Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. v. Arctic Iron Co.

261 F. 15, 171 C.C.A. 611, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1707
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 7, 1919
DocketNo. 2758
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 261 F. 15 (Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. v. Arctic Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. v. Arctic Iron Co., 261 F. 15, 171 C.C.A. 611, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1707 (6th Cir. 1919).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

As a result of the consideration which we gave to this case after it was submitted, we certified to the Supreme Court several matters which we thought to be questions of law arising upon the record, and each of which might have been decisive of the entire case. The Supreme Court held that the questions were not such as [17]*17the statute contemplated (section 239 of the Judicial Code [Act March 3, 1911, c. 231, 36 Stat. 1157, Comp. St. § 1216]), and dismissed the certificate. 248 U. S. 178, 39 Sup. Ct. 91, 63 L. Ed. 198. After the case was remanded to this court, further argument was permitted, and we now proceed to consider the questions involved as best we may and as far as necessary.

The controlling facts, and what we thought the decisive questions, appear from our certificate, which we reproduce at. the foot hereof and adopt as a statement of facts and as a part of this opinion. Me do not need to say that this case must be decided, not merely upon a discussion of the general and familiar principles which are invoked by the respective parties, but upon the application of those principles to its own peculiar and essentially unique facts, and some comment is fitting upon the most striking of such facts.

[1] 1. Mliatever standing plaintiff has to demand the relief sought depends upon a rule of corporate law, and upon the fact that the interests of the parties were represented by stock in a corporation. This corporation, with its equal division of stock between the two beneficial interests and with its four directors, two allotted to each interest, was the convenient form by which the two tenants in common of real estate made the estate indivisible by the act of either, and provided that nothing should he done with it without the consent of both. The beneficiaries have continually dealt, with the property as tenants in common would do. Any .such corporation forms as they observed were of no effect as to their substantial mutual relations. Mrhen any step was to be taken, it was not considered at a stockholders’ or directors’ meeting, but was taken up and decided independently by the two interests. If they agreed, the corporate signature was attached; if they disagreed, nothing was done. When the Cliffs, the owner of one-half, desired a lease, it went directly to the owners of the other half and negotiated. When the Oliver sought a lease, it bargained separately and independently with the owner of each half.

The courts have often considered the extent to which the existence of a corporate form dictates the appropriate rule -of law. The latest controlling discussion is that found in the opinion of the Supreme Court in Chicago Co. v. Minneapolis, 247 U. S. 490, 38 Sup. Ct. 553, 62 L. Ed. 1229. The principle of the decision is that—

“Where stock ownership has boon resorted to, not for the purpose of participating in the affairs of a corporation in the normal and usual maimer, but for the purpose, as in this case, of controlling a subsidiary company so that it may be used as a mere agency or instrumentality of the owning company or companies, * * * the courts will not permit themselves to be blinded or deceived by mere forms of law, but, regardless of fictions, will deal with the substance of the transaction involved as it the corporate agency did not exist and as the justice of the case may require.”

This language is used with regard to two corporations, which, for convenience, put their common interests into a third subsidiary corporation, which became merely their instrument for doing their business. It is not easy to see why the principle may not apply as well to stockholding individuals as to stockholding corporations, nor why [18]*18the existence of the corporate shell and corporate forms, without more, should transform what is right into what is wrong; yet, save for the supposed effect of such shell, this suit would never have been brought. We do not overlook the fact that the Chicago-Minneapolis Case is more nearly the converse, than the parallel, of this. There the real parties were not allowed to use the corporate instrument to get an advantage otherwise unlawful; here defendants’ proposition is that the corporate cloak should not deprive the parties of a business advantage otherwise lawful — but this distinction may not make the cases any less truly analogous.

The very title of this case involves a fundamental misconception. If we look to the bottom of things, this is not a quarrel between the Arctic Company and the Cliffs Company. It is, and always has been, really a controversy between two hostile and exactly equal groups of stockholders in the Arctic. The man who happened to be president had no more inherent right to bring this suit in the name of the Arctic to impeach the Oliver-Cliffs transaction thán the man who happened to be treasurer would have had to bring a suit in the name of the Arctic "to affirm it. The suit never was authorized at any stockholders’ or directors’ meeting; and while that is not in itself finally important, it should be noticed, because it forces us to remember that this suit never could have been authorized at such a meeting, and that such authority Was impossible, because an equal part of the corporation approved and an equal part disapproved. There is no real question here, worthy of our study, except whether Mather and the Cliffs did a wrong to Kauffman and Breitung. In such a controversy, no one else has a cent’s worth of interest, and the attention of a court of equity should — so far as permitted by rules which it is not safe to vary — be centered upon the real parties in interest and not upon the clothes they wear. It is not necessary to say that there could be no cases — indeed, there might be many — where, in spite of an equal division of stockholding interests and directorships, there would be such real or presumptive dependence by both parties upon all the directors as would leave the normal fiduciary obligations unimpaired. This is not such a case. This is one where the actual relation of the two factions is more important than the theoretical delation which might have existed but did not. So far as appears, there never had been dependence or reliance by either owner upon the other; but, however that might be, it is sure that, before the present series of transactions had been reached and during their continuance, the two factions or interests were occupying positions adverse to each other and were dealing together at arms’ length, and both of them fully realized it.

Neither is it necessary to say that this peculiar situation, by which the corporation had become and was the instrumentality of the two real estate owning tenants in common for the unitary and convenient handling of their property, is alone sufficient to dispose of the case; it at least permeates and colors every other question involved, and, before the mere fact of the existence of a corporate form can be allowed to control, calls for the clearest demonstration that fixed and invariable rules for corporate conduct have been violated.

[19]*19[2] 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 F. 15, 171 C.C.A. 611, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-cliffs-iron-co-v-arctic-iron-co-ca6-1919.