Oelbermann v. New York & Northern Railroad

7 Misc. 352, 27 N.Y.S. 945
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 7 Misc. 352 (Oelbermann v. New York & Northern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oelbermann v. New York & Northern Railroad, 7 Misc. 352, 27 N.Y.S. 945 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.

The complaint in this action is quite voluminous and contains many allegations of the motives and the intention of the defendants, the New York Central Railroad Company and Drexel, Morgan & Co., stated to be reprehensible, but I am unable to see that any fact is alleged that would entitle the plaintiffs to any of the relief demanded.

The action is brought to restrain the defendant, the New York Central Railroad Company, from voting upon certain stock owned by it at the election of officers of the New York & Northern Railroad Company, and restraining the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, as trustee under a certain mortgage, from foreclosing that mortgage, and the complaint asks for a receiver for the New York & Northern Railroad Company and for other and further relief.

There is no allegation that any of the defendants to the action have acquired any interest in the property of the New York & Northern Railroad Company, except so far as it is alleged they are stockholders or the holders of bonds of the said company, and the action, therefore, cannot, upon the allegations contained in the complaint, be turned into an action to recover an interest in the property of the New York & Northern Railroad Company that had been acquired by any of the defendants. What has to be now determined is whether or not the plaintiffs are entitled to any relief, conceding the facts alleged in the complaint to be true.

The plaintiffs apparently lay great stress upon the allegation that the act of the officers of the New York Central Railroad Company in purchasing the stock of the New York & Northern Railroad Company was ultra vires, and hence void, but I do not see, conceding that to be true, how that can give the plaintiff the right to any relief in this action. When the [354]*354New York Central Railroad Company purchased that stock from its holders, and paid its money for the stock, the former holders of the stock parted with their title thereto. The only persons who could object to that transaction were the stockholders of the Central Railroad Company or the People of the state. The plaintiffs, as stockholders of the New York & Northern Railroad Company, had no interest that would entitle them to object to the right of the New York Central railroad to invest its money in the stock of another corporation, and as to all the world except those interested in the New York Central railroad or the People of the state the title to the stock purchased by the New York Central Railroad Company vested in it.

The complaint alleges that the default in the payment of the coupons upon the bonds of the New York & Northern Railroad Company occurred on June 1,1892, though by the terms of the mortgage the default did not become operative until one year from that date, and it was competent for the said railroad company at any time within said period of one year to pay said coupons .and be relieved from said default. There is no allegation, however, that the said New York & Northern Railroad Company at any time within that year had the money necessary to pay said coupons. It is suggested that the stockholders might and would have, by an assessment on their shares of stock, provided the necessary funds to meet said interest charges; but it is not alleged, nor does it appear, that the said New York & Northern Railroad Company had the power to assess its stockholders, or any right to compel the stockholders to pay that amount.

It appears that on January 28, 1893, the defendant, J. Pierrepont Morgan, a member of the firm of Drexel, Morgan & Co., purchased the majority of the stock and of the second mortgage bonds of the New York & Northern Railroad Company, and the said Morgan, being then the holder and owner of said securities, on or about the 18th of March, 1893, sold the same to the New York Central Railroad Company, and, so far as appears, this was the first time that the [355]*355Central Railroad Company became the owner of any of the stock or bonds of the New York & Northern Railroad Company. No fact is alleged to show that the New York Central Railroad Company did any act that prevented the New York & Northern Railroad Company from paying its past dne interest, except that it refused to advance the money out of its own pocket to pay such interest, and the allegation that the majority of the stockholders had a purpose to get the property of the New York & Northern Railroad Company does not give a right of action. Some unlawful act of the majority stockholder must be alleged that is either actually accomplished or is contemplating to accomplish that purpose.

It is a novel proposition that a bondholder of a railroad company who is also a stockholder cannot insist upon the payment of his bonds because he also owns the stock of the company, but is bound not only to forego his right to collect the amount due him, but is also obliged to contribute to pay interest on other bonds held by the company when the company is unable to meet its obligations.

The complaint further alleges that, having acquired the securities mentioned, the New York Central railroad offered to lease the property, franchises and privileges of the New York & Northern Railroad Company and voted upon the stock held by it in favor of such lease. The other stockholders, including the plaintiffs, objected to such lease, and in consequence of their objection the same was not consummated.

The subsequent allegation that the New York Central Railroad Company purchased additional bonds of the New York & Northern Railroad Company, and subsequently requested the trustee, or procured Drexel, Morgan & Co. to request the trustee, to foreclose the mortgage to secure the payment of such bonds, gives to the plaintiffs no cause of action, as that act was not unlawful. The New York & Northern Railroad Company, so far as appears, had no money to pay its coupons, and the holders of the bonds had the right to require the trustee to foreclose the mortgage upon the failure of the railroad company to pay the interest on the bonds; nor is any [356]*356fact alleged that would justify the court in enjoining the trustee from prosecuting such foreclosure suit, or prevent the holders of the bonds from obtaining the relief to which they were entitled.

The complaint alleges that two of the stockholders of the New York & Northern Railroad Company who were opposed to the foreclosure of the mortgage, one of such stockholders being one of the plaintiffs in this action, were made parties to-that foreclosure proceeding, and interposed a defense to that action. Nothing appears to show why all of the plaintiffs in this action could not have been made parties to the foreclosure suit, and could not have obtained all the relief demanded in this. action except the injunction restraining the New York Central Railroad Company from voting on the stock held by it in that foreclosure suit.

I have carefully examined the complaint to see if there is a. single allegation of any act, either of the New York Central Railroad Company, or of Drexel, Morgan & Co., of J. Pierrépont Morgan, or the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, that was illegal, or that they had not a legal right to do, and I fail to find any such act alleged.

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Related

Colby v. Equitable Trust Co.
55 Misc. 355 (New York Supreme Court, 1907)
Niles v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad
35 Misc. 69 (New York Supreme Court, 1901)
In re Buffalo, New York & Erie Railroad
37 N.Y.S. 1048 (New York Supreme Court, 1896)
Oelbermann v. New York & Northern Railway Co.
14 Misc. 131 (New York Supreme Court, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Misc. 352, 27 N.Y.S. 945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oelbermann-v-new-york-northern-railroad-nysupct-1894.