Fitzgerald v. Fitzgerald & Mallory Construction Co.

59 N.W. 838, 41 Neb. 374, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 176
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1894
DocketNo. 5309
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 59 N.W. 838 (Fitzgerald v. Fitzgerald & Mallory Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzgerald v. Fitzgerald & Mallory Construction Co., 59 N.W. 838, 41 Neb. 374, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 176 (Neb. 1894).

Opinions

Ryan, C.

• 1. In the district court of Lancaster county, Nebraska, John Fitzgerald, on behalf of himself and all other stockholders of the Fitzgerald & Mallory Construction Company,; filed his petition against said Construction Company and the Missouri Pacific Railway Company as defendants. This petition stated that the capital stock of the aforesaid Construction Company amounted to $1,500,000, divided into shares of $100 each; that of these, at the time of bringing suit, John Fitzgerald was the owner of 1,500 shares, Jay Gould of 4,000 shares, Sidney Dillon of 1,000 shares, Morton, Bliss & Co. of 2,000 shares, Russell Sage of 2,700 shares, George J. Gould of 500 shares, and S. H. Mallory of 1,500 shares. The matters complained of in the petition, for the most part, arose out of a written contract made between the said Construction Company and the Denver, Memphis & Atlantic Railroad Company, whereby was undertaken by the Construction Company the building of the line of road of the railroad company. Following this contract there was entered into another between the aforesaid Construction Company and the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, whereby the last named company be[397]*397came entitled to the stock and bonds of the Denver, Memphis & Atlantic Railroad Company to be issued to the Con? struetion Company in consideration of its construction of the railroad aforesaid. The other matters which gave rise to this controversy had their origin in the construction by said Construction Company of the line of railroad of the Pueblo & State Line railroad, and the subsequent ownership of the stock and bonds of said Pueblo & State Line Railroad Company issued to the Construction Company, and by said Construction Company turned over to the Missouri Pacific Railway Company. For the stock and bonds of both railroads to be constructed as aforesaid the Missouri Pacific Railway Company agreed to give to the Construction Company first mortgage bonds of the said Missouri Pacific Railway Company equal to $11,000 per mile of the railroads completely constructed by the said Construction Company as aforesaid. The petition averred that payment in bonds was in fact only made at the rate of $10,000 per mile, though the roads had been fully constructed; that the Missouri Pacific bonds received at that rate were purchased by certain named officers of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company at a discount of ten per cent, though said bonds were worth par; that though the agreed rate at which the Missouri Pacific Railway Company was to transport material necessary for the construction of the work aforesaid was at the rate of three-fourths of a cent per ton per mile, in fact for a large amount of said material there was charged and collected from the Construction Company payment at the rate of three cents per ton per mile, which excess, the said petition alleged, was still due the said Construction Company; that said Missouri Pacific Railway Company^ officers, by collecting interest which was not in fact due, and upon other unfounded pretenses, had exacted and withheld from the Construction Company large sums of money, for which said Missouri Pacific Railway Company ought to be held to account. There were other mat[398]*398ters complained of in the petition, but for our present purpose the above described causes of action are amply sufficient.

That it might appear that the suit was brought by Mr. Fitzgerald as a stockholder of the Construction Company, he made the following averments in reference to certain of the matters above described :

Complainant says that shortly after said contracts were made, those owning a controlling share of the stock of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company procured a controlling share of the stock of the Construction Company, notably Jay Gould, Russell Sage, George J. Gould, and Sidney Dillon; that at the date of said contracts the directors of the Construction Company were as follows: John Fitzgerald, S. H. Mallory, S. S. King, T. M. Stewart, and Edward A. Temple, who were the directors at the time the said contracts were made and entered into; that after they had obtained control of this stock they demanded the resignation of all the directors except Fitzgerald and S. H. Mallory, and on November 3, 1886, the said board of directors was changed, and in place of Messrs. King, Stewart, and Temple were elected George J. Gould, Russell Sage, and Richard Cross; that two of said directors, complainant afterward found out, were directors in the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, and that said Richard Cross was a member of a firm which were bankers for the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, and that the directors were absolutely under the control of the Missouri Pacific management; that this board of directors has not been changed, except that George J. Gould has gone out and Sidney Dillon, another Missouri Pacific director, and one of its largest stockholders, has been elected in his stead, and that now the said three directors have assumed and had the management in all important matters of said Construction Company, and have managed its affairs in the interest of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, and have [399]*399been, as will hereinafter more clearly appear, under the control of Jay Gould, the president of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, the largest owner of its stock, and who controls it. ' * * * That the payment of only $10,000 per mile in five per cent bonds for the first one hundred and fifty miles was brought about by the fraudulent acts of the Missouri Pacific, as follows : That by the contract with the Denver, Memphis & Atlantic Railroad Company the Construction Company was to build a railroad from the east line of Kansas to the west line thereof and equip the same as to be thereafter located, and properly grade the line according to the engineer’s survey of the same.”

Plaintiff alleged that the first one hundred and fifty miles of the line of the Denver, Memphis & Atlantic Railroad was constructed according to contract and fully completed, but that by reason of the refusal of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company to allow its engineer to accept the said one hundred and fifty miles with a. view to its acceptance in accordance with the terms of the contract, the Construction Company was unable to secure its acceptance by the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, and that to secure payment for the said one hundred and fifty miles the Construction Company was compelled to accede to the proposition of Jay Gould, the president of the Missouri Pacific, and to accept $10,000 per mile, which, as plaintiff alleged, had already been fully earned. The petition alleged that the pretense upon which the president of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company founded the claim of that company to a reduction of payment per mile was, that the road was not completed, and, as plaintiff alleged, this was untrue in fact, and that the road was then fully completed according to the terms of the contract, as would have been found had the civil engineer of the Missouri Pacific inspected the road as was contemplated by the contract between the Construction Company and the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, and [400]*400that for these reasons the reduction of $1,000 per mile exacted and compelled was wholly without consideration, for which reason, as the plaintiff alleged, the Missouri Pacific Railway Company was still indebted to the Construction Company to the amount of the discount aforesaid with interest thereon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 N.W. 838, 41 Neb. 374, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-fitzgerald-mallory-construction-co-neb-1894.