82 F. 263 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern North Carolina | 1897
The bill of complaint is filed by a private stockholder in the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company. The gravamen of the complaint is the passage by the legislature of North Carolina in 1897 of two acts which, it is charged, change the original charter of the company, and impair the fundamental contract contained therein, and that, under said two acts, changes in the management and constitution of the company are threatened which will materially impair, if they do not destroy, the rights and property of the private stockholders in the corporation. The legislature of North Carolina in 1852 incorporated the Atlantic & North Carolina Railroad Company, with one terminus at Beaufort and another at Goldsboro, in that state, giving all powers necessary for constructing its railroad. The act made provision also for the subscription to its capital stock by individuals, private corporations, and municipal bodies, and invited and encouraged such subscriptions. The charter is most liberal in its terms, and the purpose of the act was to make it a part of a grand scheme of internal improvement effecting railroad communication from the Atlantic, through the center of the state, to meet the Tennessee line. The capital was fixed at a maximum of $900,000. At the session of 1854-55 an act was passed amending this charter, and by this act the state beeame a stockholder in the' company. The capital stock was increased to $1,600,000. And as soon as it appeared to the board of internal improvement that one-third of the capital stock had been taken by solvent individuals or companies, and that $300,000 thereon was paid to the treasurer of.the company, the board was authorized to subscribe, on the part of the state, for the remaining two-thirds of the stock, and to pay for it as in the act provided. Two sections of this amending act bear upon the matters in controversy in this case, — sections 3 and 4. Section 3 provides that the affairs of the company shall be managed and directed by a general board, to cónsist of twelve directors, eight of whom shall be appointed annually by the board of internal improvements, and may be removed in like manner, and four to be elected by the stockholders at their next general meeting, provided that no one but a stockholder holding at least five shares can serve as director. Section 4 provides a scale of voting in case a stock vote be taken in all elections and on all questions in any general meeting of stockholders ; that is to say. the owner of one or two shares shall have one vote. The owner of not less than three and not more than four shares shall be entitled to two votes, the owner of not less than five or more than six shares to three votes, and so on, followed by this proviso:
*265 “Provided, that no individual or company holding stock in said company shall ho oniiUod to moro than two hundred votes, except the state, which shall he entitled to three hundred votes, hut should the state hereafter transfer any part of Its stock, ihen its vote shall he in proportion, to what may be retained as compared with the amount now represented in said corporation. The state shall at all general meetings of stockholders he represented by an agent or proxy appointed by the governor, and such agent or proxy shall he entitled in the general meetings aforesaid, to vote according to the above scale on all questions, except: in the election of directors by the individual stockholders.”
It may be noted Rere, and may save time in the further discussion of this case, that these provisions as to a scale of voting are essential provisions in the contract between the individual private stockholders and the slate as stockholder. It contains mutual concessions as the consideration of the contract. The state agrees to the 'vote to he cast for her on the maximum of the stock, and makes provision for the reduction of that vote in certain contingencies. No provision whatever is made for an increase of her vote in any contingency. The advantages of this contract inure to, and are a part of the property of, each stockholder and each share of stock. Another thing must be noted: The act provides that at each general meeting of stockholders the state shall be represented by a proxy. The use of this imperative word renders it necessary that a state proxy he present at all such meetings. This original charter, with its amendments, under the law then existing in North Carolina, were not subject to modification, amendment, or repeal by the legislature, against the will of the stockholders.
in 1897 the legislature of North Carolina passed an act entitled:
‘An act to amend an act entitled an act to incorpórale tlie Allantic and North Carolina Railroad Company and the North Carolina and Western Railroad Company.”
This act strikes out section 4 of the former act quoted above, and inserts in lieu thereof the following:
“In all general and special meetings of stockholders the state shall be represented by an agent or proxy appointed by file governor, who shall be entitled to vote the stock of the state on all questions arising in said meeting, except in the election of directors by the individual stockholders and the presence of the state’s proxy shall be necessary to constitute a quorum in said meeting. All laws and clauses of laws in conflict with this act are repealed.”
Ex vi termini, this act seeks to repeal all provisions made as to the scale of voting, and destroys the equilibrium fixed in the charier. The state, desiring to go into this enterprise, invited the subscriptions of individuals, and agreed that when $300,000 of these were paid she would put in the remainder. The rights of each stockholder, and the relative rights of the state as a shareholder to the other shareholders, were fixed at the same time, as a part of the inducement to subscribe, and surely these were fundamental. The right of each stockholder is secured to him, not to be taken away or surrendered without his consent. As to this complainant, a large stockholder, this act must he inoperative if he dissents, as he does dissent, thereto. Bank v. Knoop, 16 How. 369; Railroad Co. v. Reid, 13 Wall. 264; Fry v. Railroad Co., 2 Metc. (Ky.) 314; Cook, Stocks & S. §§ 494, 500; Mor. Priv. Corp. § 645.
At the same session, in 1897, the legislature of North Carolina
The bill, as has been seen, is filed by a private stockholder. He makes defendants to the bill I). L. Russell, governor, Z. B. Walser, attorney general, the board of internal improvements of North Carolina, a body corporate, and Robert Hancock, Esq., and seven other gentlemen, who have been appointed directors in behalf of the state in this corporation, and the railroad corporation itself. The bill sets out in detail the original and amended charter of the company,.
The defendants, in response to a rule for that purpose, have shown cause, by answer, why the prayer of the bill be not granted. It appeal's from this return that at the time of the passage of the acts of 1897 there were a board of directors, a president, and a state proxy for the Atlantic & North Carolina -Railroad Company; that after the passage of these acts this board of directors, as well as the proxy, were removed, and Mr. Hancock and his board of directors were appointed; that (he old board acquiesced and surrendered; and that when this bill was fib'd the new board was in actual and peaceable possession. The reasons given for the removal of the old board and of the proxy were these: The private stockholders, anticipating some change in the state’s representation in the company, had been splitting up the shares, and putting them in various names, thus taking advantage of the result of the scaling provisions of the charter, which gave greater voting power to the small shares. To aid in accomplishing tiie result sought, — increase of power in private stockholders, — the provision of fho by-law which required the presence of the state proxy in forming a quorum at mecí mgs was repealed. A large proportion of the power of the president, was taken away, and vested in a finance committee of the board. The answer also charges misconduct in other resjjects on the part of the old board, justifying its removal.
With regard to the policy under which this railroad company is administered, the wisdom or unwisdom of its management, the dereliction of duty on the part of any of its officers or employés, this court can have no concern. These are corporate acts, and, if done under regularly constituted authority, must be corrected, if corree
With regard to so much of the act as provides for the appointment of a receiver, as an abstract question, much could be said. It comes perilously near confounding the legislative department with the judicial department. If the legislature can usurp the discretion of a judge, and instruct him, in a given case, to pursue a given course, it can by degrees take within its control other and more important judicial functions. But there is at present no suit pending under this section, none threatened. The necessity for such suit, the prospect or probability of such a suit, do not exist, may never exist. The prevents e process of this court cannot meet such a case. Nor can the court decide a legal principle upon which it cannot make a practical application. Williams v. Hagood, 98 U. S. 72. It can only consider the existing facts before it, and upon such facts pronounce the law and apply the remedy.
From what has been said it follows: That the first prayer of the bill for an injunction cannot be granted, as there is no suit, or threat •of suit, or prospect of a suit for the possession of this railroad by the .governor, or by any one designated by him. On the contrary, the oc