Alsop v. Riker

155 U.S. 448, 15 S. Ct. 162, 39 L. Ed. 218, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2291
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 10, 1894
Docket59, 63
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 155 U.S. 448 (Alsop v. Riker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alsop v. Riker, 155 U.S. 448, 15 S. Ct. 162, 39 L. Ed. 218, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2291 (1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

William H. Aspinwall, Joseph W. Alsop, Edwin Bartlett, David Leavitt, Edward Learned, Samuel W. Comstock, and William A. Booth, holders of construction bonds of the Ohio and Mississippi Bailroad Company, Eastern Division, issued to the stockholders and creditors of that corporation on the 15th day of December, 1858, a circular inviting them to unite in adopting an agreement such as was transmitted with the circular. In that circular they expressed the opinion that by the adoption of the proposed agreement the company would be enabled to place its road and property in a condition to command the entire business to which from its location it would be fairly entitled; “ to meet promptly all future demands upon it for interest on its remaining indebtedness; from its net earnings to pay fair dividends upon its stock within a reasonable time; and that all causes for litigation will be removed and the interests of all parties be thereby placed in a safe and reliable position.”

*450 "With the circular was submitted a statement showing that the estimated liabilities of the company, with interest to July 1, 1859, aggregated $18,393,768, of which $2,050,000 were first-mortgage bonds, $258,000 were second-mortgage bonds, $4,242,000 were construction or third-mortgage bonds, part ot which were to be used in redeeming and retiring the second-mortgage bonds, and $3,320,000 were income bonds, including scrip certificates.

The appellant, Andrew J. Biker, was at that time the holder and owner of nine of the company’s construction bonds.

The agreement recited that the subscribers were “ desirous that concessions shall be made by all parties in interest which shall discharge a portion of the indebtedness of said company and thereby assure the prompt payment of all sums which shall become due on the residue thereof, and without prejudice to the proper improvement and maintenance of the road and its appurtenances.”

By the first paragraph of the proposed agreement it was provided that subscribers who were owners or legal representatives of legal demands against the company would discharge the same on payment therefor by the company*-, as follows: For the three coupons that were then, or that should become due, on its first-mortgage bonds, next prior to and including those due July 1, 1859, one-half thereof in money, and one-half thereof in shares of the capital stock of the company at par; for the coupons that were then, or that should become due, on second-mortgage bonds, up to and including those due April 1, 1859, one-half thereof in money, and one-half in shares at par; for the principal of second-mortgage bonds, one-third in .shares at par, and the remaining two-thirds in construction bonds at par; for or that might become due, on its income bonds, up to and including those due May 1, of such income bonds, in sb the coupons that were then due 1859, together with the principal mres at par; for the scrip (certificates convertible into income bonds) issued by the company in shares at par; for other the company, as the same were admitted or allowed by its directors, in shares at par — the interest on the above demands, *451 (excepting coupons,) so to be paid, to be made up to the first day of July, 1859, and to be paid in the same manner as the demands to which it related.

By the second paragraph it was provided that subscribers being owners or legal representatives of shares of the capital stock of the company, would transfer all their shares to its directors or to such person or persons as the directors should designate and appoint —to be reissued or retransferred to make the above payments, and to return to the subscribers or their legal representatives who transferred their shares such portion as they would be entitled to under the agreement, the residue, if any, to belong to the company.

The third paragraph provided thát the covenants contained in the above paragraphs were upon the following conditions: 1st. That the owners or legal representatives of all demands or stock paid or transferred should subscribe to and comply with the agreement, or that equivalent concessions be made so that the entire payments contemplated should be made — the company to purchase with any balance of shares remaining after the payments above named, or with other means, fifty thousand dollars of the first-mortgage .or construction bonds, and to cancel all the bonds and coupons so paid or purchased, except those necessary for exchange for second-mortgage bonds as aforesaid — so that on the first day of July, 1859, the indebtedness should not exceed $5,000,000, of which not more than $2,050,000 should be represented by first-mortgage bonds, and the residue by construction bonds, with interest running from March 1, 1859. 2d. That the owners of income bonds should have loaned to the company the money required to' make the cash part of the above payments, such loan with interest to be repaid at the earliest practicable time, consistent with the proper maintenance of the road. 3d.- That the city of Cincinnati should grant such modifications and. releases of its demands, contracts, and claims against the company as its directors and the trustees named in the agreement should deem satisfactory. 4th. That the capital stock of the company should not exceed $7,500,000, unless increased by a further reduction of its bonded debt.

*452 It was further provided that the subscribers should transfer and deliver to the persons named as trustees, their survivors and successors in trust, their several demands, and all evidences thereof, that were contemplated to be discharged or paid for in shares of stock, and all their shares of said capital stock, (with power to transfer,) to be managed by such trustees for the benefit of the subscribers and their legal representatives in the proportions and upon the terms and conditions specified in the agreement, and should comply with any requirements which the trustees, pursuant to authority, should make.

The persons who sent out the above circular, their survivors and successors, were named as trustees under the agreement, a majority of them to have authority to do such acts and things on behalf of the subscribers as they deemed necessary or' expedient to carry out the purposes of the agreement which did not impose liability upon a subscriber to pay' any money except at his option.

The other paragraphs of the agreement prescribed in detail the mode in which the proposed scheme should be executed, and the authority which the designated trustees might exercise.

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Bluebook (online)
155 U.S. 448, 15 S. Ct. 162, 39 L. Ed. 218, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alsop-v-riker-scotus-1894.