Bailey v. Railroad Co.

84 U.S. 96, 21 L. Ed. 611, 17 Wall. 96, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1317
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 28, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 84 U.S. 96 (Bailey v. Railroad Co.) 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
Bailey v. Railroad Co., 84 U.S. 96, 21 L. Ed. 611, 17 Wall. 96, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1317 (1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Certificates of stock, described in the bill of complaint as common or unpreferred stock, amounting to $3,000,000, were issued by the respondents, divided into shares of one hundred dollars each, which constituted their capital stock. Pecuniary obligations were contracted by the company in •constructing .the road, much beyond their means of payment, which consisted of three classes of bonds, issued by *103 the company at different times, in aid of the construction and equipment of the road, and which were secured by three several mortgages,- and were known, as' land bonds, convertible bonds, and secoud mortgage bonds. Embarrassment necessarily ensued, as the stock of the company had become of no value in the market, and as the respondents were unable to pay the interest on their bonds or to make any dividends, they issued to the holders of the bonds a circular or plan for extricating the compauy from their difficulties and for improving their securities. By that plan they proposed to the several holders of the bonds that they should exchange the same in part for other bonds and in part for preferred stock of such a nature that its holders should have the right to receive “ 7 per cent., not cumulative, but to share with the common stock any surplus which may be carried over and above 7 per cent, upon both in anyone year.” Measures were adopted to send that circular to all the holders of the bonds, and it appears that a large majority of the bondholders approved and accepted the terms and conditions of the proposed arrangement, and as evidence thereof signed an instrument by which they-agreed to surrender the mortgage bonds which they held, and receive, in exchan'ge therefor, new bonds and preferred stock in accordance with the provisions of the plan for extricating the company from its present difficulties and for improving their securities; that the respondents thereupon appointed a committee with power to carry it into effect; that the committee prepared an indenture to accomplish that end; that they subsequently, by order of the directors, submitted the same to a meeting of the stockholdei’s convened for that purpose, and that the stockholders did then and there accept and ratify the action of the directors and of the committee and ordered that the indenture should be duly executed and delivered. Authority was also conferred upon the directors, at the same meeting, to adopt, in behalf of the company, such certificates in relation to the preferred stock to be issued under the agreement “ as may be necessary to carry the same into effect,” and to cause the same to be executed, *104 iii behalf of the company, as they may think best. They, the directors, accordingly prepared and adopted, in behalf of the company, the form in which all of the certificates of the preferred stock were for a time issued by the respondents, which contains the recital that the holder “ shall be entitled to receive all the net earnings of said company which may be divided pursuant to said indenture in each year, up to $7 per share, aud to share in any surplus beyond $7 per share which may be divided upon the common stock.” Certificates of preferred stock were issued in that form until the legislature passed the act authorizing the company to convert their bonds secured by mortgage into preferred stock, when the certificates issued in that form were recalled .and a new form was adopted, but inasmuch as it contains the sanie provision in respect to the right of the holder to participate in the yearly net earnings of the company it need not be reproduced, except to say that the certificates in the second form, as well as'^iu the first, purport, on their face, to be issued subject to the terms aud conditions of the indenture between the company aud the trustees, which the stockholders directed should be executed and delivered to carry the pilau sent to the bondholders into effect. Pursuant to that order it was executed, and it contains the following provision : “ That said preferred stock shall be entitled to a dividend of per cent, from the net earnings of said road in each year, whenever a dividend of said net earnings shall be made, before any dividend shall be declared upon other mi preferred shares of said corporation, and to an equal dividend with said other shares of the net earnings of the company beyond said 7 per cent., but shall at no time be entitled to an accumulated dividend in any subsequent division of said net earnings.” Eight huudred shares of the preferred stock are owned by the complainant, and he filed the bill of complaint claiming that by the true construction of the indenture the preferred stock is eutitled, not only to a dividend of 7 per cent, from the net earnings of the road in each year, before any dividend is declared in favor of the unpreferred stock, but also to an equal dividend with the unpreferred *105 stock in the net earnings of the same year beyond the amount required to discharge the dividend of 7 per cent, secured to the preferred stock.

Shares of the preferred stock, it is conceded, are entitled to a dividend of 7 per cent, from the net earnings of the road in each year whenever a dividend of net earnings is made, before any dividend can be claimed for the shares of the unpreferred stock, as that is a matter of priority created by the indenture, but it is insisted by the respondents that the priority does not extend beyond the 7 per cent., that when that priority is satisfied the preferred stock is not entitled to any further dividend in that year until the uupreferred stock shall receive a 7 per cent, dividend from the net earnings of the road in the same year.

Ten and a half per cent, net having been earned by the road in one year, the directors, adopting the views of the respondents, made a dividend of 7 per cent, upon the preferred stock, and having satisfied that priority, they made a dividend of 3§- per cent, from the residue of the net earnings beyond the 7 per cent, upon the unpreferred stock, and the complainant insisting that the fund of 3| per cent, was to be shared equally between the preferred and the unpreferred stock, filed the present bill of complaint and prayed for an injunction to restrain the company from paying any such dividend upon the unpreferred stock. Proofs were taken and the parties having been heard the court entered a decree for the respondents, dismissing the bill of complaint.

Evidence was introduced showing that all the parties understood the transaction, from its commencement to its final consummation, as it is understood by the respondents, but it is insisted by the complainant that such evidence is inadmissible, as its tendency is to explain and qualify what is in writing, and the court is inclined to concur with the complainant in that proposition. Such evidence cannot be admitted in the case except for the purpose of connecting the several written instruments together, and of showing that *106 they are all parts of one transaction ; nor is it admitted that the evidence is necessary in this case, even for that purpose, as the instruments themselves contain the most persuasive evidence to establish that fact, and inasmuch as it appears that they were all introduced, either by the complainant or by tlie'respondéuts, without objection, they are properly before the court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 U.S. 96, 21 L. Ed. 611, 17 Wall. 96, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-railroad-co-scotus-1873.