Lakes Coal & Docks Company under contracts purporting to run for five years, which were executed in .the name of the White Oak Coal Company by said Dixon, without the authority ox knowledge of the Board, directly contrary to votes prohibiting the entering into such contracts without previous authority by the Board; the money of.the White
“That the Board of Directors of this defendant are fully alive to the undesirability of a continuance of any large indebtedness of the AVhite Oak Coal Company to any of the operating subsidiary companies. That the existence of this indebtedness is one of the reasons why further funds should be raised by The New Eiver Company in a proper manner, and why, by the increase of capital stock of the White Oak Coal Company subscribed for by the New Eiver Company, or otherwise, the White Oak Coal Company, should be put in funds to pay said indebtedness. That' it has been impossible to further finance the needs of The New Eiver Company on a reasonable and advantageous basis while said Samuel Dixon continued in the office of President of The New Eiver Company or its subsidiary companies, and that it was for that reason and for other reasons hereinafter set forth, that a change has recently been made in the executive head of said companies. That the Board of Directors of this ■defendant' elected on June 5th, 1912, immediately took up this matter and voted such authority to its Executive Committee in ■conjunction with its Treasurer as would have enabled all financial needs of The New Eiver Company and the subsidiary ■companies to have been taken care of on an advantageous and businesslike basis. Said needs would have been taken care of before the 1st of July had it not been for the bringing of these ■proceedings. That there is no complaint in this proceeding by :any stockholder of any subsidiary company and that this complaint is not brought in behalf of any such stockholders but of ■stockholders in The New Eiver Company. That the plaintiff, W. E. Deegans, is not a stockholder in either the Dunn Loop Coal & Coke Company or the Harvey Coal & Coke Company; but this defendant is informed that the Longdale Coal Company, of which the said Deegans asserts he is president, claims to have purchased some shares of stock in each of said companies. ■ That S. A. Scott has never been the manager or had any control over the affairs of the White Oak Coal Company, but that said Samuel Dixon has continued ever since the organization of said Company up to the date of June 12?, 1912, to be the President and
“This defendant further says with reference to the losses referred to in the 9th paragraph of the Plaintiff Bill in the operations of the mines of the Stuart Colliery Company, and the mines of the Great Kanawha Colliery Company, that a large investment has been made under the administration of said Dixon in the mines of the Stuart Colliery Company the cost of sinking the shafts and developing the said mines having been greatly in excess of the estimates made by said Dixon under whose administration said shafts were sunk and the mines opened up. That further heavy losses have occurred in the operation of the Stuart Colliery Company on account of two explosions which occurred while said Dixon was General Manager of said Company. That it is not clear from the Plaintiffs’ Bill as to how they claim the property of the Stuart Colliery Company should be dealt with except by continuing the development of the mines of said company to the point where they will have been brought to a profitable production, and if said course is to be pursued the properties must necessarily be operated- during the intervening period. The plaintiffs allege in the 4th paragraph of their bill that said property is worth in reasonable value $500,000.00. An abandonment of said mines would according to the plaintiffs own allegation involve the sacrifice of that amount. And the defendant further says that some of the best coal produced in the New Biver field is produced at the mines of this Company, and that, as this defendant is informed and believes, it only requires the proper handling of said mines to make them pay satisfactory profits within a reasonable time. That the present Manager of the Stuart Colliery Company, S. A. Scott, has done extensive work in said mines, and has brought them to the point, as this defendant is informed, and believes,
“With reference to the two mines owned by the Great Kanawha Colliery Company, this defendant says that said mines were bought in reliance on the representation of said Dixon that they would be a profitable and satisfactory investment, it being represented by him that the Great Kanawha mine would yield a return of 6% upon the investment and that the Eureka mine, of said Company, would make much in excess of said return. That in fact said mines have since they were acquired (except for a short period of time) proved unprofitable; that said Dixon, said Scott, the present Manager of the Great Kanawha Colliery Company, and the Board of Directors of' The New Biver Company and of the Great Kanawha Colliery Company, have beep in accord in the belief that it is desirable that said properties of the Great Kanawha Colliery Company should be disposed of, and have made every effort to dispose of the same on satisfactory terms, but on account of the depression in the coal trade, which has existed for several years past, they have been unable to find a purchaser who would purchase said property for a reasonable price and on satisfactory terms. And this defendant says that good business policy requires that the mines of the Great Kanawha Colliery Company should be carried until'the'property can be sold.
