Gould v. Head

41 F. 240, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1984
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 1, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 41 F. 240 (Gould v. Head) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gould v. Head, 41 F. 240, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1984 (circtdco 1890).

Opinion

Philips, J.,

(after stating the facts as above.) Ido not feel called upon, in the determination of the questions raised by the exceptions, to pass upon the question whether or not the real object and inspiration of the American Cattle Trust was to form such a combination against the freedom of trade and competition as to subject it to the disability of being contrary to public policy. The trust company, as such, is not before the court; and counsel for defendant declines to urge such objection against the character of the trust.

The first question of importance arising on the answer is, did the the American Cattle Trust, or the trustees thereof, have the power to transfer, by sale or otherwise, the shares of stock in question to the complainant? Exactly how the complainant acquired possession of this stock is not disclosed by the bill; and, taking the answer in its entirety, it is to be inferred from its statements that the complainant must have obtained them by the president or the treasurer, McGhee, of the cattle trust, filling up the blanks in the four certificates mentioned in the answer with the name of the complainant, and then delivering them to him. And, referring back to the averments in the bill, the complainant claims to have obtained them as a purchaser for good and valuable consideration; and, for the purposes of this exception, we may so first consider him. On the hearing of the application for a temporary injunction, it [244]*244was held by Judge Hallett that, under the constituting instrument of the American Cattle Trust, it was not within the general scheme and purpose of the trust that the trustees should, upon the acquisition of the shares of stock of any corporation, immediately transfer them by sale to a third party. Gould v. Head, 38 Fed. Rep. 886. If this be correct, it would, upon the complainant’s' theory of his right, place him hors de combat on his own chosen field. This leads to an examination of the articles of association of the American Cattle Trust. The second paragraph thereof is as follows:

“The general object contemplated by the parties who unite in the establishment of this trust is to encourage, develop, and secure improved methods and economies in the production, transportation, distribution, handling, and sale of cattle, sheep, hogs, and other animals, and of the food and other products produced or manufactured from them, or any or all of them, in the United States or elsewhere, and to transact any and all other business incident thereto, growing out of or connected therewith, or with any or all of them.”

The fifth paragraph sets out the method by which the general objects of the association are to be attained:

“The method adopted by the parties hereto, and the trustees acting under » the trust agreement, for accomplishing the objects hereinbefore stated, is the acquisition, by purchase, exchange, or otherwise, and the holding, management, and disposition, of shares of the capital stock of companies, corporations, and joint-stock associations organized for any of the purposes hereinbefore named in the second article of this agreement, in the states and territories of the United States, and in the District of- Columbia, as well as in any other country, ”

Looking at these provisions alone, there is strong ground of doubt as to whether it would be within the scheme of the trust that the trustees should transfer by sale the stock acquired to a third party. Such power, unquestionably, should appear in express terms, especially if its exercise is likely to be followed by such results as suggested themselves to the mind of Judge Hallett. The only term from which such power can be deduced, looking at paragraph 5 alone, is the following: “And disposition of shares of the capital stock of companies, corporations,” etc. The term “disposition” has so many' applications, in its mere dictionary definition, which in the main are consistent with the more general objects declared in the second paragraph, that it might well be said that meaning should be given to it, if possible, which would not pervert the general declared object of the association, nor lead to results of injustice to the interests of all concerned. In such juncture, the court might well say that the term “disposition” should be restricted to its more primitive and general import, which does not necessarily imply a barter, sale, or alienation. The greatest embarrassment, however, to my mind, arises on the language of subsequent paragraphs. The sixth section provides, inter alia, that—

“All of the shares of stock, bonds, cash, and other property or contraéis for the same, rights, etc., or any matter or thing of value whatsoever, coming into the possession or control of the trustees, or to which they may be or [245]*245become entitled, shall be vested in, held, and controlled by the trustees as a whole, and shall not be alienated or parted with, except upon the authorization, and with the approval, of the hoard of trustees.”

The primary meaning of the word “alienate” is “to convey or transfer to another, as title, property, or right.” The necessary implication from this is that it was in the contemplation of the originators of the association, and also In the mind of the framers of the articles, that it came within the power of the trustees to alienate shares of stock held by the trustees, as it is expressly declared that they shall not alienate or part with the same, “except upon the authorization, and with the approval, of the hoard of trustees.”

Then the twelfth paragraph, which defines and declares “the powers and duties of the board of trustees,” is as follows: “To acquire, receive, hold, and dispose of the title to shares of the capital stock of companies, corporations, and joint-stock associations, organized or engaged in any of the lines or branches of business hereinabove described, or in any business relating to or connected therewith, or in any degree pertaining or auxiliary thereto.” Tt is among the recognized canons of construction that words and phrases shall be taken in their plain, ordinary, and usual sense. Particular words and phrases are to be taken and understood in their obvious meaning and common acceptation; and if they have acquired, among certain classes of persons or tradesmen, any different or special signification, they are to he so applied by the court. The term “disposed of,” in its dictionary definition, has among its meanings that of “bargain,” “alienation,” “passing from one into the control of another,” “parting with.” Webst. Dict. b. Of course, the import of this term may be so limited by its context and its cognates as not to extend to a conveyance or sale of property. The statutes concerning the grounds of attachment in civil actions, as set out in many of the statutes, afford an illustration. It has been held by the supreme court of Missouri, in Bullene v. Smith. 73 Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
41 F. 240, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-head-circtdco-1890.