Continental Securities Co. v. Michigan Cent. R. Co.

16 F.2d 378, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3860
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1926
Docket4605
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 16 F.2d 378 (Continental Securities Co. v. Michigan Cent. R. 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
Continental Securities Co. v. Michigan Cent. R. Co., 16 F.2d 378, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3860 (6th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge.

In 1898, the “Vanderbilt families owned controlling inter•ests in the stock of the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railroad and of the Miehi.gan Central Railroad. They also owned the controlling interest in the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad. At that date they caused the New York Central & Hudson River to purchase this control of stock of each of the other railroads. This relationship .continued until 1914, at which date the New York Central & Hudson River and the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern consolidated as the New York Central Railroad, and that line, the New York Central, has continued to own 90 per cent, of the Michigan Central stock.

In 1903, the appellant, the. Securities -Company, bought 100 shares of, the Michigan ■Central stock, out of a total of about 18,750 shares. ' In February of 1915, the Securities Company, by Clarence H. Venner, its president, filed this bill in the court below, alleging first, that the common management of the Lake Shore lines and the Michigan Central lines constituted a restraint of competition in interstate commerce by its union of. parallel and competing lines, and was in violation of the Anti-Trust Act (Comp. St. §§ 8820-8823, 8827-8830) and the Clayton Act (38 Stat. 730), and also in violation of the Constitution and laws of Michigan and other states, and alleging, second, that the New York Central, as the majority stockholder of the Michigan Central, was fraudulently conducting its affairs to the injury of the minority stockholders and for the sake of benefiting the former Lake Shore. The District Court dismissed the bill, finding that there was no detrimental ■domination.

It is now settled that a private suitor cannot invoke the aid of a court of equity to ■enjoin a violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (Paine Lumber Co. v. Neal, 244 U. S. 459, 37 S. Ct. 718, 61 L. Ed. 1256), and it would be impossible to decree a dissolution of such combination in intrastate traffic without ■directly affecting and upsetting interstate traffic and thus. trespassing upon a federal subject as to which Congress has legislated.

The plaintiff gets no help from the Clayton Act. Section 7 of that act (Comp. St. § 8835g) gives to the Interstate Commerce Commission no power to prevent one railroad from controlling a competing road, unless there is in the transaction an actual intent to stifle competition, while the Sherman Act, as construed, reaches every combination which gives the power to suppress competition, and hence it is claimed that the exception made by the latter part of section 16 (Comp. St. §• 8835o) does not interfere with whatever right the first part of that section may give to a private suitor to complain in equity of a control absolutely forbidden by the Sherman Act. Assuming, without deciding, that this claim may be correct, we observe that other reasons" sufficiently persuade us to our stated conclusion.

The first is that substantially the same combination of which plaintiff complains had been long in existence, as an established status, when plaintiff bought its stock in 1903. Since 1898 the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad had owned the controlling stock in the Lake Shore and in the Michigan Central. It was a holding company, like the Northern Securities Company in 193 U. S. 197, 24 S. Ct. 436, 48 L. Ed. 679. By the merger with the Lake Shore in 1914’the minority stock in the, Michigan Central did not become substantially more subject to the control of the competing railroad than it had been before. There might be formal reasons why the new control would be unlawful when the old was not; but they do not satisfy us as the sole support of a suit in equity not otherwise maintainable. It is obvious that plaintiff cannot be heard to complain of the bur-' den which it voluntarily and intelligently assumed when it bought into the controlled corporation.

. The other reason is that the favor of section 16 extends only to injunctive relief to be given to “any person * * * against threatened loss or damage.” This is not appropriate language to reach such a suit as this, ini which a stockholder files a representative suit, and apprehends no “threatened loss or damage” save that which comes through the damage to his corporation. The substantial complaint of th^ bill, so far as based on the Anti-Trust Act, is against the situation which took permanent shape as a completed act some time before the bill was filed. The main remedy sought is dissolution of the combination. Section -16 never has been held to reach such a case. The result sought is practically the same as would be asked for in a suit by the Attorney General *380 It is true that the bill claims that there should be an injunction against the continuance of the combination; but that is largely collateral and incidental to the desired dissolution by compelling a sale of the stock. The force of the permission granted by section 16 may -well be exhausted by extending it to a private suit for injunction against two strangers, who by their intermonopoly and trade restraint will injure his independent business.

We do not interpret the action of the Supreme Court in the General Investment Case, 260 U. S. 261, 286, 43 S. Ct. 106, 67 L. Ed. 244, in dismissing the ease without prejudice to a new suit under the anti-trust laws, as implying that such a suit would lie. Tie case had been commenced in the state court, and it was held that there had been no jurisdiction. Whether there would be jurisdiction, or a good case, if the suit were begun in the federal court, was a question not presented by the record, and the action of the Supreme Court was merely a refusal to decide that question, or to let it seem to be decided, in a case where it did not exist. A dismissal for lack of jurisdiction is always to be without prejudice.

The Paine Case, supra, was not a stockholders’ suit; but the reasons for permitting a private party to sue for injunction under the Sherman Act appeal to us as less persuasive when he is acting, as here, for his participating corporation, than when he is, as there, an injured stranger. General Investment Case, 260 U. S. at page 286, 43 S. Ct. 106, 67 L. Ed. 244.

It is not easy to see much practical distinction between the cause of action of that minority stockholder .in a railroad, who says that his stockholding interest will be irreparably injured because the majority stockholder in managerial control has united this railroad with another one owned by the majority stockholder with the purpose of eliminating any competition and in violation of the antitrust laws, so that profitable business which would normally go to the first road is diverted to the second, and the cause of action of that same minority stockholder in the same railroad who complains of the same injury to his private interests and from the same acts, but because the majority stockholder is trustee for the minority. Yet there is a theoretical distinction, and for the purposes of this opinion we assume it to be sufficient. This brings us to the consideration of the only remaining complaint, the .alleged unfair and construe-tively fraudulent majority management of the Michigan Central for the purpose of injuring it and helping the Lake Shore.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F.2d 378, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 3860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-securities-co-v-michigan-cent-r-co-ca6-1926.