Forrester v. Boston & Montana Consolidated Copper & Silver Mining Co.

55 P. 229, 21 Mont. 544, 1898 Mont. LEXIS 165
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 55 P. 229 (Forrester v. Boston & Montana Consolidated Copper & Silver Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forrester v. Boston & Montana Consolidated Copper & Silver Mining Co., 55 P. 229, 21 Mont. 544, 1898 Mont. LEXIS 165 (Mo. 1898).

Opinions

Pigott, J.

— We shall discuss briefly such of the points made by the defendants as seem worthy of serious attention.

1. Defendants argue that the failure of plaintiffs to state and prove that they have exhausted their remedies within the corporation is fatal to the maintenance of the action. The point is without merit. Sufficient appears to show, with reasonable certainty, that plaintiffs could not hope to obtain within the corporation itself redress of their alleged grievances. The board of directors had not only executed a deed in the company’s name to all its property, but had also procured the ratification and express approval of such act by stockholders owning 131,036 shares of its stock. The directors obtained also the consent in writing of these stockholders to the making and delivery of the confirmatory conveyance of May 31st. They called the meeting of June 6th, at which the proposition to ratify the things done by them was to be submitted to the stockholders; and they held irrevocable powers of attorney executed by owners of the number of shares mentioned, running to defendant Bigelow, who was president of the company, authorizing, and, indeed, it would seem, directing, Bigelow or his substitutes to vote in favor of the ratification of, and consent to, the sale theretofore made by Bigelow and the other directors in the name of the Montana company. Admission is made by defendants that the [549]*549directors caused the New York company to be organized, to the end that it might take the place of the Montana company, and for the purpose of transferring the property of the latter-named company to the former. The further admission appears that the stockholders whose proxies were held by Bigelow, or his substitutes as attorneys in fact, were desirous of voting in favor of the transfer; and that the 131,036 shares would have been so voted but for the injunction is established beyond doubt. The protest of plaintiffs, made just before suit was begun, against the action of the directors, and against the proceedings proposed to be taken at the meeting of June 6th, was unavailing; and the answer is framed upon the theory that the objection by plaintiffs to the action taken by the directors, and any protest against that intended to be taken, would have been disregarded by the holders of 131,036 shares, as well as by the directors. The law, which does not demand a request that a person or corporation sue him or itself, nor require the doing of any useless thing, as prerequisite to the accrual of a right of action, will therefore, in the circumstances here existing, permit the plaintiffs to maintain suit to undo or , prevent the acts of directors or stockholders performed or threatened to be performed, if such acts be, as to plaintiffs, ultra vires; and this is within the principles declared in Gerry v. Bank, 19 Mont. at page 199, 47 Pac. 813; Ashton v. Dashaway Association, 84 Cal. 61, 22 Pac. 660, and 23 Pac. 1091; Botts v. Ry. Co., 88 Ky. 54, 2 L. R. A. 594, 10 S. W. 134; Smith v. Dorn, 96 Cal. 73, 30 Pac. 1024; Barr v. Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., 40 Fed. 412; and in conformity with the rule laid down in Pomeroy on Equity Jurisprudence Sec. 1095; Albers v. Merchants’ Exchange, 45 Mo. App. 206; 4 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, 280; 27 ib. 396; 4 Thompson on Corporations Sec. 4521.

2. Another contention of defendants is that the action must fall because the complaint fails to aver that plaintiffs were owners of their shares at the time of the transactions of which they complain. This point is also without merit. The cases cited by defendants in support of their position are not [550]*550pertinent. Equity rule 94, promulgated by the Supreme Court of the United States, provides that ‘ ‘every bill brought by one or more stockholders in a corporation against the corporation and other parties, founded on rights which may properly be asserted by the corporation, must be verified by oath, and must contain an allegation that the plaintiff was a shareholder at the time of the transaction of which he complains, or that his share had devolved on him since by operation of law, and that the suit is not a collusive one to confer on a court of the United States jurisdiction of a case of which it would not otherwise have cognizance. It must also set forth with particularity the efforts of the plaintiff to secure such action as he desires on the part of the managing directors or trustees, and, if necessary, of the shareholders, and the causes of his failure to obtain such action;” and the federal authorities relied upon are to a great extent based upon that rule, which, of course, is not binding upon the state courts. (Parsons v. Joseph, 92 Ala. 403, 8 South, 788.) The other citations are for the most part, if not wholly, of cases in which the stockholders sued to recover for wrongful intra vires acts of the officers of corporations, or to obtain an accounting in respect thereto, performed before the plaintiffs in those cases became shareholders. We deem it unnecessary, however, to inquire whether, in the respect stated, rule 94 is but declaratory of an equity doctrine; for in the case at bar defendants recognize and admit that the transfer is not yet legally consummated, and' that, to bring about the desired result, not less than two-thirds of the stock must be voted in favor of the transfer, at a meeting called for that purpose. The vote has not been taken. To prevent such an attempted ratification or authorization of the proposition submitted as would result from the voting of the shares at the meeting, is the object sought to be obtained by the injunction.

3. Defendants insist that the 200 shares standing in the names of plaintiffs were acquired by and for the use of the Montana Ore Purchasing company, a rival corporation, between which and the Montana company an unfriendly feeling [551]*551exists, and many actions are pending, and of which one plaintiff is attorney, and the other vice president; that the action is not in good faith, but was brought from improper motives, and in the interest of the rival corporation, and not for the benefit of the nonassenting stockholders, and that, for this reason, plaintiffs are not entitled to be heard in a court of equity. The court below found that plaintiffs owned the shares, and that they were acting in good faith; and we cannot say that the evidence received on the hearing so clearly proves the contrary as to warrant us in deciding that the lower court erred in determining the question as it did. On the hearing of the application for the injunction pendente lite, the matter was one peculiarly within the discretion of the court below. Consideration of the elaborate and ingenious argument of defendants discussing the effect of bad motives upon the right to maintain the suit is thus rendered unnecessary; and we do not decide whether or not an injunction ought to be refused against a private corporation in a suit brought by an individual stockholder in the interest of a rival corporation.

4. It does not appear that plaintiffs were guilty of unreasonable delay or laches in commencing suit. They instituted proceedings prior to the day on which the stockholders were to meet for the purpose of voting in favor of the transfer theretofore made, or attempted to be made, by the directors; and it is evident that the suit brought to protect whatever rights plaintiffs may have was timely. (Mills v. Central Ry. Co., 41 N. J. Eq., 1, 2 Atl.

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Bluebook (online)
55 P. 229, 21 Mont. 544, 1898 Mont. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forrester-v-boston-montana-consolidated-copper-silver-mining-co-mont-1898.