Foster v. Mansfield, C. & L. M. R.

36 F. 627, 6 Ohio F. Dec. 143, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2660

This text of 36 F. 627 (Foster v. Mansfield, C. & L. M. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Mansfield, C. & L. M. R., 36 F. 627, 6 Ohio F. Dec. 143, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2660 (circtndoh 1888).

Opinion

Jaceson, J.

The object and purpose of the present bill is to open the decree of this court, rendered in 1877, in the foreclosure proceeding in the case of “Thomas A. Scott and George W. Cass vs. The Mansfield, Cold water & Lake Michigan Railroad Company,” under which said company’s line of road, with its franchises and property, was sold. The decree in said cause is sought to be set aside and vacated on the ground that it was obtained by fraud, and worked an injury and wrong to said railroad company, which the corporate management, after request on the part of the complainant as a stockholder therein, have refused or neglected to take steps to remedy or redress. There is no want of jurisdiction growing out of the fact that some of the defendants to the present suit are citizens of the same state (Ohio) with the complainant, inasmuch as this suit may properly be regarded as ancillary or supplementary to the original suit in which the decree complained of was made. It is well settled' that iii such cases suit may be maintained without regard to -the citizenship of the parties. See Minnesota Co. v. St. Paul Co., 2 Wall. 609-633; Krippendorf v. Hyde, 110 U. S. 276, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 27; and Railroad Co. v. Railroad Co., 111 U. S. 505, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 583. It is also well settled that a shareholder may interpose and set the machinery of the law in motion for the protection of corporate rights, or the redress of corporate wrongs, when the corporate management, after proper demand, refuse or fail to act in the matter.. Generally, when it is necessary to sue in order to enforce corporate rights or avert wrongs threatening the corporate interests, the suit must be brought by the corporate management in the name of the corporation. This rule applies to suits both at law and in equity. Individual shareholders are not, ordinarily, the proper parties to sue or defend on behalf of corporate interests. If, however, the corporate management fails or refuses to protect or enforce corporate rights after proper request so to do, or commits breaches of trust, or is guilty of fraudulent acts and conduct, whereby irreparable injury is done or threatened to corporate interests, a shareholder, in a case where the corporation itself would be entitled to sue and obtain relief, may bring suit on behalf of himself and others in like situation, for the protection or assertion of corporate righ. va 1 interests. The conditions and circumstances under which the individual stockholders is allowed to sustain, in a court of equity, in his own name, a suit founded on a right of action existing in the corporation itself, and in which the corporation itself would be the proper complainant, are fully set forth in Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U. S. 450-460, and in the requirements of equity rule 94. It is important to bear in mind that the rights involved in such suits are not those of the shareholder who sues, but of the corporation, whose rights are sought to be asserted. The cause of action which the individual stockholder is allowed to enforce in such cases is one belonging, not to the stockholders, but to the corporation itself. Thus in Davenport v. Dows, 18 Wall. 626, it is said:

[629]*629“But such a suit can only be maintained on the ground that tho rights of the corporation are involved. These rights the individual shareholder is allowed to assert on behalf of himself and associates, because the directors of the corporation decline to take the proper steps to assert them. * * * The relief is asked on behalf of the corporation, not the individual shareholder; and, if it be granted, the complainant derives only an incidental benefit from it.”

The present suit falls within this rule, and the case presented by the demurrer to the bill then divides itself into two leading questions: First, has the Mansfield, Coldwater & Lake Michigan Railroad Company, under the showing made by the bill, any right to complain of the decree rendered by this court in 1877, in the foreclosure suit of Thomas A. Scott and George W. Cass against said corporation; and, secondly, if tho company was ever entitled to have said decree set aside and vacated for fraud in its procurement, has that right been lost by the “laches” of itself or of complainant in the assertion of said rights?

The record in the case of “Thomas A. Scott and George W. Cass vs. The Mansfield, Coldwater & Lake Michigan Railroad Co. et al.” is filed with and made a part of complainant’s bill. It appears from the bill and said record that said Scott and Cass, as the trustees under the original and supplemental mortgages executed by said Mansfield, Cold-water & Lake Michigan Railroad Co. on the 1st October, 1871, and 1st October, 1872, respectively, to secure the payment of certain coupon bonds issued ,by said company, filed their bill in this court on January 20, 1876, against said railroad company and Swan Rose & Co., general creditors thereof, to have said mortgages foreclosed by a sale of the road and other property covered by or embraced in the mortgages, because of the default of the mortgagor in the payment of the interest on $1,600,000 of said bonds then outstanding in tho hands of bona fide and lawful holders thereof. The interest accrued thereon and alleged to be in default was stated to be $270,000, $35,000 of which was due October 1, 1873; $35,000 was due and payable April 1, 1874; $56,000 became due April 1, 1875, and $56,000- matured October 1, 1875, which several installments, with interest since date of maturity till time of filing the bill, amounted to the sum of $270,000. The trustees further alleged that the railroad company had failed to pay or provide the sinking fund of 1 per cent, required by the mortgages on the $1,600,000 oí bonds so issued and outstanding, and, that under and in accordance with the terms and provisions of said trust deeds or mortgages said bonds had been properly declared and made due as to the principal thereof, because of such defaults on the part of the mortgagor. Said original and supplemental trust deeds or mortgages were filéd with and made parts of the bill to foreclose, as Exhibits A and B thereto, and purported on their face to be regularly executed by proper officers of the corporations under proper authority from the company.

The defendant railroad company was duly served with process on the 24th January, 1876, and on the 17th April, 1876, it filed its answer in the cause. In said answer it denied that it was duly and legally organized and incorporated as a corporation, when said mortgages were exe[630]*630cuted and said bonds issued. It averred that' its incorporation and organization was not perfected and completed until January 6, 1873, and that prior to said date it possessed no power or authority to execute and deliver either said bonds or mortgages. It therefore denied that said mortgages were the proper act of the corporation, or constituted any valid lien on its railway and property. The answer, then, by the eighth paragraph thereof,' proceeded to set out how and under what circumstances the corporation was formed and organized.

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Bluebook (online)
36 F. 627, 6 Ohio F. Dec. 143, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-mansfield-c-l-m-r-circtndoh-1888.