“This defendant denies that there has been any improper use of the moneys of the other subsidiary companies by the Stuart Colliery of the Great Kanawha Colliery Companies. It avers that it may have happened at times that the different subsidiary companies of The New Biver Company have accommodated one another by the loan of funds, but that this has always been legally done and with the consent and approval of all of the parties concerned. And this defendant denies that by reason of the use of any such funds there has been a failure to pay dividends to the stockholders of The New Biver Company.
“This defendant further says that only small amounts are due and payable at the present time from subsidiary companies for royalties on leases1. That on no lease does the amount exceed $4,000.00 and that the aggregate of all amounts now so due and payable from the subsidiary companies is less than
On awarding the appeal from the decree below, on July 12, 1912, on the .petition of The New Eiver Company, by two members of the court, all proceedings, on or under said decree, including any act or proceeding by the receivers appointed, were thereby stayed until the further order of the court. Later, at a Special Term, on motion of appellant, it was further ordered that until the further order of the court, the powers of said receivers be wholly suspended and that they yield and deliver to appellants, their agents’ and servants, such possession of any and all of said property, books and papers, as they or any of them might then have. And afterwards on July 20, 1912, upon the joint petition of all of said subsidiary companies, appeals and supersedeases were also allowed them, and it then further ordered that until the further order of the court all proceedings on and under said decree, including any act or proceeding by the receivers appointed by said decree or either of them, should be and the same were thereby stayed, and the powers of the receivers were thereb3r wholly suspended, and they were required to yield and deliver to petitioners and to each of them, their agents and servants such possession of any and all of the property, books and papers of the petitioners.as they or any of them had. '
These actions of the court but presaged the disposition which we were then of opinion would finally have to be made of the
A well grounded legal proposition particularly applicable here is, that when the equities of the bill upon which a receiver is sought are fully denied by the sworn' answers of the defendants, and the evidence adduced in support of the bill does not overcome these denials, a receiver should not be appointed. Wilson v. Maddox, 46 W. Va. 641, 649, 33 S. E. 775, 778-9, citing High on Receivers, section 24. Our case just cited also holds that a receivership should be granted only under peculiar and urgent circumstances, and where the right to be protected is clear, and where there is no other safe or expedient remedy.
Another proposition, equally well grounded, and applicable also to the case at bar is, that individual stockholders must seek relief through the corporation itself, first by application to the directors, and then to the stockholders, before going into a court of equity on their individual initiative. The bill shows appeal to stockholders of The New River Company, but not to directors, and it does not appear that if the grievance was well grounded in fact, application to the directors would have been in vain; on the contrary, the answers impliedly, if not in terms, say that an adjustment of the accounts between the White Oak Coal Company, and the creditor subsidiary companies is intended, and will be accomplished as soon as money can be provided for the purpose. In what other way could the wrong, if any, be righted? None is suggested. If we say that suit might be brought by the subsidiary companies against the "White Oak Coal Company, the debtor company, or that such suit in equity might be maintained by them or some of them to compel by mandatory injunction the adjustment of the debtor and creditor accounts, no relief if any could be obtained except through the individual companies, and before individual stockholders of
On the case as presented on this hearing, we are of opinion, that there was gross abuse of power in the appointment of special receivers, and that the decree and order appealed from appointing them should be set aside, reversed and annulled, and that the orders heretofore entered by this Court in relation thereto, stand confirmed and made absolute and the cause’ remanded for further proceedings to be had therein, in accordance with the principles and directions given herein, and it will be so ordered.
Reversed and Remanded.