44 F. 146 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania | 1890
On the 29th day of March, 1886, the firm of Samuel R. -Bullock & Co. and the Corry Water-Works Company, a corporation of the state of Pennsylvania, entered into a contract whereby the former agreed to construct for the latter water-works in the city of Corry, Erie county, Pa., according to certain plans and specifications, and to pay all the expenses, legal fees, a.nd salaries, which might be needed to maintain and operate the works for a period of six months after completion, and to pay the first six-months interest,- — viz. §3,000, — on the hereinafter mentioned mortgage bonds of the water company; and, in consideration thereof, the water-works company agreed to issue and deliver to said Bullock Co. §100,000 in bonds, and §125,000 in the full paid-up non-assessable stock of the water-works company. Bullock & Co. proceeded to construct the water-works, and fulfilled, their part of the contract, and the water-works company issued and delivered to them the bonds and stock, as agreed on. The bonds bear date April 1, 1886, are each of the denomination of §1,000, and are payable to Bamuel R. Bullock & Co., or bearer, on the 1st day of April, 1916, with interest coupons annexed payable to bearer, semi-annually, and the bonds are secured by a mortgage, or deed of trust, of even date covering all the property, real and personal, rights, privileges, and franchises of the water-works company, executed and delivered by said company to the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, (defendant in this suit,) a corporation of the state of New York, as trustee. The last-named company accepted the trust, and the mortgage, or trust-deed, was duly recorded in the county of Eric, Pa., on April 13, 1886. In the month of October, 1886, the National Water-Works Investment Company, a corporation of the state of New York, purchased from Bamuel R. Bullock & Co. all of said bonds, together with §50,000 of their said stock, for the cash price of §90,000, which sum was paid to Bullock & Co. by said investment company upon the delivery of the bonds, and said bonds are still owned by that company. The water-works company made default in the payment of the interest on said bonds, due April 1, 1889, and thereupon,
■The main purpose of the bill is to enjoin the exercise by the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company of the power of sale given by tho said trust mortgage, on the ground that the same is an invalid instrument, and conferred no estate or rightful authority upon the trustee. In support of this proposition, three reasons were assigned and urged by the plaintiffs’ counsel at the final hearing, namely:
“First. Because the issue of bonds which it attempts to secure was an increase of the corporate indebtedness without the consent of the persons holding the larger amount in value of the stock obtained at a meeting to be held after sixty days notice. Second. Because the amount of mortgage bonds issued exceeded one-half of the capital stock paid in, the evidence in the cause showing, substantially, that nothing was ever paid in on account of the capital stock. Third. Because it appears from the evidence that, by the attempted issue of stock and bonds to Bullock & Co., under the construction contract, there was a fictitious increase of stock and indebtedness, which, by the terms of the constitution, are void. ”
The plaintiffs rely upon the provisions of the corporation laws of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, which limit the right of such a corporation to issue bonds secured by a mortgage to an amount not exceeding one-half the capital stock paid in, and require the previous consent of the stockholders at a meeting called for the purpose, and upon section 7 art. 16, of the constitution of the state, which provides:
“No corporation shall issue stocks or bonds except for money, labor done, or money or property actually received; and all fictitious increase of stock or indebtedness shall be void. The stock and indebtedness of corporations shall not be increased, except in pursuance of general law, nor without the consent of the persons holding the larger amount; in value of the stock first obtained at a meeting to be held after sixty days’ notice given in pursuance of law.”.
' Before approaching the consideration of the legal questions involved, certain matters of fact must be stated. It appears that the meeting of the stockholders of the waterworks company, at which the issue of the mortgage bonds was authorized, was not called for that purpose, but to vote upon the proposition to increase the capital stock from $20,000 to $200,000. It is, however, shown that all the stockholders of the company except one, — viz., Charles S. Wallace, — were present.at that meeting, and voted in favor of the issue of the bonds, and the execution of the mortgage, or trust-deed, to secure them;., and it is further satisfactorily
“ And whereas, this form of mortgage, or trust-deed, was, at a meeting of the stockholders of the water company, held on the 29th day of March, A. D., 1886, duly approved and ratified, and the proper officers directed to execute the same, in the name of the water company.”
