Healey v. Loveridge

19 A. 921, 72 Md. 220, 1890 Md. LEXIS 30
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 19, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 A. 921 (Healey v. Loveridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Healey v. Loveridge, 19 A. 921, 72 Md. 220, 1890 Md. LEXIS 30 (Md. 1890).

Opinion

Robinson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an Alleghany County case, and the questions are mainly questions of fact, involving charges of bad faith and fraud against high railroad officials, against presidents of coal companies, and against leading members of the bar. The record is a voluminous one, with no less than five hundred pages of testimony, a good deal of which is conflicting and contradictory, painfully so, we may add, and it is a difficult matter to get at the truth of some of the transactions closely connected with the .questions at issue.

The bill is filed by the administratrix of Maurice A. Healey, to set aside a transfer by him to the defendant Loveridge of 352 shares of stock, being a majority of the entire number of shares of stock of the Pennsylvania [222]*222Railroad in Maryland, on the ground that the transfer was obtained by fraud and without consideration. To understand properly the object and purposes of this transfer, it is necessary to refer briefly as we can, to some facts about which there is no dispute. The- Pennsylvania Railroad in Maryland was chartered in 1876, to run from the City of Cumberland to the Pennsylvania State line, a distance of six miles, and there to connect with the Bedford and Bridgeport Railroad, a part of the Pennsylvania Railroad system. The object in constructing this Road, was to give to the City of Cumberland, the benefits of a competitive road with the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, then its only outlet. Its estimated cost was $150,000, and this sum was to be raised by the issue and sale of $85,000 first mortgage bonds, and $65,000 Cumberland City bonds, which that city had generously loaned to the company for the completion of the road. There was a capital stock, it is true, of $35,000 divided into 700 shares, all of which was taken, but with the exception of a few hundred dollars for preliminary surveys, no money it seems was paid by the persons to whom the shares were issued. Of these shares, 500 stood in the name of Healey, the active promoter of the road, and its first president, and 100 shares stood in the name of Laing, and 100 shares in the name of Zacharias.

In the early part of 1878, the $65,000 Cumberland City bonds were delivered to Healey, the president of the road, and were sold by him through Col. Schley at 90 cts. of their face value. With the proceeds arising from the sale of these bonds, the work of construction began, under a contract with Messrs. Wingate, Saxton & Co., and progressed satisfactorily, apparently so at least, till about the middle of November of that year, when for reasons satisfactory to themselves, Win-gate, Saxton & Co., abandoned their contract. Healey, then attempted to carry on the work, hut being unable [223]*223to negotiate the $85,000 first mortgage bonds, and being without money or credit, all 'further work on the road was entirely suspended. The whole amount expended in grading and construction up to this time, did not, according, to the estimate of engineer Gaffney, exceed forty thousand dollars. The proceeds from the sale of the $65,000 Cumberland City bonds had -been deposited in bank by Healey to Ms oion credit, and of the sum thus deposited, not less than. $15,000 had been used by him for his own purposes. All agree, that the prospect of completing the road, was, in the winter of 1879, gloomy and discouraging. The company was largely indebted to material men and employés, all of whom were clamoring for the payment of their claims, and there was, besides, a wide spread feeling of discontent and indignation on the part of the people of Cumberland, growing out of the suspension of the work, and the reckless management .of the affairs of the company, and the general apprehension of the loss of the $65,000 loaned to the company, without the prospect of any corresponding benefit to the city. No one realized more fully the condition of affairs than Healey himself; and “tormented and worried to death," he says, against the earnest entreaties of both Williams, the counsel of the road, and Haydon, its engineer, he determined to leave Cumberland, his precise whereabouts being unknown. Before going, however, he executed a power of attorney authorizing Williams and any other person whom he might see proper to associate with him, to negotiate the $85,000 mortgage bonds, on such terms as they might deem best; and to apply the proceeds to the completion of the road. All efforts, however, on the part of Williams, and Col. Schley, associated with him, to negotiate these bonds were unavailing. “He touched," says Col. Schley, “the money power of the country," but not a dollar could they get. So, in this emergency, they applied to the [224]*224defendant, Loveridge, to aid them in disposing of the bonds. Loveridge was the president of the Maryland Coal .Company, which was the owner of large and valuable coal fields in Alleghany County, and resided in New Jersey, with an office in New York City. The company, of which he was the president, and the American Coal Company, were at that time constructing the George’s Creek Railroad, as an outlet for their coal, and Loveridge had felt, he admits, a great interest in the completion of the Pennsylvania road in Maryland, because he expected to make a connection of the George’s Créek road with it. With this view, he expressed his willingness, not only to negotiate the mortgage bonds, but to complete the road, upon the condition, however, that Williams, as attorney for Healey, would transfer to him 352 shares of Healey’s stoch, being a majority of the entire stock of the company, and upon the further condition that he was to have the absolute control and management of the affairs of the company.' Accordingly, on the 2nd of April an agreement was made between Williams, attorney for Healey, and Loveridge, by which 352 shares of stock were- transferred to Loveridge, to enable him, says the agreement, “to retain the absolute control of the Pennsylvania Railroad in Maryland,” and Loveridge on his part agreed to negotiate the bonds at not less than 80 per cent, of their face value, the proceeds to be applied to the completion of- the road; and while retaining the entire control and management of the company, he agrees that Healey shall remain as president.

Now, a great deal was said about the authority of Williams to transfer the 352 shares of Healey’s stock, but in view of the subsequent agreement of the 26th of April, between Healey himself and Loveridge, this seems to us to be an immaterial question. Whether, strictly speaking, he had the authority, under the power of attorney, to transfer Healey’s stock, all will agree, that [225]*225it was made by Him in perfect good faith, and for the best interests not only of Healey, but of all parties interested in the road. The stock, he knew, was in fact without any market value. Besides he knew, that Healey was indebted to the company, all the way from $10,000 to $15,000 for money belonging to it which had been used by him for his own purposes. He knew, too, that Healey had given bond to the City of Cumberland, in the sum of $75,000 with sureties, for the completion of the road as a competitive road. The paramount object of all parties was to secure the means necessary to complete the road, and having failed to negotiate the bonds himself, he knew that this object could only be accomplished through the assistance of Loveridge.

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Bluebook (online)
19 A. 921, 72 Md. 220, 1890 Md. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/healey-v-loveridge-md-1890.