Irvin v. Anthony Shoals Power Co.

277 F. 926, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2535
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 2, 1921
DocketNo. 3754
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 277 F. 926 (Irvin v. Anthony Shoals Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irvin v. Anthony Shoals Power Co., 277 F. 926, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2535 (5th Cir. 1921).

Opinions

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

This suit was a bill in equity filed in the superior court of Wilkes county, Ga., by the appellants, the personal representatives of J. H. Fitzpatrick and T. M. Fitzpatrick, against the appellees, Anthony Shoals Power Company, a Georgia corporation (herein referred to as the power company), Westinghouse, Church, Kerr & Co., a corporation, William Morris Imbrie & Co., John F. Wallace, .and others; the appellees other than the power company being nonresidents of the state-of Georgia, and the appellants being resident citizens of that state. On the application of Westinghouse, Church, Kerr & Co., William Morris Imbrie & Co., and John F. Wallace, the [927]*927suit was removed to the United States District Court for the Southern District of "Georgia. That court overruled a motion to remand the case to the state court, holding that the power company was not a necessary party.

The averments of the bill showed the following: In the year 1907 ¡ire Fitzpatricks owned all the capital stock (240 shares) of the power company, which owned a water power and several hundred acres of appurtenant land. The Fitzpatricks also owned options on about P.000 acres of land, so situated as to be of value to the contemplated development of the water power. In 1907 they entered into a contract with the Electric Properties Company, a New York corporation, which afterwards changed its name to Westinghouse, Church, Kerr & Co. (herein referred to as the Westinghouse Company). In pursuance of that contract, the Fitzpatricks transferred to the Westinghouse Company all the stock of the power company, and the options on the 9,000 acres of land, for $28,000. That contract provided for the Fitzpatricks receiving, in a contingency mentioned, a further .stated cash sum and also part of the common stock of a new corporation, the organization of which was contemplated. On August 12, 1909, after the options transferred by the Fitzpatricks had been exercised and the 9.000 acres had become part of the holdings of the power company, the Fitzpatricks and the Westinghouse Company entered into another agreement, which provided as follows:

“I. The title to and ownership of the capital stock of the Anthony Shoals Power Company, and through such stock ownership the title to and ownership of all lands, easements and water rights and other property of said company, shall rest absolutely in the Electric Properties Company, and the parties of the second part individually and as executor as aforesaid admit and declare that they are not and that neither of them is entitled to any right or interest therein or in the proceeds thereof except as created by this agreement.
*‘2. If the said stock or property is sold by the Electric Properties Company for cash, the sum of twenty-eight thousand dollars ($28,000) with interest at six per cent, shall be first deducted from the proceeds and retained by the Electric Properties Company, and the balance divided between the Electric Properties Company and the parties of the second part, in the proportion of actual cash, with, interest at six per cent, thereon, theretofore expended "by The Electric Properties Company upon or in connection with said stock of the Anthony Shoals Power Company, or upon or in connection with any property acquired for or in connection with the development of the Anthony Shoals Power Company, or otherwise in any manner for any purpose of the enterprise which is the subject of snid agreement of January 22, 1907 (loss the $28,000 and interest) and seventy-live thousand ($75,000) dollars with interest thereon at six per cent, representing the investment of the Fitzpatrick interests.”

The Westinghouse Company expended about $250,000 on account of the properly mentioned in the last-quoted clause of that agreement. The interest of the appellants, under said agreement, in a valid sale of said property for anything approaching its market value, would amount to $88,000 or more; said property being worth the sum of $400,000 or more. The appellees claim that the Westinghouse Company, in December, 1918. sold all said stock in ihe power company to said Imbrie & Co., for a consideration of $42,000, and that a few days thereafter Imbrie & Co. sold said stock to John F. Wallace for a consideration of $50,000. Wallace was president of the Westinghouse [928]*928Company when the contract of August 12, 1909, was entered into,, and has continued to be an officer of that company. The considerations of said pretended sales were grossly inadequate. Imbrie & Co. were not bona fide purchasers, but acted merely as a go-between or conduit by means of which the Westinghouse Company and Wallace sought to pass the title of said stock from the former to the latter. The bill prayed that the sales whereby the power company stock was put in the name of Wallace be declared fraudulent, null, and void, and that the same be set aside; that the appellees be restrained and enjoined from disposing of the stock or any property of the power company; that said stock and property be placed in the hands of a receiver and sold through such receiver; and that the proceeds of such sale be distributed in accordance with said contract.

The bill asserts the claim that the appellants have a beneficial interest in land the title to and possession of which are in the power company, and the relief prayed includes the sale of that land under the court’s order, and the distribution of the proceeds of the sale between the appellants and others. The suit involves more than a controversy. in regard to the stock of the power company. The granting of the relief sought involves divesting the power company’s title to' and possession of land. Such relief is not grantable in a suit to which the power company is not a party. When the object of a suit is to sell property, put the purchaser in possession, and distribute the proceeds of the sale, the one in possession and holding the title to the property is a necessary and indispensable party. Construction Co. v. Cane Creek, 155 U. S. 283, 15 Sup. Ct. 91, 39 L. Ed. 152; Wilson v. Oswego Township, 151 U. S. 56, 14 Sup. Ct. 259, 38 L. Ed. 70; Moloney v. Cressler, 210 Fed. 104, 126 C. C. A. 618. That the bill may not state a cáse against the power company, or one warranting the appointment of a receiver for its property (as to which no opinion is expressed), involves a decision on the merits of the case and is no reason for holding, in passing on the question of removal, that the power company is not a necessary party to a suit seeking the relief which is sought by the bill in this case. A result of the power company being a necessary party and its citizenship being the same as that of the appellants is that the suit was «not removable from the state court, the plaintiffs and a defendant corporation which was a necessary party being citizens of the same state.

The decree is reversed, with direction that the case be remanded to the state court.

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Bluebook (online)
277 F. 926, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irvin-v-anthony-shoals-power-co-ca5-1921.