Kreiger v. Shelby R. R.

84 Ky. 66, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 37
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 17, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 Ky. 66 (Kreiger v. Shelby R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kreiger v. Shelby R. R., 84 Ky. 66, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 37 (Ky. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinions

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion or the court.

The original charter incorporating the Shelby Railroad Company, approved on the 15th of March, 1851, was amended by an act, approved February 3d, 1869, and from that amendment, or its construction, has arisen the present litigation.

By this amendment the company was authorized to extend its road through other counties, as well as the county of Shelby, and by the second section of the amendatory act a portion of the county of Shelby was laid off by a well defined boundary, and the legal voters within that boundary empowered to vote a subscription of stock, not exceeding three hundred thousand dollars, to aid in the construction of the road.

The vote was taken favoring the enterprise, and [69]*69the subscription made by the county judge in accordance with the provisions of the act. Bonds were required to be issued, payable in twenty years, bearing interest at a rate not exceeding eight per cent., with the right reserved of paying them within three years from date. The bonds were required to be executed in the name of.and under the seal or scroll of, this portion of Shelby county, and to be signed by the county judge, and countersigned by the county clerk, and when executed the bonds were to be “de'livered to the president and directors of the railroad ' company in payment of said subscription, and they may be by them negotiated, hypothecated or sold, upon such terms as may by said president and directors be deemed expedient, and may be transferred by indorsement.”

These bonds were executed and delivered, and then sold by the company, and the proceeds applied to the building of the road. The road was completed from Anchorage, on the Louisville & Lexington road (now the Louisville & Nashville road), to the town of Shelbyville, a distance of eighteen miles.

Under the seventh section of the act of 1869 an annual tax was levied on all the property in the district subject to taxation for State revenue to pay the interest when due, and the principal at maturity, and this tax has been collected from year to year in payment of the interest, and in part discharge of the principal.

The collecting officer is required by the express provisions of the act “to execute to each person a receipt for the amount of taxes paid by him, which [70]*70shall be assignable, and when they amount to fifty dollars or more shall entitle the holder, upon presentation to the proper officers of the company, to certificates of stock, at the rate of one share for fifty dollars and every multiple of fifty.”

The ninth section of the act provides that “the several counties and portions of counties shall not vote the stock for which certificates may be issued to the tax-payers, but the same shall be voted by the individual stockholders.”

The officers of this corporation being elected by the stockholders, it is claimed by the appellants, Kreiger and others, who are individual stockholders, that this district voting the tax is not a stockholder in the company, and, therefore, has no voice in the selection of its officers, nor any right to receive dividends declared; that, so far as the district is concerned, the individual tax-payer residing therein, when he has paid his taxes and obtained a certificate of stock, to that extent is entitled to vote, but no further; and this, it is insisted, is the only manner in which the district can be heard in the selection of the officers of the company, and in the distribution of the dividends. These three consolidated cases each involve this question.

It is claimed that the appellants have purchased the receipts of the tax-payer or his certificates for a trifling sum, and are, therefore, endeavoring to obtain the power to control the corporation.

Whatever may have been the motives influencing the appellants, the tax receipts are made assignable, and this case must be treated as a controversy [71]*71between the tax-payer and stockholder on the one side and the taxing district on the other.

It is apparent that at the completion of the road the stock was of bnt little value, and so continued for a number of years, yielding no dividend and giving no indications of a profitable investment. Shortly before the institution of the present action a small dividend (perhaps two) was declared by the company, and this seems to have called the attention of the officers of the company and the stockholders to the necessity of having the charter construed with a view of ascertaining who had the right to vote the stock and receive dividends.

Prior to the payment of these dividends the district had been voting its stock to the amount of three hundred thousand dollars, and while this may indicate the construction placed upon the act by many of the parties in interest, we can not well see why it should work an estoppel on the stockholders, or compel such a construction of the charter if inconsistent with its provisions.

The facts conduce to show that as much as three hundred thousand dollars has been paid by the taxpayers in the way of interest, and for this reason it is maintained that no right exists in the district to vote the original stock subscription. If thi;ee hundred thousand dollars have been paid by way of interest that by the terms of the charter can be converted into stock, it then follows that when this is added to the original subscription of three hundred thousand dollars, that the district and the tax-payers had stock, or were' entitled to stock at the time [72]*72of these actions, amounting in all to the sum of six hundred thousand dollars, and may have greatly more, as the bonds have not yet fully matured, and all the interest hereafter paid can be, under the charter, converted into stock. It is maintained that such was not the intention of the amendment of 1867, and the only stock that exists or can be valid is such stock as is or may be acquired by the taxpayer in the payment of the interest on these bonds and the principal as the bonds mature.

It is argued by appellant that no corporate rights belonged to or were given to this district by the act in question, and no express or implied power to vote the stock or receive the dividends — further, that the stock had not been paid for, and, therefore, by an express provision of the statute, the district, if owning the stock, could not vote it until fully paid.

As to these propositions attempted to be maintained by counsel, it is proper to refer to the original act of incorporation to which the act of 1869 was an amendment, under which the county of Shelby and the town of Shelbyville were empowered to subscribe to this enterprise, and by the sixth section of the original act of incorporation, under which the stockholders were authorized to elect directors, “each, stockholder was allowed one vote for every share owned by him, her or itf and the amended act in no manner changed or restricted this right as to any subsequent stockholder, whether a natural or artificial person.

The amended act creating this taxing district, making its subscription to depend upon the popular vote. [73]*73and requiring its bonds to be executed and delivered to the company by the county judge, under the name and seal or scroll of the district, or the portion of Shelby county authorized to vote, made it a corporation, entitling it to all the rights and privileges of a stockholder.

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Bluebook (online)
84 Ky. 66, 1886 Ky. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kreiger-v-shelby-r-r-kyctapp-1886.