48 Vt. 266 | Vt. | 1876
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is a petition of the state’s attorney for this county, for leave to file an information in the nature of a writ of quo warranto against the respondents for usurping and exercising the rights of directors of the Central Vermont Railroad. A rule to show cause having been obtained and served on the respondents, the question now comes up whether this court will grant the leave asked. A preliminary question has been discussed, whether, if insufficient cause be shown and leave is granted, a judgment of ouster will be awarded as a matter of right or as a matter of course. It is not denied that at the time our statute was enacted, and down to the present time, the practice was settled and uniform in the courts of England, that after leave was granted and the information filed, the respondents had time and opportunity to plead to the information'. The nature of the application is summary, and requires speed; and the court will see to it that there be no useless delay. The 4th sec. of the statute of Anne, required “ proceeding at the most convenient speed that may be,” and “an appearance and pleading as of the same term at which the information shall be filed.” But the practice in the English courts, under that statute, was, when the information was filed, if there was not voluntary appearance, to require such appearance by venire facias or compel it by distringas. The rule requires the respondents to show cause why an information should not be filed against them: if they omit to show cause, as they may, the rule becomes absolute, and the information is filed. In The People v. Robinson, 4 Cow. 97, the respondent had been adjudged guilty upon default of appearance to show .cause, and ouster awarded. The court held the judgment irregular, and without due process of law, and set it aside, as irregular and void. It is noticeable as having been ably argued by the attorney general on the one side, and John C. Spencer on the other, and thoroughly sifted by the court. We think, when an information is allowed to be filed, it is the duty of the court to fix some time, ordinarily
The statute gives merely jurisdiction to this court of these prerogative writs, and prescribes no forms or rules for proceeding; but, by manifest implication, adopted the function and manner of use of the proceedings then uniformly practiced in the common-law courts of England. The analogy of practice in certiorari is urged upon us. The analogy is not obvious. The inquiry in the application for certiorari, is based on the record, and is a substitute in sessions matters, for the writ of error, which applies only to common-law procedure. The court examine copies of the record upon which it is claimed that an erroneous judgment has been rendered in the inferior court, and 'if the court find error, they will order the record to be certified into this court, and render thereon such judgment as should have been rendered. The record imports verity, which neither party can dispute.
II. This proceeding is criminal in its form, but civil in its nature; and is addressed to the judicial discretion of this court.
The case discloses that said corporation has, by the Court of Chancery, been made receiver, and holds in trust the Vermont Central and Vermont & Canada Railroads, and is operating, under leases, several other railways in this and other states. The trust duties thus imposed are active, and executive in their nature, involving important duties and responsibilities, both to the cestui que trust and the public, and incurring, necessarily, from day to day, large liabilities in intricate and often complicated transactions in the administration of the trust, which, from the nature of the case, must be largely outstanding and unsettled. One of the incidents of a receivership is a bond, commensurate with the magnitude of the trust, approved by the Court of Chancery, and to respond to that court for the property, its income, and for all laches of administration. Such bond is presumed to have been furnished by those who have assumed the duties and have been the active administrators of the trust. If the present incumbents should be ousted, they would have the right to require that their personal liability by bond or otherwise, should cease with the ouster; and the chancellor would, doubtless, require new bonds, to respond any laches of administration. How far personal character, capacity, and responsibility, induced the appointment of this corporation receiver of this large property and executive trust, is known only to the chancellor. The Court of Chancery has absolute control of the trust and its administrators, and may so temper any order, as to restrain wrong and insure justice. While this court has no power upon this application, but to grant or refuse the petition, without discrimination as to the fitness or unfitness of men for the administration of so important a trust, it is easy to foresee that it is possible for complicated questions to arise between the outgoing and incoming directors as to liability and responsibility, and for a litigation to spring up, subjecting the trust to new burdens, without benefit to the parties or the public. We have no warrant for saying that such mischief would, necessarily, follow; but to some extent it is possible, and perhaps
III. The right of the respondents to hold and exercise the office of directors of this corporation, depends upon the legality of the 2850 votes cast by Langdon and Millis on the stock in question. If such votes were lawfully cast, the respondents were duly elected directors, otherwise not.
