Mowrey v. Indianapolis & C. R.

17 F. Cas. 930, 4 Biss. 78
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana
DecidedJune 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 930 (Mowrey v. Indianapolis & C. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mowrey v. Indianapolis & C. R., 17 F. Cas. 930, 4 Biss. 78 (circtdin 1866).

Opinion

MCDONALD, District Judge.

This is a proceeding in equity for an injunction. The hill was filed on the 2Sth of May, 1860. On the same day, the complainant, without notice to the defendants, and in their absence, moved for a temporary injunction to operate till the motion could be fully heard on due notice on a day to be fixed by the court. As the bill stated facts indicating a pressing emergency, I then ordered that the defendants should be enjoined as prayed, till, on due notice to them, the motion could be fully heard ! on the fifth day of June, 18GG. On the latter day, all parties appeared by counsel. The defendants then moved for a dissolution of the injunction already granted; and, at the same time, the complainant moved for a temporary injunction till the final hearing, or till the further order of the court.

The injunction ordered on the 28th of May was decreed without much consideration on my part. I followed a practice which had long prevailed in the courts of the state of Indiana. But, on further reflection, I think my order for a temporary injunction was premature. Equity would seem to demand that, in cases of emergency, where irreparable injury would follow unless an immediate injunction were ordered, the national courts should have power to grant temporary injunctions without notice of the application for them to the party enjoined. But the act of congress of March 2, 1793, forbids that any writ of injunction shall “be granted in any case without reasonable previous notice to the adverse party, or his attorney, of the time and place of moving for the same.” 1 Stat. 333. In view of this act, as well as of the 55th rule in equity of the supreme court, it should seem that no special injunction can be granted by this court but on due notice. And in the case of New York v. Connecticut, 4 Dall. [4 U. S.] 1, the supreme court has decided that an injunction can neither be granted by the United States courts, nor any judge thereof, without due notice to the adverse party or his attorney. I, therefore, dissolve the injunction ordered on the 28th of May.

We proceed to consider the motion now made by the complainant for a temporary injunction. By the bill, it appears that Albert L. Mowrey, the complainant, is the owner of three hundred and thirty-one thousand five hundred and fifty dollars in the shares of the capital stock of the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad Company; and that the defendant [Henry C.] Lord, is the president of the company. The corporation exists under a special charter from the Indiana legislature, granted before the adoption of the constitution of 1851.

The bill alleges that a negotiation has lately been set on foot to consolidate said company with the Lafayette and Indianapolis Railroad Company. To this consolidation it appears that the latter company has already consented. And it further appears that the board of directors of the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad Company have called a meeting of their stockholders to obtain their consent to the consolidation.

The bill charges that, on the 10th of May [931]*931last, certain articles of consolidation were agreed to and signed by H. O. Lord, T. A. Morris, and W. Wright, a committee on tlie part of the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad Company, and by W. F. Reynolds, a ■committee on the part of the Lafayette and Indianapolis Railroad Company. A copy of these articles is exhibited; and they purport ■ tp .be the work of the boards of directors of tiie two companies, “by and with the assent of their ''respective stockholders.” Among other things, these articles provide for the issuance by the consolidated company of bonds to the amount of two million eight hundred thousand dollars, of which two millions and a half are to be delivered to said Reynolds in trust, first, to pay all the expenses of such trust; second, to pay all the legal liabilities of the Lafayette and Indianapolis Railroad Company for their stock; third, to pay such stockholders of the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad Company .as desire to exchange their stock for these bonds. The articles provide that, after these payments, the residue of the bonds shall be appropriated in various ways unimportant to the present decision to be stated.

The bill also charges that in 18G5 a corporation was organized.to construct a rail- ■ road from Indianapolis to the Indiana state line in the direction of Danville, Illinois, by the name of the Cincinnati, Indianapolis, and Danville Railroad Company; that, at the instance of the defendant Lord, the complainant •subscribed two hundred thousand dollars to the capital stock of that company, and other persons subscribed thereto one million eight hundred thousand dollars; that Lord, and the -directors of the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad Company, and the directors of the Lafayette and Indianapolis Railroad Company, are attempting to effect the said consolidation, with the fraudulent design to break down the Cincinnati, Indianapolis, and Danville Railroad Company, and render the •complainant’s stock therein worthless; that by issuing said bonds, the defendants intend to buy up therewith all the stock so, as aforesaid, subscribed to the road last aforesaid, except the two hundred thousand dollars subscribed by the complainant; and that with a view to that object, the said Lord has already, as president of the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad Company, actually bargained for a considerable portion of the stock •of the Cincinnati, Indianapolis, and Danville Railroad Company, agreeing to pay therefor ■said bonds when they shall be issued.

To all these doings ~the complainant objects as frauds on his rights; and he especially objects to said consolidation, insisting that the same can not be legally effected without his consent. I lay no stress on the aver-ments in the bill touching the Cincinnati, Indianapolis, and Danville Railroad Company. That company is not a party to this suit; .and if it were. I think the matters relating to it and its stock are not proper subjects of consideration in a bill whose principal object, evidently, is to enjoin the consolidation of two other railroads. Indeed, I suspect that to unite all these matters in one bill might make it multifarious.

Nor do I deem material any inquiry into the policy of the proposed consolidation. Whether such a consolidation would be beneficial or injurious to the stockholders in general, or "would favorably or unfavorably affect the complainant’s stock in particular, are matters to be consiuered and determined by them alone. The only question for the court is a question of power. Have these corporations the power to consolidate against the will of one of the stockholders? If they have, we will not disturb them in the exercise of that power; if they have not, we are bound to forbid its exercise.

The statute of Indiana, on the subject of the consolidation of railroad companies, gives the power to consolidate in general terms, without any provision as to the consent of stockholders. 1 Gavin' & H. p. 526. While, therefore, the general power of consolidation without doubt exists in this state, yet. whether such consolidation — especially in the present case — can be legally effected, without the consent of all the stockholders, cannot be determined by any Indiana statute, but must depend on general principles of law.

We have seen that complainant is a stockholder in the Indianapolis and Cincinnati Railroad Company to the amount of three hundred and thirty-one thousand five hundred and fifty dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 930, 4 Biss. 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mowrey-v-indianapolis-c-r-circtdin-1866.