Memphis & Charleston Railroad v. Woods

88 Ala. 630
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 88 Ala. 630 (Memphis & Charleston Railroad v. Woods) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Memphis & Charleston Railroad v. Woods, 88 Ala. 630 (Ala. 1889).

Opinion

STONE, C. J.

This suit was commenced October 27, 1887, and is prosecuted by stockholders of the Memphis & Charleston Railroad Company, .representing a minority of the stock. n

The case was submitted in the court below on a demurrer to the bill, and on a motion to dismiss it for want of equity. From .the chancellor’s decree overruling the demurrer, and refusing to dismiss the bill, or to dissolve the injunction, the present appeal is prosecuted. Coming before us in this form, we must treat as true all the averments of the bill which are well pleaded, and in the further progress of this opinion they will be stated as facts.

The Memphis & Charleston Railroad was constructed under charters obtained from the States of Tennessee and Alabama, and extends from Memphis in Tennessee to Stevenson in Alabama, running partly through Mississippi. One hundred and fifty miles of the track are in Alabama. The entire length of the road is not shown. The capital stock is $5,312,725, divided into 212,509 shares, of $25 each. Of these shares, 106,261 — being a majority of the whole num[633]*633ber — stand on the books in the name of the East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Bail way Company, another corporation, which does not connect with or touch the Memphis & Charleston Bailroad at any point. The complainants hold eight thousand and eight hundred of the shares, representing two hundred and twenty thousand dollars of the capital stock, and they sue in their names, and in the names of such other of the stockholders as may join in the suit.

The Memphis & Charleston Bailroad has been in operation for a third of a century. The profits of the corporation, if any, prior to the time of its passing under the control of the East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Bailroad Company, hereafter shown, we have no certain means of ascertaining, further than that from June, 1858, two years after the completion of the road, to June, 1861, the net earnings were never less than ten, and once as high as sixteen per cent. We have no account of any earnings during the civil war— from 1861 to 1865 — and suppose, not only ‘that there were no net profits, but that the cessation of hostilities left the road very much out of repair. Extraordinary expenditures became necessary to repair and equip the road, and up to June 30, 1867, the expenditures exceeded the receipts. During the years ending June, 1868, to June, 1874, surplus profits, amounts not shown, were earned by the road each year, except the two years 1871 and 1872. The sum of the deficiency for these two years was about one hundred and fifty thousand dollars.

The East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Bailroad Company obtained its charters from the States of Tennessee and Alabama, and had been many years in operation. It extended easterly far beyond Knoxville, Tennessee; and having absorbed, or otherwise obtained control of the Selma, Borne & Dalton Bailroad, an Alabama corporation, extended in a south-western direction one hundred and fifty miles or more into Alabama, terminating at Selma in this State. It also operated a line which touched at Chattanooga in the State of Tennessee, eastward from Stevenson, and distant from it twenty-five or more miles. There was, however, a connecting line between the respective termini, but it belonged to another railroad corporation. The E. T., V. & Ga. B. B. Company had probably many other extensions and connections, not necessary to be noticed here. The extent, distances and connections of the East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Bailroad Company are stated partly on general knowledge,

[634]*634About 1874, one Wilson was elected president of the Memphis & Charleston Bailroad Company, and was continued in the office until 1881. His election was procured through the instrumentality of the East Tennessee, 'Virginia & Georgia Bailroad Company, and although not exactly coterminous, the two railroads have been operated substantially under one management ever since. In the first instance, the Memphis & Charleston Bailroad was let by lease to the East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Company, the rent agreed on being the net income of the former road above expenses. In a suit instituted for the purpose of testing the legality of that lease, it was set aside as being ultra vires. Another suit between the Knoxville & Ohio Bailroad Company and the East Tenn., Va. & Ga. Company, to which the Memphis & Charleston Company was not a party, resulted in the acquisition by the East Tenn., Va. & Ga. Company of a large volume, nearly one-half, of the shares of stock in the Memphis & Charleston B. B. Company. Later acquisitions placed a majority — a bare majority — of the entire stock of the latter company, in the name and asserted ownership of the East Tenn., Va. & Ga. Company.

The bill insinuates that each of the two suits named above was collusive, at least in part, and facts averred point in that direction. It is also averred that certain shares of the stock, which were held by the Memphis & Charleston Company in its own right, were transferred by the, common president of the two companies to the East Tenn., Va. & Ga. Company without any authority therefor. Marked bias and partiality in favor of the latter company are charged to have prevailed in these transactions, and it is also charged that the East Tenn., Va. & Ga. Company was without the power to acquire and own stock in another railroad company. It is expressly charged, that the intent and purpose of the said purchase of stock was to give to the E. Tenn., Va. & Ga. Company a controlling vote in the management of the Memphis & Charleston Company; and the exhibit taken from the record of the suit with the Knoxville & Ohio B. B. Company, if correctly set forth, proves this charge to be true. The bill further charges that, after the agreement of lease, noted above, which was in 1877, the two railroads have been operated under one and the same president, and under one and the same management. Inequality and fraud are charged in the combined management of the two roads, greatly to the profit of the East Tenn., Va. & Ga. Company, and to the equal detriment of the Memphis & Charleston Company.

[635]*635The bill makes specific charges of partiality and maladministration, as follows: First, When the East Tenn., Ya. & Ga. Company acquired controlling power over the Memphis & Charleston Bailroad, the repair shops of the latter had been partially destroyed, but could have been rebuilt at a small expenditure. They were not rebuilt. The rolling-stock of the M. & O. Company was carried to the shops of the E. T., Ya. & Ga. Company at Knoxville, Tennessee, “where the repairing was done at extravagant prices, and mileage was charged for all the distance the rolling-stock was carried over the road of the E. T., Ya. & Ga. B. B. Company.” Second, “The rolling-stock (of the M. & C. Company) was unnecessarily increased at exorbitant cost”— ($500,000 at one time) — “and was used by the E. T., Ya. & Ga. B. B. Company upon its own road, without any compensation” to the M. & C. B. B. Company for such use. Third, “The M. & C. B. B. was renewed with steel rails, iron bridges and ballast, in advance of the needs of the railroad, to keep down the apparent net earnings.” Fourth, “Less than the pro rata

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Bluebook (online)
88 Ala. 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/memphis-charleston-railroad-v-woods-ala-1889.