Guilford v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

61 N.W. 324, 59 Minn. 332, 1894 Minn. LEXIS 164
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 7, 1894
DocketNo. 8862
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 61 N.W. 324 (Guilford v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guilford v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 61 N.W. 324, 59 Minn. 332, 1894 Minn. LEXIS 164 (Mich. 1894).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

This action was brought to have the plaintiff adjudged the owner of certain shares of the stock of the defendant company, and to compel the company to issue to him new certificates therefor in place of the originals, which are alleged to have been lost, and, if the defendant refuses to issue the same, that plaintiff have judgment against it for the value of the stock.

[339]*339It is not questioned but that one Asa Guilford, plaintiff’s father, now deceased, was once the owner of the stock, and that plaintiff, a citizen of this state, is his assignee, sole heir, or next of kin, as well as the administrator of his estate, and hence the owner of the stock, unless Asa Guilford had, in his lifetime, previously transferred it to some one else. The stock certificates are alleged to have been lost by Asa in February, 1882. The defendant has always been willing to issue to plaintiff new certificates on condition that he first execute to it a bond with.two sureties in double the amount of the value of the stock (over $35,000) to indemnify it against the original certificates in case they should turn up in the hands of a third party. This condition the plaintiff has been unable to comply with. This is the third action which has been brought for the same relief, — one in 1882, by Asa Guilford; the second, by plaintiff, in 1888, affirmed oo appeal 43 Minn. 434, (46 N. W. 70); and the present action, in 1893, — the judgment in each case being the same, to wit, that the plaintiff was entitled to new certificates only on first giving the bond required by the defendant. The facts in the present action are the same as in the previous actions, except the additional lapse of time during which the original certificates still remain undiscovered, and no other claimant for the stock has appeared, and that in the meantime the legislature of this state has enacted a statute (Laws 1893, ch. 45) providing for the renewal of stock certificates when worn out, lost, or destroyed.

The defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of New York, where its principal place of business is located, and where all its general officers reside, and where all its stock and other books are kept. The only business transacted by it in this state is the maintenance of telegraph lines and the transmission of telegrams, for which purpose exclusively it has local agents here.

1. The defendant, both in its answer and on the argument, makes the point (not raised on the appeal in the former action) that the courts of this state have no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action, because it pertains solely to the management of the internal affairs of a foreign corporation.

The doctrine is well settled that courts will not exercise visitorial [340]*340powers over foreign corporations, or interfere with the management of their internal affairs. Such matters must he settled by the courts of the state creating the corporation. This rule rests upon a broader and deeper foundation than the mere want of jurisdiction in the ordinary sénse of that word. It involves the extent of the authority of the state (from which its courts derive all their powers) over foreign corporations. The only difficulty is In drawing the line of demarkation between matters which do and those which do not pertain to the management of the internal affairs of a corporation.

To entertain an action to dissolve a corporation, to determine the validity of its organization; to determine which of two rival organizations is the legal one, or who of rival claimants are its legal officers; to restrain it from declaring a dividend, or to compel it to make one; to restrain it from issuing its bonds, or from making an additional issue of stock, — would clearly all be the exercise of visitorial powers over the corporation, or an interference with the management of its internal affairs. But the distinction between any of these cases and the one at bar seems to us very apparent. None - of the cases -cited by defendant’s counsel fully support his contention. Those which at first sight seem most nearly in point are Smith v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 96 Mass. 336, and North Star Mining Co. v. Field, 64 Md. 151 (20 Atl. 1039,) both of which, we think, may be distinguished from the case at bar.

In the first of these cases the plaintiff himself was a citizen of Alabama, and had never lived in Massachusetts, — a fact upon which the court lays much stress, and which alone would probably have justified a court of equity, in the exercise of its discretion, in declining to entertain the bill. Moreover, in that case the insurance company, a mutual one, had declared the plaintiff’s policy forfeited for the nonpayment of premiums, and the relief sought was to have the policy revived or restoied on the ground that the default of the plaintiff was excusable because of the existence of facts which rendered it impossible to pay his premiums. And the court says upon plaintiff’s bill it appears that there is not even an existing contract between the parties. The proceeding is based upon a past relation growing out of a contract made without the jurisdiction, which by its own terms has ceased to be operative, and which [341]*341the plaintiff seeks to revive as an executory obligation, and reinstate him as a member of the corporation, his right to which necessarily depended on the local statute law of the state which created the corporation. •

In North Star Mining Co. v. Field, supra, the corporation had declared the plaintiff’s stock forfeited for the nonpayment of an assessment, and the latter brought suit to be reinstated as a stockholder-in the books of the company, and restored to all his rights as such, alleging that the assessment was illegal and void. As the legality of the assessment and the right of the company to declare the stock forfeited for its nonpayment depended on the charter of the company and the peculiar statute law of the state creating it, the court refused to entertain the bill. But in the present case there is no. question as to the issue, validity, or forfeiture of the stock. There is not even any controversy as to the right of the plaintiff to a certificate as evidence of his title. The only dispute is over the terms, or conditions upon which that certificate shall be issued. We do. not see how the granting of such relief is, in any proper sense, the exercise of visitorial powers, or an interference with the management of the internal affairs of the defendant.

Statements are sometimes found to the effect that where the act of the corporation complained of affects a person solely in his capacity as a member of the corporation, or where the rights of a person grow solely out of his membership in the corporation, and not out of some external transaction, the subject relates to the management of the internal affairs of the corporation, over which the courts of another state should not assume jurisdiction. Such' general statements must always be construed in connection with the-particular facts of the cases in which they are used. Moreover,, such statements are not strictly correct as abstract propositions in the broad and unqualified sense in which they are sometimes understood.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 N.W. 324, 59 Minn. 332, 1894 Minn. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guilford-v-western-union-telegraph-co-minn-1894.