Ervin v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co.

27 F. 625, 23 Blatchf. 517, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2141
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedMay 27, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 27 F. 625 (Ervin v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ervin v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co., 27 F. 625, 23 Blatchf. 517, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2141 (circtsdny 1886).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

When this case was before this court on demurrer, (20 Fed. Rep. 577,) the questions of law arising upon the allegations of the hill were fully considered. It was then determined that, although the majority of stockholders of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company were authorized by the statutes of Oregon, under which the corporation was organized, to dissolve the corporation, dispose of its property, and divide the proceeds despite the opposition of the minority stockholders, and although the majority exercised this authority in the mode which the organic law of the corporation permitted, nevertheless they had no right to exercise their control over the corporate management for the purposes of appropriating the property or its avails to themselves, to the exclusion of a minority, or without rendering them a fair return,

[626]*626The case is now here upon the proofs, and the following facts appear :

At a meeting, regularly convened, of the stockholders of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, on the thirty-first day of March, 1880, the sale and transfer of all the property and franchises of the corporation to the Oregon Railway & Navigation Company, and the dissolution of the first-named corporation, were authorized by a vote of a large majority of the shares into which the capital stock of that corporation was divided; and the directors were requested to take the necessary formal action for the purpose. The directors took action; the sale and transfer were concluded; the corporation received, as the purchase price, $2,300,000; the directors declared a final dividend of é6 cents on the dollar per share, payable only'upon the surrender by stockholders of their certificates for cancellation; and the corporation was formally dissolved. This is the sale which is complained of. These proceedings were brought about chiefly by the instrumentality of the defendant Villard, who, early in the year 1879, conceived the scheme of amalgamating the properties of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, the Oregon Steam-ship Company, and the Oregon & California Railroad Company, and consolidating them under one management, to control substantially the carrying business of Oregon and part of Washington Territory, which had theretofore been controlled by these transportation companies. In February, 1879, he formed a syndicate for the purchase of the property of the Oregon Steam-ship Company. This company, which was an Oregon corporation, then owned and operated a line of steam-ships plying between San Francisco and Puget sound, and other property appurtenant to its business. Its capital, which was originally $3,000,000, had been reduced to $1,000,000, and its $2,000,000 of outstanding mortgage bonds had been pledged for a loan of $1,200,000. The syndicate bought the franchises and property for $350,000, and took the assets of the company subject to a debt' of $500,000, to which sum its creditors had consented to reduce their claims. Yillard became its president.

■' At this time the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, also an Oregon corporation, owned and was operating a fleet of steam-boats, barges, wharf property, and real estate, by which it conducted a water transportation business on the Columbia, Snake, and Willamette rivers, in Oregon. It also controlled and operated two short portage railroads along the Columbia river, by means of which freight and passengers were transported at points at which the river was not navigable. It had a capital stock of $5,000,000, divided into 50,000 shares; it had no bonded debt; its properties and equipment were being constantly improved; and its financial condition was healthy and prosperous. Although, prior to 1878, its dividends had been irregular and small, its business had so largely increased that in that year it paid to its stockholders dividends amounting to lOJ per cent.

[627]*627In May, 1879, Yillard made a contract with one Ainsworth (who for several years had been buying up the stock of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company at low prices, and then owned or controlled a majority of the shares) to purchase of him a majority of the shares of the company, agreeing to organize a new corporation, with a capital stock of §6,000,000, which was to create its mortgage bonds for §6,000,000. By the contract between Yillard and Ainsworth the new corporation was to acquire the property of the Oregon Steamship Company for §2,000,000 of its stock and bonds, and was also-to acquire the property of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company for §6,500,000 of its stock and bonds, and Ainsworth was to receive, for the stock sold by him to Yillard, 50 cents per dollar on its shares in cash, and 20 cents in bonds and 30 cents in stock of the new company at par. June 13, 1879, the new corporation contemplated by the agreement between Yillard and Ainsworth was organized by the name of the Oregon Railway & Navigation Company, its articles of association being filed at that time pursuant to the laws of Oregon. The articles of association authorized the purchase of the property of the pre-existing corporations, and the stock of those companies. The now corporation created $6,000,000 of mortgage bonds, bearing 6 per cent, interest, and its capital stock was $6,000,000. June 27, 1879, the new corporation, by the action of its directors, set apart $2,000,000 of its bonds and stock, to acquire the property and pay the debts of the Oregon Steam-ship Company; also $3,557,000 of its bonds and §3,255,100 of its stock to acquire the stock of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company under the contract made between Yillard and Ainsworth; and the next day Yillard assigned that contract to the new company. Shortly afterwards the company acquired that stock, and July 7, 1879, credited Yillard with the price of 40,712 shares of the stock, at §6,615,700, as against the bonds and shares which had been set apart. Subsequently the now corporation acquired 5,736 additional shares of stock of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company under an arrangement known as the “Harriott and Noyes contract.”

Soon after the new corporation had acquired a majority of the-stock of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company it assumed the management of the business of that company by the election of officers and directors, and the selection of agents, who were in its own interests. The Ainsworth party were identified in interest with Yillard,. and the syndicate which had organized the new corporation; and some of those who belonged to the combination began to represent the future prospects of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company as unfavorable, because its traffic would be depleted by a railroad about to be built by the new company. In the mean time they were purchasing such shares of-stock as could be bought at satisfactory prices. During the first five months after the organization of the new corporation, commencing in July and ending December 1, 1879, the net earnings derived from its business operations were $699,864. Of [628]*628these earnings $559,650 were derived from the interest of the new company in the earnings of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, including its appendage the Walla Walla & Columbia River Railroad Company. During the same period the total net earnings of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, and including its share of those of the Walla Walla & Columbia River Railroad Company, were $687,807, while the earnings of the Oregon Steam-ship Company, the other constituent of the properties of the new corporation, during the same period, were $135,214.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F. 625, 23 Blatchf. 517, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ervin-v-oregon-ry-nav-co-circtsdny-1886.