Memphis & L. R. R. v. Dow

19 F. 388, 22 Blatchf. 48, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2051
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedFebruary 11, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 19 F. 388 (Memphis & L. R. R. v. Dow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Memphis & L. R. R. v. Dow, 19 F. 388, 22 Blatchf. 48, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2051 (circtsdny 1884).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

The complainant’s hill is filed against the trustees and holders of the mortgage bonds of the complainant for $2,600,-00Ú, and the mortgage upon its corporate franchises and property for securing the same, executed May 2,1877, seeking to annul the bonds and mortgage, upon the ground that they wore issued and executed by the complainant without corporate power in that behalf.

A brief statement of tho facts relating to the creation of the mortgage bonds, their origin, consideration, and purpose, will serve to present the legal questions involved. The complainant, created under a spec'al act of the legislature of Arkansas, is a reorganized corporation which has succeeded to the property and franchises of a former corporation of the same name under the foreclosure of a mortgage of that corporation, and a conveyance i uder the decree of foreclosure. By the terms of that mortgage, and by the provisions of the decree of foreclosure in conformity therewith, it was provided that if the trustees named in the mortgage should be requested so to do by a majority of the holders of the bonds secured thereby they might purchase the property, and, in that case, no bondholder should have any claim to the premises or the proceeds thereof, except for his pro rata share, as represented in a new corporation or company to be formed, by a majority in interest of said bondholders, for the use and benefit of the holders of the mortgage bonds. The trustees purchased at the sale, and thereupon the bondholders proceeded to organize the present corporation. There was due to tho holders of the old mortgage bonds $2,600,000 of principal, and $1,300,000 of unpaid interest, and the scheme of reorganization contemplated the acceptance by the bondholders of the new mortgage bonds in place of their old ones, and of the capital stock in place of their accrued and unpaid interest. Accordingly, by tho terms of the reorganization agreement, the capital stock of the new corporation was fixed at $1,300,000, divided into 13,000 shares of $100 each, and was declared to be full paid; and by the same agreement the trustees who had purchased at the foreclosure sale were directed to transfer the property and franchises purchased by them to the new corporation, upon the condition, among others, that the new corporation should execute and deliver to said trustees the new mortgage bonds for $2,600,000, now sought to be set aside. Thereupon—the new corporation having agreed to accept a conveyance of the property and franchises of the old corporation, pursuant to the terms of the reorganization agreement—the trustees convoyed the same to the new corporation, the deed of conveyance reciting the conditions upon which, as trustees, for the owners of the outstanding mortgage bonds, they were authorized to make such conveyance, and further reciting the acceptance of such conditions by the new corporation. The corporation accepted this conveyance and took [390]*390possession under it. Every certificate of shares of stock issued by it contains a recital that the holder takes his stock subject to the mortgage bonds in question. The new mortgage bonds were issued and delivered to the trustees for the holders of the outstanding mortgage bonds, and were distributed by the trustees, pro rata, to the holders of those bonds. The capital stock was also apportioned among the holders of these bonds, pro rata, and certificates were delivered for the shares to which each bondholder was entitled.

After the reorganized corporation had operated the railroad for several years, and early in the year 1880, the majority of the stock was acquired by Messrs. Margrand, Gould, and Sage, in the interest of the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Bailway Company. The object seems to have been to acquire control of the corporation and subordinate its management to the interests of the Iron Mountain company. The parties who thus acquired control now control the corporation, and, speaking through it, insist that the mortgage bonds, which were the consideration of the transfer of the property to the corporation, are void, and should be set aside. The case, then, is this: The complainant is a corporation which was brought into life by a body of creditors of a pre-existing corporation, who had succeeded to all the property thereof, and who proposed to convey such property to the complainant upon receiving, among other considerations, the mortgage bonds in suit. The complainant assented to this proposition, accepted a conveyance of the property, and executed its mortgage bonds. It asserts now that although it had power to acquire the property it had no lawful power to pay for it in the terms and manner promised. Its contention is founded upon a section of the charter or act of incorporation by which alone it is claimed its power to create a mortgage is conferred, and upon a provision of the constitution of Arkansas which limits the power of corporations of that state in issuing bonds. The section of the charter relied on is section 9, which is as follows:

“The said company may at any time increase its capital to a sum sufficient to complete the said road, and stock it with any thing necessary to give it full operation and effect, either by opening books for new stock, or by selling such new stock, or by borrowing money on the credit of the company, and on the mortgage of its charter and works.”

The constitutional provision is contained in article 12, and declares :

“No private corporation shall issue stock or bonds except for money or property actually received, or labor done; and all fictitious increase of stock or indebtedness shall be void.”

As the bonds and stock issued by this corporation were issued for property actually received, viz., the said railroad and all the corporate property, it is not obvious how this constitutional provision has any application to the present controversy. It is assumed in the argument of counsel for the complainant, and reiterated several times, [391]*391that the complainant received no consideration for the mortgage bonds. Upon what theory this is claimed or can be maintained is not apparent, and, indeed, is incomprehensible. The original corporation had been divested of its property by the foreclosure sale. The newly-organized corporation accepted a reconveyance upon condition oí executing the new mortgage bonds to the vendors. Whether the complainant is a new corporation, or whether it is the old corporation, need not he considered, because in either view the mortgage bonds were the consideration of the conveyance.

The proposition which is advanced, that the vendors and the vendees were the same persons, and therefore there could be no contract or sale, is not even technically correct. One of the parties was the corporation; the bondholders, by their trustees, were the other parties. True, the stockholders of the corporation were also the bondholders, but the circumstance that all the stockholders of a corporation arc at the same time the several owners of property, which the corporation wishes to buy, does not destroy the power of the parties to contract together. Suppose there were two corporations, each composed of the same stockholders, can it bo seriously contended that one corporation could not make a contract with the other? A corporation may contract with its directors; why not with its stockholders ? If the complainant ever acquired the property it was by a purchase; if it could purchase, the bondholders could sell, and the mortgage was the consideration of the purchase and sale.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. 388, 22 Blatchf. 48, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/memphis-l-r-r-v-dow-circtsdny-1884.