Jackson v. White

188 F. 775, 110 C.C.A. 481, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4361
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 1911
DocketNo. 953
StatusPublished

This text of 188 F. 775 (Jackson v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. White, 188 F. 775, 110 C.C.A. 481, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4361 (4th Cir. 1911).

Opinion

ROSE, District Judge.

In the summer and early fall of 1901 the complainants and the defendants White, H. C. Jackson, Archer, and Nye held among them more than one-half of the capital stock of the Eittle Kanawha Railroad Company. They united in a sale for $350,000 of all their holdings to J. T. Blair and E. D. Pulton. Out of this sum the sellers agreed to pay . .id discharge all existing liens and incumbrances and all valid claims and demands of any character whatever against the company. The buyers deposited $350,000 with the defendant the Citizens’ Trust & Guaranty Company. The last-named company was to pay this money out in the first place in discharge of the debts of the railroad company upon vouchers made up by its then board of directors. If a demand was made upon the railroad company which the directors did not believe to be valid, the sellers of the stock reserved the right to contest such claim. If they made such contest, they were required to leave in the hands of the trust company a sum of money sufficient to save harmless the buyers from any loss or damage that might arise in consequence of such claim. The surplus, if any, remaining after discharging the debts and liabilities of the company, was to be divided among the sellers in proportion to the number of shares of stock sold by each of them, respectively.

The complainant says that the $350,000 was paid out under the direction of the defendants White, H. C. Jackson, and Archer. She asserts that she did not receive the sum due her, first, as creditor of the company; second, as stockholder therein; third, under a written contract with the defendant H. C. Jackson.

We will consider these contentions in the order above mentioned.

First, as creditor: Among the claims against the railroad company presented to its board of directors was that of AV. W. Jackson for $2,000 for services rendered and expenses incurred for the company. This claim the board of directors rejected. AV. AV. Jackson is. the complainant’s husband. She says that the claim should have been allowed and not rejected. The special master agreed with her and held that she was entitled to this sum. The court below held that the special master was in this respect in error. In so holding the court below was right. It was right whether the claim of W. W. Jackson was or was not a valid one- in his hands as against the company. The record [777]*777does not show that this claim was ever assigned to the plaintiff. She has, therefore, in a legal sense, no interest in it.

Second, as stockholder: The number of shares of stock sold to Blair and Fulton was 2,971. At the time such sale was made, 282 shares stood in the name of the complainant. The special master found that 23% of these belonged to defendant H. C. Jackson, and liad been put in the name of the complainant by mistake, and that the complainant was legally and equitably entitled to 258% shares and no more. The report of the special master was in this respect confirmed by the court below. Complainant does not here contest such conclusion.

As the holder of 258% shares she is entitled to the same proportion of the surplus remaining’ after discharging the debts and liabilities of the company as 258% bears to 2,971. This is not now denied. Until the filing of the bill in this cause it was ignored. That there is a surplus in which she is entitled to share is now admitted. _ What that surplus amounts to, or at least what it should amount to, is disputed. Defendants say that the determination by the board of directors of the company that a particular claim was a valid claim against the company is binding upon the complainant. This the complainant denies. She asserts that the defendants White, H. C. Jackson, and Archer caused to be paid claims which they knew were not debts of the company. She contends that the larger part of such sums so improperly expended were paid to some one or the other of the three defendants last named. She says that they are bound to account to her for her share of the sums which they so unlawfully paid out. To the extent that any of the defendants received out of this sum of $350,000 money which he was clearly not entitled to claim under the terms of the agreement with Blair and Fulton, the complainant’s contention under the peculiar circumstances disclosed by the record appears to us to be well founded.

To judge justly what was done and how it came to be done it is necessary, if possible, to understand something of the history of the railroad company and of the relation of the three principal defendants to it.

That there was a Little Kanawha Railroad appears to have been due in large part to the defendant Tí. C. Jackson. With him in the years immediately preceding 1901 were associated the defendants V. B. Archer and A. B. White and, apparently somewhat less intimately, H. B. Nye. Their resources were not adequate to enable them comfortably to finance the project. They at times found it very difficult to raise needed money for the road. The credit of the company had become so impaired that its name on commercial paper rendered the paper nonnegotiable. In other words, its note, even though indorsed by White or Archer or H. C. Jackson, would not be discounted at bank, although the individual notes of those gentlemen would have been. They were accordingly forced to give, in lieu of its paper indorsed by them, their individual notes.

They were hopeful that some day the enterprise would pay handsomely. They knew it had no money at the time. They, or some of [778]*778them, kept imperfect accounts of the expenditures and liabilities made or incurred by them for it. In order to raise money when it was sorely needed, sometimes the company and sometimes some of the defendants as individuals made bargains with other people by which such other persons were promised an interest in the securities to be issued by the road under varying terms and conditions classified in the several briefs. When the sale to Blair and Fulton was actually made, the sum received was not sufficient to realize any great expectations. The obligations entered into by the company and by the individual defendants varied in their terms. It was not easy — perhaps it was not possible — to make an exactly equitable distribution of the money received because the varying contracts and engagements could not be reduced to any common denominator. It was largely because of these conditions and difficulties that the present litigation has arisen and the record has expanded into nearly 1,300 printed pages.

The defendants H. C. Jackson and White, and to a somewhat less extent Archer, had borne the burden and heat of the struggle to keep the company out of absolute financial ruin. In order to save the company, H. C. Jackson and White had used their credit and resources to their full limit.. For years the company had been ever before them. Their financial future was largely bound up with it. They had labored, spent, and risked for it. It did not seem to them that the complainant’s husband, W. W. Jackson, under whom she claimed, had ever been of much use to the company, although in its earlier days he seems to have spent considerable time in writing about it and in talking about it. When the directors or their executive committee were auditing the bills against the company and issuing vouchers for the payment of such bills, they realized that the enterprise was being finally wound up. The hope of large profits which had buoyed them up through many periods of doubt, struggle, and difficulty were now at an end.

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Bluebook (online)
188 F. 775, 110 C.C.A. 481, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-white-ca4-1911.