Minis v. Pennsylvania R. R.

3 Balt. C. Rep. 203
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Balt. C. Rep. 203 (Minis v. Pennsylvania R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minis v. Pennsylvania R. R., 3 Balt. C. Rep. 203 (Md. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

HARLAN, O. J.—

The bill of complaint which was filed in this case on the 13th day of October, 1910, by certain minority stockholders of the Northern Central Railway Company seeks to set aside a so-called sale of 5,000 shares of stock of the Union Railroad Company of Baltimore, made by the directors of the Northern Central Railway Company to the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company in February, 1894, and have the stock together -with 3750 additional shares of stock acquired as a stock dividend on said 5,000 shares retransferred to the Northern Central Railway Company by the Philadelphia. Baltimore and AVashington Railroad Company, a road formed by the consolidation of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore' Railroad Company and the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company in 1902, and to have the latter road account and pay over to the Northern Central Railway Company [204]*204all cash dividends received by the Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington Railroad Company or its predecessors, the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company on said 5,000 shares and said additional 3,750 shares of .stock of the union Railroad Company, the Northern Central Railway Company restoring to the Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington Railroad Company the price paid to it for the 5,000 shares of stock of the Union Railroad Company, viz., $550,-000.00, together with legal interest from the date of said payment, and that all such cash dividends may be decreed to be distributed and paid among the stockholders of the Northern Central Railway Company.

The grounds upon which the so-called sale by the Directors of the Northern Central Railway Company is attacked are that it was fraudulent in law and ultra vires, and that the vendee was a participant in the wrong committed upon the stockholders of the Northern Central Railway Company by the directors.

If the action of the directors of the Northern Central Railway Company was fraudulent or ultra vires it is not denied that a stockholder injured thereby may invoke the aid of a Court of Equity to redress the wrong. The defendants, however, deny any fraud or that the transaction was ultra vires and they also rely upon the defense of laches and acquiescence more than 16 years having elapsed between the date of the transaction now sought to be attacked and the filing of the bill.

While the case must be considered as one of great importance because of the interests and amount of money involved, there are but four main questions which need to be determined by the court, and these are comparatively narrow, viz: First, Was the so-called sale of the stock of the Union Railroad Company to the Philadelphia Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company by the directors of the Northern Central Railway Company fraudulent in law or ultra vires? Second, Was the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company a participant in the illegal act? Third, Is laches or acquiescence a defense to this suit? And fourth, If the plaintiffs are entitled to relief, what is the form that this relief shall take?

The Union Railroad Company of Baltimore was incorporated in 1866, and its line of railway runs from the line of the Northern Central Railway Company at North street in the city of Baltimore east of Union Station, through a tunnel eastwardly and and southerly to tide water at Canton and to a connection with the Baltimore & Sparrows Point Railroad at Colgate Creek, and with a branch running to Bay View Junction on the line of the Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington Railroad Company. The lines of the Union Railroad Company gives the access and the only access of the Northern Central Railroad Company and the line heretofore belonging to the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company to deep water, in or near Baltimore, and its said line is also the connecting link between the line of the former Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company and the former Baltimore & Potomac Roalroad Company and over the line of the Union Railroad Company all through traffic running by the said roads (now consolidated at the Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington Railroad Company) to and from the cities of New York and Philadelphia and the North and East arid from and to the city of Washington and the South must pass.

This physical relationship of the Union Railroad Company with the lines of the Northern Central Railwas' Company and with the lines of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company and the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company (now consolidated, as the Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington Railroad Company) is an important factor in the ease, but is not the subject of dispute.

Prior to 1882 the Union Railroad Company was owned and operated by the Canton Company of Baltimore. It had been completed and opened for traffic in 1873. By the terms of its Charter (1870 Cli. 412, Sec. 2) it was provided that:

“All railroad companies shall have the right, upon equal terms, to run their locomotives and cars over the tracks of the said company, and no discrimination in rates of toll, or in any other respect, shall ever be made in favor of any company; provided, that the said Union Railroad Company [205]*205shall not charge for the use of the roacl a sum exceeding the rale of five cents per ton per mile for tolls for use of said road for every mile or proportion-ale part of a mile, and for passengers a sum not exceeding the rate of ten cents per passenger per mile or proportionate part of a mile for each passenger.”

On December 30, 1873, an agreement had been entered into between the Northern Central Railway Company, the Batlimore & Potomac Railroad Co., and the Western Maryland Railroad Company covering ilie nse of the line of the Union Railroad Company by the other companies, as tools therein fixed and in accordance with the rates so established, and a supplemental agreement dated May 1, 1875, the line of the Union Railroad Company was used by these companies and the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Railroad Company until the purchase of its stock from the Canton Company in 1881-82. These agreements, the defendants say, were considered fair and proper when made, but as the traffic over the Union Railroad Company, of the Northern Central Railway Company, the Baltimore & Potomac Railroad Company and the Philadelphia Wilmington & Baltimore Railroad Company increased, and freight rates received by them became lower, the rate of toll provided by these agreements became very burdensome to them. Inasmuch as it is conceded that much the. greater proportion of the traffic of the Union Railroad Co. was contributed by the Northern Central Railway Company, the burden of course bore more heavily upon it than upon the two other companies named. There would naturally seem to have been but three ways of relief; first, to secure a reduction of tolls upon the Union Railroad Company ; second, for an independent line to be built to supply the facilities supplied by 'the Union Railroad Company; third, for the Union Railroad Company to be acquired from the Canton Company by some one or all of the railroads contributing traffic to it, or by some company friendly to them. What efforts were made looking to the reduction of tolls does not appear, although Mr. Newcomer in his letter of December 35, 1883, to Mr. Cassat says he had the opportunity of impressing upon Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Balt. C. Rep. 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minis-v-pennsylvania-r-r-mdcirctctbalt-1912.