Hall v. Ames

182 F. 1008, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5688
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedNovember 23, 1910
DocketNo. 661
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 F. 1008 (Hall v. Ames) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Ames, 182 F. 1008, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5688 (circtdme 1910).

Opinion

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

As there is a long and continuous line of decisions of the Supreme Court of the United-States .putting beyond doubt the disposition of this -case, we do not feel called on to elaborate, the statement in regard to it. . .

On'or-about January S5, 1905, the'complainants deposited with the Merrill Trust Compány,:one*of the respondents,'sundry shares of the capital’ stdck of thé Machias Dumber Company, a corporation created by the laws of the state :of Maine, to be held and finally sold to the trust corporation, subject to directions to'be given by James M. W. Hali%nd-‘the--respondents Wing--and-Ames, or a majority of them. Some other conditions were contained in'.the terms o'f' deposit, but it is not necessary that we should detail them as thetcase now stands. By the terms of deposit and the subsequent agreement of extension, the limitation on the power of sale was fixed at December 31, 1908. Subsequently, on or about November 10, 1908, the complainant James M. W. Hall read a newspaper notice that the stock thus. deposited [1009]*1009would be sold at auction on November 25, 1908. Whereupon he brought a bill in equity in the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine seeking to enjoin the sale; the bill having been filed in behalf of himself and all other stockholders. The bill was originally filed by James M. W. Hall against the same respondents as appear here. Subsequently James R. Hall and Morris A. Hall became parties complainant by intervention; so that the parties to the suit in the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine when determinative action was taken were the same as exist here. There have been some minor withdrawals from the deposit and some minor additions thereto which occurred prior to the filing of the bill in the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, and possibly there have been some changes since; but for all substantial purposes the mass of the shares of stock to which the proceedings in the Supreme Judicial Court related are identically the same as the mass of the same involved here. Therefore we have in both proceedings identically the same parties and the same property. Each court had complete jurisdiction over all the parties respondent, as well as full jurisdiction over the Machias Lumber Company; so that it was fully within the power of each to declare the transfers of the shares of the capital stock of the Machias Lumber Company valid according to the legal rules which might be found to apply thereto, and to give efficiency to the same. Both in the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine and in this court the proceedings were and are in equity; and, on the face of each bill, each court respectively had full jurisdiction in equity to shape out such remedies as the case might involve. Therefore there is no question of jurisdiction whatever as to either court within the legitimate interpretation of that word.

The bill in the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine was brought mainly to restrain the proposed sale of the shares of the capital stock involved, and apparently solely for that purpose. The Supreme Judicial Court of Maine decided that the deposit was a valid one, and that the proceedings looking to a sale were proper, and that no injunction should be granted; so that, except for what we shall explain, the proper decree would have been merely a dismissal of the bill on its merits, with costs. As the proceedings developed, however, it. became apparent that the court could not dispose of the bill finally within the limit of December 31, 1908, which we have stated. On the filing of the bill in the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, a preliminary injunction was granted, the complainants having filed a bond to the respondents. Subsequently, on December 26, 1908, a temporary injunction, properly so called, was made as prayed for in the bill by an order which contained the following stipulation agreed to by the complainant James M. W. Hall. This stipulation was expressly agreed to by all the counsel of record, as will appear by what we quote with reference thereto, and the whole was entered of record. We find it expressed to us in the following terms:

“Order on Temporary Injunction.
“This cause came oh to be heard this day on the motion of the defendants, Wilson D. Wing and Alfred K. Ames, of date of December 15, 1908, praying [1010]*1010for a dissolution or modification of the temporary injunction now in force, and after notice and bearing, and argument of counsel,
“It is ordered, adjudged and decreed:
“That the temporary injunction be dissolved unless the plaintiff on or before 12 o’clock noon of December' 28, 1908, files stipulation agreeing therein. .
“(1) That this cause shall be prosecuted to final decree.
“(2) That during the pendency of this bill the Merrill Trust Company shall not vote the stock as provided in said trust agreement, but it shall be voted by the beneficial owners thereof, each for himself. No treasury or new stock shall be sold or issued during the pendency of this bill.
“(8) That, if the bill is dismissed on final decree, said shares may be sold under the trust agreement, provided there shall be sold at the same time sufficient shares as, reckoning in said three hundred and sixty-one (3G1) shares, shall be at least a majority of the shares of the capital stock of the Machias Lumber Company then outstanding.
“(4) That the trust agreement, except as to the sale called for upon the contingency of an entry of a dismissal of this bill on final decree, terminates on December 81, 1908, as therein provided.
“When said stipulation shall be so filed, the bond of the plaintiff under the temporary injunction shall be released. “Geo. E. Bird,
. “Justice Supreme Judicial Court.
“I hereby agree to the stipulation required by the foregoing order but without prejudice. James M. W. Hall.
“Bond of plaintiff is hereby released as required by the foregoing order.
“Wilson D. Wing.
“Alfred K. Ames.
“Merrill Trust Co.
“By H. M. Heath, Attorney.
“Seen and agreed to:
“Symonds, Snow, Cook & Hutchinson,
“Attys. for Plaintiff.
“Heath & Andrews,
“Attys. for Defendants.”

Afterwards the bill went to a full hearing, and was decided according to an opinion filed on March 26, 1910, found in 76 Atl. 926. That opinion sustained the legality of the deposit, and the proposed proceedings for a sale, and held that the complainant had no right to an injunction. In accordance with what the court understood to be the effect of the stipulation of the parties we have quoted, the opinion ended as follows:

“Under the stipulation, the decree below must be so framed as to direct the trustee to sell all the stock now in its hands, at public auction, after due notice to all the equitable owners, with the same effect as if made before December 31, 1908.” ,

Then it ended with the following order:

“Decree in accordance with this petition.”

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Related

Whan v. Hope Natural Gas Co.
94 S.E. 365 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1917)
Hull v. Burr
207 F. 543 (First Circuit, 1913)
Hall v. Ames
190 F. 138 (First Circuit, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
182 F. 1008, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-ames-circtdme-1910.