Linder v. Hartwell R.

73 F. 320, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2632
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 8, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 73 F. 320 (Linder v. Hartwell R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linder v. Hartwell R., 73 F. 320, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2632 (circtndga 1896).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge.

This is a bill filed by T. J. Linder, originally against the Hartwell Railroad Company and the Richmond & Danville Railroad Company, in the superior court: of Hart: county, and removed by the Richmond & Danville Railroad Company to this court. Recently the {Southern Railway Company was made a party defendant, and since the argument the plaintiff has conceded the necessity for making John B. Maxwell, trustee, a party, and an order has been taken i.o that effect. The case made by Linder’s bill is Unit the Hartwell Railroad Company is a corporation of Georgia organized for the purpose of constructing a railroad, from Bowersville to Hartwell, Ga.; that the Richmond & Danville Railroad Company is a foreign corporation of the state of Virginia; that the capital stock of the Hartwell Railroad Company is $21,000, in shares of $100 each, of which Linder owns 5 shares, the Richmond & Danville Railroad Company owns 189 shares, making it a majority stockholder; that the Hartwell Railroad Company, on the 2d of January, 1880, issued its first mortgage bonds in the sum of $20,000, in denomination as follows: 20 of said bonds being for $100 each, and 30 bonds at $500 each, all bearing interest at 10 per cent, per annum from the 1st of September, 1879, and due and payable September 1, 1.889. No part of the interest on these bonds was due or payable before the 1st of January, 1884, at which time, all accrued interest was to be paid, and Uie interest thereafter to be paid semiannually on the 1st of March and September of each year. On said 2d óf January, 1880, a mortgage was executed in favor of John I?. Maxwell, R. E. Saddler, and John Snow, trustees named therein, on said railroad and appurtenances, to secure the payment of ¡¡¡lid bonds. Linder is the owner of $3,800 of these bonds, with a large amount of accrued interest; and the remainder were owned by the Richmond & Danville Railroad Company, which, as alleged in the amendment, passed into the hands of the Southern Railway in 1884, after the bonds had matured. The Hartwell Railroad was constructed by a construction company under a contract by which the construction company was to own and operate the road, and reeeiye the profits of the same until January 1, 1884. In the meantime the con[322]*322struction company sold out the balance of its term to the Richmond & Danville Bailroad Company, who operated the road from the time of this sale, in 1881, to the 1st day of January, 1884, when the railroad was turned over to the Hartwell Bailroad Company. This change was a mere formality, indicated by some entries in books; the road continuing to be operated, as it had been before, by the officers of the Bichmond & Danville Bailroad Company, as the officers of the Hartwell Bailroad Company. The bill charges, further, that the road was operated by the Bichmond & Danville Railroad Company, for its benefit, and without regard to the interest of the minority stockholders or the creditors of the road; that the books of the company were kept in Virginia, where they were inaccessible to the minority stockholders and creditors, or, at least, inaccessible without great inconvenience and expense; that the Bichmond & Dan-ville Bailroad Company has failed and refused to furnish a statement of the gross income, expenses, and net income of the road, and that it has failed to furnish an exemplification from the hooks showing the accounts of the Hartwell Bailroad, and the disposition made of its earnings, and has refused to allow an inspection of the books; that the majority stockholders have fraudulently withdrawn the earnings of the road from the treasurer, and applied them to their own private use, and refuse to account therefor. The bill further alleges that the complainant, not having access to the books of the company, cannot state positively as to amounts, but that, since January, 1884, the gross receipts of the Hartwell Railroad have averaged $9,000 per annum, amounting in all to $72,000 at the time the hill was filed; that the legitimate expenses of said road had not exceeded $3,000 per annum, leaving as a net profit $8,000 per annum, or a total of $48,000, or some other large sum, in the hands of the Richmond & Danville Bailroad Company; that the effect of this fraudulent conversion of the income of the Hartwell Railroad was to leave it insolvent and unable to pay the demands against it; that B. E. Saddler, one of the trustees, has died since his appointment, and before the filing of this bill; that John Snow refused to act as trustee; and that John B. Maxwell refused to sue. The prayers are for the appointment of a receiver; for an injunction; for a mandamus requiring the Richmond & Danville Bailroad Company to turn over certain property (which is described in the bill as having been wrongfully taken by it, and which has not beeiL alluded to because deemed immaterial); for an accounting between the majority stockholders, the Richmond &' Danville Railroad Company, the Hartwell Railroad Company, and the plaintiff as to the earnings of the road; for the foreclosure of the mortgage; and for subpoena.

The demurrers are on the grounds — First. That Maxwell, trustee, is not made a party. This has been cured by the amendment referred to. Second. That there is no allegation that the officers of ¡he Hartwell Bailroad Company were requested to act and instil nte this proceeding by Linder before he filed his bill. Third. That the trustee, by the terms of the mortgage, has no right to proceed to foreclose against the mortgagor for default in payment of principal and interest, except upon the request of holders of not less than one-fourth [323]*323of the bonds upon which default shall have occ/irred. Fourth. That Linder, as a bondholder (assuming that, for the reason stated in the second ground, he cannot proceed as a stockholder), has no right, as mortgagee, to the income and profits of the road while it was in the possession of the mortgagor, and before proceedings to foreclose. This states the substance of all the demurrers filed bv the Hartwell Railroad Company, the Richmond & Danville Railroad Company, and the Southern Railway Company.

It will be perceived (hat there are three questions for determination: First. As to the right of Linder, as a stockholder in the Hart-well Railroad Company, to maintain this suit. There is uo allegation in the bill of any request made to the officers of the Hartwell Railroad Company to institute this proceeding before Linder commenced it. So that it would he necessary that he should have the right, under ihe peculiar circumstances of this case, to bring this bill as a stockholder without first making a demand on the officers of the Hartwell Railroad Company to proceed. What would be true as- to this, under the facts of this case, it is not necessary to determine, as the plaintiff’s counsel have stated in open court that they do not rely upon Linder’s rights as a stockholder, hut upon his rights as a bondholder.

As to third ground of demurrer, the power given the trustees, by the terms of the mortgage, upon the default in the payment of principal and interest, is to take possession of the mortgaged property, and to sell the same. Even if the trustees had no power to proceed to foreclose the mortgage in court except upon the request of one-fourth of the holders of bonds ordinarily, (he situation of the bondholders here, and their relation to each other and to the Hart-well Railroad Company, makes an exceptional case, and justifies this proceeding. The Richmond & Danville Railroad Company owns more than one-fourth of the bonds, .and therefore has it in its power, if the request of one-fourth of the bonds is necessary, to delay proceedings indefinitely.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 F. 320, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linder-v-hartwell-r-circtndga-1896.