Booker, Ex parte

18 Ark. 338
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 Ark. 338 (Booker, Ex parte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Booker, Ex parte, 18 Ark. 338 (Ark. 1857).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hanly

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an application made to this Court for a mandamus to the Judge of the 4th judicial Circuit, to compel him under the provisions of the 5th section of the 86th chapter of the Digest p. 592, to grant an injunction upon a bill to him presented, showing that the Hon. A. A. Stith, Judge of the 6th Circuit, was disqualified from acting thereon, and having the endorsement of his refusal of such injunction, as required by the statute in such case.

The substance of the bill, so far as it may be material in the present enquiry, is, that on the 29th November, 1852, the Mississippi, Ouachita and Red River Railroad Company, were created and constituted a body politic and corporate, by that name and style, under and by virtue of the provisions of an act of the legislature of this State, approved 8th January, 1851, entitled “ an act granting certain powers, etc.” (See Pamph. Acts 1850-1, pages 86-7:) that some time during the fall of 1852, the complainant, under the charter of the company, subscribed the sum of $500 to the capital stock thereof, and thereby became, and was a stockholder for that amount; that the design and object of the creation and organization of the company were to secure and ensure the construction of a railroad in this State from a point on the Mississippi river, at or near Gaines’ Landing, through or near Camden on the Ouachita river, to some point on Red river at or near Fulton, thence to some point on the boundary line of this State and the State of Texas. That after the complainant became a Stockholder in the company, it was determined by the board of directors thereof, chosen under the charter, that calls upon the stock subscriptions should be made at certain periods thereafter; that the calls upon the sum subscribed by the complainant on the 29th April, 1856, amounted to the sum of $270; that he had not paid any part or portion of this amount, up to the 20th Oct., 1856, when the company brought suit therefor, on the law side of the Hempstead Circuit Court; that the suit is still pending in that Court undetermined; that he has made no defence thereto, and does not intend so to do, being advised by counsel, as he alleges, that the proper forum for his defence is a Court of equity: offers to let judgment go against him on the law side of the Court, and proposes to waive errors, when such judgment is actually rendered. The bill further, in substance, states that it is provided by the charter, when the construction of the road is begun, it shall be commenced simultaneously at its terminus on the Mississippi, and its crossing of the Ouachita river, progressing at each point in a westerly direction; that since the complainant became a stockholder, the board of directory, in utter disregard of the charter, have caused large sums of money to be expended in payment for work and labor done on the road, between its commencement on the Mississippi, and its crossing on the Ouachita river, instead of proceeding, pari passu, with the work on that part of the road lying west of the Ouachita river, which they have omitted to do; that within the same period the directory have established the line of the road, so that it will not cross Red river at, or near Fulton; but, on the contrary thereof, at a point some 15 or 20 miles distant therefrom, less eligible, and clearly one which will cost the company much more to construct a crossing of that stream: that the chief object and the main inducement, which operated upon and influenced the complainant to become a subscriber to the stock of the company, were to advance the country intermediate Fulton on Red river, and the crossing of the road on the Ouachita river, and if he had not confidently believed the requirements of the charter, in all their force, would have been faithfully and to the letter carried out by the company, he never would have subscribed for any portion of the stock thereof. The bill further, in substance, alleges that the company, by omitting to proceed with the work on the road at its crossing on the Ouachita river in a westerly direction as it progressed at the end on the Mississippi river, and its diversion from Fulton on Red river to the point 15 or 20 miles distant, operated per se as a violation of the charter, and as a consequence thereof, that the complainant thereby became and was absolved, in equity, from the payment of his entire stock liability, including the amount sued for, and asked to be enjoined.

A printed copy of the charter was exhibited by reference to the acts of the assembly for 1854-5.

The Mississippi, Ouachita and Red River Railroad Company was made sole defendant to the bill, and against whom the injunction was prayed to restrain the collection of the complainant’s stock subscription, either by execution or otherwise, etc.

• For the purposes of this application, we will consider the allegations of the bill as not only true, as we are bound to do upon an ex parte proceeding of this sort, but sufficiently full and explicit, to the end that we may at once reach and dispose of the real merits of the application.

It was a question of serious doubt, until comparatively a recent date, whether a private corporation could, under any circumstances, be sued, either at law or in equity, by one of its own members. (See Waning vs. Catawba Co. 2 Bay (S. C.) R. 109. Cunliffe vs. Manchester & Bolton Canal Co., 1 Myl. & Russ. Ch. R. 131 and note. Dodge vs. Woolsey, 18 How. (U. S.) R. 331.

But it is now well settled that a private corporation may be sued by one of its own members, either at law or in equity, under particular circumstances, or a special state of facts. (See Ang. & Am. Corp. sec. 390-1, and the authorities above cited: also, Pearce vs. Patridge, 3 Met. R. 44. Hill vs. Manchester and Salford Water Works, 5 Adol. & Ellis R. 866.)

And a special case in which a private corporation may be sued in equity by one of its members, is, when the company attempts to do acts which they are not empowered to do under the acts of the legislature from which they derive their authority to act as such; and in such case it has been holden that a Court of chancery may restrain them by injunction, from the commission of the threatened and impending usurpation. See Ang. & Am. on Corp. sec. 391, Ware vs. Grand Junction Water Co. 1 Myl. & Rus., Ch. R. 126. Bagshaw vs. Eastern Counties Railroad Co. 1 Beav. Ch. R. 1.)

In the last case cited, the objection was expressly taken on the part of the corporation, that the corporation ought not to a party to the suit. But the vice chanceller, Sir James Wagram, said he'had no hesitation in overruling the objection; that the acts of the directors (in diverting the corporate moneys for a purpose different from what was originally contemplated, against the will of a single share-holder) were the acts of the directors as the representatives of the company, and as such were the acts of the company itself, and that the company would not be bound unless it were a party in its corporate character. See also, Coleman vs. Eastern Counties Railway Co. 10 Beav. Ch. R. 1, to the same point.

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18 Ark. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booker-ex-parte-ark-1857.