Meredith v. New Jersey Zinc & Iron Co.

55 N.J. Eq. 211
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 55 N.J. Eq. 211 (Meredith v. New Jersey Zinc & Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meredith v. New Jersey Zinc & Iron Co., 55 N.J. Eq. 211 (N.J. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The complainants are, severally, the owners of certain shares-of stock in the New Jersey Zinc and Iron Company, and seek [213]*213By their bill to enjoin the performance of a contract entered into by that company with the other defendants.

The New Jersey Zinc Company was organized in 1880, under the General Corporation act of this state, and the purposes and objects of the corporation and places where its business is to be carried on are designated as follows in the certificate of organisation :

The places where the business of the company is to be carried on are the county of Sussex, in the State of New Jersey; the city of Newark, in the county of Essex in said state, and in the city of New York, county and State of New York.”

The objects are

•“ the mining of zinc and iron ores and other ores and mineral substances; the manufacture and sale of the products of such ores and minerals; the purchasing, leasing, holding and selling such real estate, machinery, mines and mineral rights and merchandise and other personal property as may be deemed ■necessary or convenient for the prosecution of the above-mentioned business.”

The business of selling the manufactured product of such ores ■and minerals out of the state was to be carried on “ in the said ■city of New York, and the principal part of such business within said state is to be transacted in the said city of Newark.” The capital stock was fixed at $3,040,000, divided into thirty thousand four hundred shares of $100 each. The complainants are the holders of two hundred and ninety-one of these shares, a little less than one per cent, of the whole.

The contract whose performance is sought to be enjoined was submitted to a meetiug of the stockholders called for that purpose, and received the approval of about eight-tenths of the whole. There is no room for the inference that each and every stockholder so approving did not have the opportunity to examine and consider the propriety of the contract and to exercise an intelligent judgment upon it. There is no room for inference that there was any mistake or any fraud, actual or constructive, in the procuration of the contract. There is no room for the suspicion even that the case presented has any of the features of ihose cases, unfortunately quite numerous in these days, where [214]*214a bare majority of the stockholders in one corporation use theiit power to make a contract with another corporation in which they are more largely interested, which is very advantageous to the latter and disadvantageous to the former. In short, there is no-room to suspect even that there is the least element of a party making a contract with itself.

It follows that the general wisdom and propriety of the contract, having been approved by so large a majority of the stockholders, cannot be called in question here, and so much of the-allegations of the bill and, arguments of counsel as are based upon the idea of its improvidence and unsupported by any proof-must be disregarded.

However, in order to appreciate the value of the attack on the contract based upon other grounds presently to be mentioned, it is worth while to state generally the origin and object of it,

The defendant the New Jersey Zinc and Iron Company and the defendant the Hardyston Mining Company, very recently successor in title to the defendant the Lehigh Zinc and Iron Company, are severally the owners of certain mineral rights situate at a place called Mine Hill, in the Wallkill valley, in the county of Sussex. The mineral which they own is called franklinite and contains zinc, and its value consists in the presence of that-mineral in it. It was discovered some fifty or sixty years ago.,, and when first discovered, and before the lodes or veins in which it was found were developed, it was supposed that there were-two distinct minerals so situate that they could be separately owned and mined, namely, zinc and franklinite, the latter a peculiar mixture of mineral substances which takes its name from the village of Franklin, near which the veins are situate. Based upon this supposition, the titles to the two different minerals found in the same lodes or veins, at the place here in question, were separated. The right to mine the zinc ore was sold by itself, and the right to mine the franklinite ore was sold by itself.

But when an attempt was made to define and separate, in practice, the two ores in the earth, it was found that it was practicably impossible, and a serious dispute at once arose whether the [215]*215various veins or portions of veins which were uncovered were franklinite or zinc.

This state .of things has led to a series of litigations in the state and federal courts, with varying results, which, I may here say, were not at all referred to in the bill, but in argument counsel for defendants relied, and I think properly, upon the common knowledge of the bench and bar of this state, derived from the official reports of the various suits, for a history of this controversy.

Before adverting to those reports it is proper to say that the defendant the New Jersey Zinc and Iron Company is the successor in title to the New Jersey Zinc Company, organized under a special charter about the middle of the century, and which became entitled to the “zinc” ore in the tract called Mine hill.

The title to the “ franklinite” in a district known as the south half of Mine hill became vested in one party, and that of the franklinite in the north half became vested in another party.

The first suit was between the old New Jersey .Zinc Company and the owner of the franklinite on the south half, and that resulted, first, iñ a victory for the franklinite company, as reported' in % JBeas. 333. That decision was reversed, on appeal, in 3 McCart. J¡.18, and the title to both ores in effect apparently vested in the zinc company. That was in 1862.

Under that decision the old zinc company prosecuted its business upon the south half of Mine hill until some time in the next decade, when a party holding an unsatisfied mortgage on the franklinite in the south half, who was not a party to the .previous litigation, foreclosed his mortgage, obtained the title and commenced a suit in the federal court against the New Jersey Zinc Company, which resulted adversely to that company. The result of that litigation was that the present New Jersey Zinc and Iron Company was organized, and the two warring titles to the franklinite and the zinc ores were conveyed to the new company, whereby it became the undisputed owner of all the ores in the south half of Mine hill and of the zinc ores on the north half.

In the meantime the franklinite on the north half became [216]*216vested in the Lehigh Zinc and Iron Company, and about nine years ago the New Jersey Zinc and Iron Company commenced suit against the Lehigh Zinc and Iron Company to establish its title to the north half, which suit, with varying fortunes in the courts, was finally decided against the New Jersey Zinc and Iron Company in November, 1896.

This decision, however, covered only a part of the north half of the hill. Another undeveloped vein of the ore still remained unaffected by the decision.

In this state of things negotiations were entered into between the parties for the purpose of settling the litigation by the purchase by one party or the other of the opposite interests.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 N.J. Eq. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meredith-v-new-jersey-zinc-iron-co-njch-1897.