Waiving, for the present, all consideration of the alleged conspiracy on the part of the respondents to forestall by fraud the majority of the stockholders in the election of the 19th of May last, and assuming that the transaction had wholly occurred six months before, and without reference to an immediate election, we inquire whether Langdon and Millis stand as purchasers and owners of such stock in this corporation. Mr. Park and associates in Now York had agreed with Governor Smith and associates in Vermont, that they would subscribe for 20,000 shares' of stock in this corporation, in certain agreed proportions. Park, in executing his part of the contract, signed in the name of two friends in New York, for 1500 shares without authority, which they repudiated. Whereupon Park assumed such subscription as his own, and the stock was entered upon the books of the corporation as belonging to Park. • It is urged that this stock having first been subscribed in the name of Meyer and McKinney, was then-stock, and Park, showing no written assignment, had no title or property in it. But Meyer and McKinney repudiated the subscription for the reason that Park was without authority to bind them by such contract. Park having subscribed for stock by an assumed agency not founded in fact, failing to bind the principal, bound himself. The five per cent, paid by Park was then placed to his credit, by the corporation, and the subscription placed on the books as a subscription by Park in his own right. Park was then not only the equitable owner, but the original subscriber for the stock. The corporation had been made receiver of this large property, upon the representation that 20;000 shares of stock had
V. Was the property sold and transferred to the purchasers by such authority as should bind the corporation ? We think the majority of directors who assembled on the directors car, and passed the resolution authorizing the sale of this stock to meet a liability becoming due on the first of June after, cannot lawfully be claimed as organized under the call of the clerk to meet at Bellows Falls at an earlier hour of the same day. If we should hold that the call of the clerk by telegraph was in accordance with the by-laws, and the time sufficient, we think the attempted adjournment by a minority to a point fifty miles distant, was irregular, and did not transfer the place of legal venue under the call, to White River Junction. But a quorum of the directors, regular in form, assembled on the car, and by resolution authorized the sale of this stock, and under that authority the stock was sold, and, as the proofs stand, for adequate and full consideration received by the company.
In Bank of Middlebury v. R. & W. R. R. Co. 30 Vt. 169, the court held that the action of a majority of the directors of a corporation, without any notice to the other directors, if within the scope of their authority, was legal,- and bound the corporation. And the court say, that “ if the authorized agents of a company have extended its business beyond the strict limits of their functions for which the charter was granted, the company would be bound by the extension, unless the corporators interfere to restrain such extension at the earliest moment ” See also Stark Bank v. U. S. Pottery Co. 34 Vt. 144.
The railroad law of our statute provides, p. 216, s. 3, “ that the government and direction of the affairs of every such corporation, shall be vested in a board of not less than five * * * and a majority of the directors shall form a board, and shall be competent to transact the business of the company.” By the
The case discloses that the relator was not only a large stockholder, and representing, as he claims, a majority of the stock, but was himself elected one of the directors on the 19th of May, and had been up to that time, vice president, and chairman of the finance committee. He was aware of the resolution of the directors, and the claim therein that the stock was sold and the
It may be claimed that this proceeding to oust certain directors on the ground that they were elected fraudulently by votes upon ihis stock, is virtually a proceeding to avoid this sale. The purchasers are not made pai’ties: Langdon’s-election is conceded ; Millis never was director, and claims to be a stockholder by virtue of the ownership of this stock. Whatever may be the order of the court in this case, it- could haVe no effect upon the rights of Langdon and Millis Suppose a new election should be' ordered, as under statute law is the practice in many of the states, and Millis, offering his votes on this stock, should be challenged. It could not be claimed upon any evidence or suggestion in this case, that if the purchase of this stock was voidable, it had not been fully confirmed by acquiesence and allowing the purchase money to go the use of the corporation.
VII. t is insisted that this stock was transferred for the purpose of giving the preponderance of votes to the respondents. We have no doubt that such motives were strong inducements at the time, and that the respondents were determined to resort to every lawful agency to maintain their position, and repel the movement of the relator. We have no opinion of the merits of the controversy, or of the wisdom or propriety of the acts of the parties, as disclosed by the testimony. There are some matters disclosed which, in the forum of conscience, would be obnoxious to criticism, that are not unlawful and are not properly brought in question in this proceeding. The case shows that this stock was not merely transferred, but sold, and that the sale was actual, not colorable; and that there was no secret trust or condition ; that the sale was for a necessary purpose, and beneficial to the company ; that the full value was paid to the corporation, which has gone to its use. We think such sale is not void, but like any other sale, can be impeached only for cause; and, that the controlling inducement for the purchase at the time, of this stock, was, to enable the purchaser and his friends to outvote the relator and his friends, does not vitiate the sale, if otherwise for honest purposes and for full valuej We think, also, that the consideration having gone to the use of the corporation without challenge or seasonable proceeding to rescind or avoid the sale, the sale has become ratified and adopted by acquiescence. And we do not think that the reasons and principles that have guided this decision, are the novel and sinister outgrowth of some abnormal state of things in this state, as was remotely hinted in the
Thfe rule to show cause is therefore discharged, and the petition dismissed.