The bill alleges that the cost of the construction of the said waterworks was only about §60,000, but the proofs do not sustain this allegation. On the contrary, Samuel It. Bullock testifies that the entire cost, including the expenses the contractors assumed for the first six months alter completion, etc., “was in the neighborhood of $121,000,” and I do not see why this estimate should not be accepted as substantially correct. The plaintiffs claim to be the owners of 1,420 shares of the stock of the Corry Water-Works Company. The whole of this stock, however, came from Samuel 11. Bullock & Co. originally, and was part of the stock that firm received from the water-works company, under their construction contract. The plaintiff’s title to 920 shares of this stock is under an assignment from said firm, dated November 10, 1888, and they have possession of the stock certificate for these 920 shares. But, in fact, that certificate had been surrendered to the company for cancellation, and other certificates had been issued for at least part of this stock, and how much stock, if any, the plaintiffs are entitled to on this certificate is not shown. The plaintiffs’ title to the other 500 shares of stock is good. They acquired those shares in February, 1889, from the National Water-Works Investment Company, at a valuation of one dollar per share, the transaction being this: The plaintiffs were creditors of Samuel It. Bullock & Co., and held, as collateral securities for their claims, stocks in various water-works companies; and the investment company was also the holder of such stocks which bad been acquired from said firm. Upon the failure of that firm, with a view to a severance of their interests, mutual stock transfers were made between the plaintiff’s and the investment company, and the plaintiffs thus acquired said 500 shares of the Corry Water-Works Company’s stock at the valuation mentioned.
Upon the undisputed facts, it is very difficult to see the standing the plaintiffs have in a court of equity, in virtue of any rights of their own, to assail the transaction between the Corry Water-Works Company and Samuel R. Bullock & Co., of which they complain. Dimpfel v. Railroad Co., 110 U. S. 209, 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 573; Appeal of Columbia Nat. Bank, 16 Wkly. Notes Cas. 357; Graham v. Railroad Co., 102 U. S. 148; Monroe v. Smith, 79 Pa. St. 459. They were not shareholders of the corporation at the time of the transaction, and were not injured by what took place. The contract had been fully executed long before the plaintiffs acquired their shares of stock, and they took them with full knowledge that the bonds and mortgage
Turning now to the specific objections urged against the validity of the bonds and trust mortgage, we find that in the case of the Appeal of Columbia Nat. Bank, supra, in which an issue of corporate stock was involved, the supreme court of Pennsylvania held that the only object of the prescribed notice of a proposed increase of stock was to give information to the shareholders, and if they had such knowledge from any source it was enough. Now, every shareholder of the Corry WaterWorks Company was present when the issue of the bonds and trust mortgage was determined on, and all voted in favor of that measure. Again, in Hardware Co. v. Phalen, 128 Pa. St. 110, 18 Atl. Rep. 428, where, to a scire facias on a mortgage of a corporation, the receiver of the corporation made defense that the debt was not authorized by a previous meeting and consent of stockholders, as directed by section 7, art. 16 of the constitution, and the act of April 18, 1874, the defense was overruled, the court holding that when. a corporation has received the benefit of money borrowed on its mortgage, and the stockholders knew of it, and made no objection within a reasonable time to the lack of authority in the corporate officers to make the loan, neither the corporation, its stockholders, nor its creditors can setup such want of authority in a suit on
We have already seen that the consideration which passed from Samuel R. Bullock & Co. to the Corry Water-Works Company was largely in excess of the whole issue of mortgage bonds, and this, too, without taking into consideration a contractor’s profit. Therefore, there is really no ground for the assertion that the indebtedness so created was fictitious, and, certainly, under the facts of this case, neither the corporation nor its stockholders can be heard so to allege to the prejudice of the innocent bondholder. If the construction contract, as a whole, offended against the constitutional and statutory provisions here invoked; the corrective power resides in the commonwealth, which alone can now complain of the completed transaction. Appeal of Columbia Nat. Bank, supra. This principle, which indeed is decisive of the entire case, was recognized as sound, and was enforced in Bank v. Matthews, 98 U. S. 621, where a mortgagor sought to enjoin a sale of the mortgaged premises under a power contained in the mortgage, on the ground that it was taken in violation of the national banking law; and in Fritts v. Palmer, 132 U. S. 282, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 93, where a foreign corporation had purchased land, and taken a conveyance thereof in direct violation of the laws of the state in which the land was situated, it was, nevertheless, held that the corporation took the title as against its grantor and his subsequent grantee, and that it was for the state alone to question the validity of the deed of conveyance to the corporation.
Let a decree be drawn dismissing the bill of complaint, with costs.