Kessler & Co. v. Ensley Co.

129 F. 397, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4755
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Alabama
DecidedApril 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 129 F. 397 (Kessler & Co. v. Ensley Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kessler & Co. v. Ensley Co., 129 F. 397, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4755 (circtndal 1904).

Opinion

JONES, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). It was not ruled on the former hearing, as complainants seem to suppose, that the refusal of the boards of directors and stockholders, under the circumstances stated, to bring the suit, amounted to a ratification of the transactions complained of; but that, in view of the case disclosed by the original bill, the minority was bound by the action of the governing body, which was not charged to be interested, or acting from improper motive. It was stated arguendo that an honest and disinterested governing body or majority of stockholders, if rescission would not be advantageous or would be harmful to the corporation, might ratify actual fraud practiced on it by an officer or director. Complainants devote a large part of their argument to combating the correctness of the former opinion on these points. They insist that a corporation cannot in any case ratify a transaction whereby its officers obtain corporate property of large value by actual fraud, save by unanimous consent of the stockholders; and that the court, by refusing to entertain the stockholders’ bill, when the corporation refuses to sue, enables the governing body or majority to accomplish indirectly, against the protest of the minority, that which could not be done directly save by unanimous consent. Upon these premises they vigorously contend that the governing body has no discretion to refuse to sue in a case like this when the minority demand it, and that their refusal to sue confers upon the minority an absolute and imperative right, beyond the power of a court of equity to control, to file the bill in their own name, making the corporation a defendant.

x. There is a manifest distinction in principle between committing a fraud upon a corporation or piling one fraud on another by abuse of corporate authority in vicious ratification, and the refusal by the governing body, on proper motives, of a request of some of the stockholders to bring suit to redress the fraud. Of and in itself the mere refusal to sue cannot be ratification. Unless the situation has been so changed, in consequence of the refusal, as to work an estoppel to complain of the fraud, the governing body may change its policy at pleasure. Of and in itself it is neither illegal nor immoral to refrain from redressing a fraud by suit. In the very nature of things, a refusal, in the interest of the corporation, to bring suit, cannot amount to a fraud upon the stockholders. They are allowed to bring suit when the corporation fails to do so solely to “prevent a failure of justice.” The failure of justice to be prevented is the failure of justice to the corporation. The transaction here complained of is wholly intra vires, and involves private, not public, wrong. The complaining minority stockholders and the other stockholders alike assert only the right of the corporation. They have no independent rights against one another, or against the corporation. The only right which any stockholder may assert in a case of this kind is subject to the police power of the govern[400]*400ing body, and the extent of the stockholder’s right is narrowed and restrained by the fair exercise of this power.

Enforcing a corporate right, especially when, as here, the corporation must restore the purchase money and surrender the right to enforce the performance of other conditions of the sale in order to regain that which it sold, may be decidedly to its disadvantage. It is frequently the highest wisdom to refrain from attempting to redress violations of right. Probable gain is generally balanced against probable loss. Modern jurisprudence assimilates corporations as far as possible to natural persons in determining their discretion and power as to such matters. The governing body is expected, within the limits of the charter, by all means not violative of law and good morals, to promote the pecuniary advancement of the corporation in its dealings, whether with its own officers or third persons. Bearing this in mind, and that it is not the fact that a fraud has been committed, but the fact of rightful or wrongful refusal to redress the fraud, which determines whether equity will aid the stockholder, the question is not of difficult solution on principle. The stockholder appeals to the conscience of the chancellor at the very threshold of the litigation to set aside the judgment of a corporate tribunal provided in advance, to determine primarily for every stockholder the very question brought before the court. The law does not presume fraud, misconduct, or infidelity on the part of the directors; on the other hand, in the absence of showing to the contrary, presumes that they acted rightly and properly. When the governing body is not challenged as in any wise unfit or interested, and no ulterior or improper motive is imputed to it, the decision by such a body is prima facie 'right, and must stand, unless the court can see from the facts stated in the stockholder’s bill that the "decision, upon the facts presented, proves its own unworthiness — shows a failure of justice to the corporation, if the stockholder is not permitted to sue.' The only right of the stockholder here is to show that the corporation has been wronged by the refusal to sue, and in that event to sue for it. Both factions have equal right to be heard on that question, not only before the court, but before the governing body. If the corporation’s interest will not be promoted by suit to redress the fraud, there is no wrongful refusal to sue, no foundation for the stockholder’s equity to compel suit, and no threatened failure of justice to the corporation to be averted. Of necessity, then, the governing body in every intra vires matter has a discretion to determine what action to take on the stockholder’s request to sue; and when the stockholder comes into court the first question it must determine is whether that discretion has been properly or improperly exercised. •

2. The assertion that a disinterested corporate body or majority of stockholders of a business corporation are powerless in any case, against the objection of a single stockholder, to ratify actual fraud, as to a matter intra vires, upon the corporation by one of its own officers, by which he obtains some of its property, cannot be accepted as a correct enunciation of the law. The case in hand involves an executed sale and conveyance of land thereunder, made under the confessedly corporate power to sell land to pay corporate debts. The vice imputed to the transaction is that it was accomplished by actual fraud of the corporation’s [401]*401officers who became purchasers. Individual stockholders have no such interest in a purely corporate asset, or the undivided corporate property of a solvent, going corporation, as entitles them, in a case of this kind, to exact unanimity on the part of the stockholders before the corporation can have or exercise judgment of its own as to the wisest course to pursue with reference to a fraud concerning it. Want of unanimity in such a case cannot dethrone the governing body, or suspend or repeal those provisions of the charter which define their powers and duties, or transfer the duties and rights of the corporation in the premises to the minority. If the interests of the corporation are promoted by the refusal to sue, or by ratification, it is unconscientious to insist that it has been wronged by either ratification or the refusal to sue. That is quite a different thing from committing or defending a fraud. The stockholder, having only derivative and subordinate rights, cannot force the corporation to do that which will harm it, or fairly complain when it elects, for its own good, to stand upon the transaction, rather than repudiate it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 F. 397, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kessler-co-v-ensley-co-circtndal-1904.