Robison v. Cleveland City Railway Co.

5 Ohio N.P. 293
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedApril 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 293 (Robison v. Cleveland City Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robison v. Cleveland City Railway Co., 5 Ohio N.P. 293 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

NEFF, J.;

In the ease of Frank DeHass Robison against The Cleveland City Railway Company and others, the questions submitted and to be decided arise upon two motions and a demurrer; first, a motion of the plaintiff, in which he prays, first, for an order of reference; and second, for the appointment of a receiver or receivers. Secondly, a motion of the defendant company, The Cleveland City Railway Company, for a dissolution of the injunction or temporary restraining order, which operates to prevent payment of dividends and the further issuance' of certificates of stock. Thirdly, upon a demurrer of John J. Shipherd to the petition of the plaintiff.

The petition of plaintiff is very voluminous indeed, occupying about thirty pages or more, embracing a vast and multifarious derail of items, and I am of the opinion that to read it or to state all contained in it, would conduce neither to clearness qf statement nor correctness of conclusion, and I shall refer to it only in so far as it is necessary to understand or to make clear the questions presented upon this interlocutory hearing.

To this petition an answer was filed by the company, but I deem it unnecessary at this time to go into even the substance of that answer.

First, then,addressing our attention to the motion for an order of reference, and the appointment Of a receiver or receivers, of the company. But, perhaps, preliminary to the consideration of this motion, it is necessary to determine whether the action as begun by the plaintiff can be maintained in his name. It is true no demurrer has been submitted or filed by the defendant, but they have answered, the principal defendant,the Railway Company; yet certainly, if the action as brought can not be maintained, [294]*294if upon the averments of the petition no affirmative relief can be granted, then it would be a work of superogation perhaps, or certainly unnecessary, to determine these interlocutory questions; or, at all events, ic will be unnecessary to appoint a receiver or to order a reference, if the final relief prayed for can not under the averments of the petition be granted, even though a demurrer be not interposed to the petition.

As presenting this question, I desire to call attention to paragraphs 33 and 34, of the petition. After reciting the fact of consolidation, the circumstances attending the consolidation, the irregularities in the over-issue of stock, etc., the petition avers:

“33. That by reason of said facts, there is hopeless and almost inextricable confusion in the title to and possession of the capital stock of said defendant company; plaintiff and many other persons who own and are entitled to such stock or certificates therefor, are unable to get them — and many persons who are not entitled to such stock or certificates therefor, hold them under color of right and claim of title which can only be divested, if ever, or established after protracted and many litigations. That this chaotic condition, so wrongfully brought about and suffered by said corporation’s neglect and the wrongful acts and negligence of its said officers and appointee, said defendants, M. A. Hanna, J. B, Hanna and John J. Shipherd,has injured and damaged and is injuring and damaging the property, rights and interest of said corporation, of this plaintiff, and of each other individual rightful owner of stock therein, irreparably, and depreciating' the stock in value beyond remedy, and for such injuries, damage and depreciation there is, and can be for plaintiff and said other stockholders, no adequate remedy at law — without the equitable intervention of this court.
“34. That plaintiff did not discover or have any knowledge of the wrongs and injurious conduct of the affairs of defendant company and its officers and said Shipherd, and of the company’s actual condition herein-above set out, till during the autumn of 1896. That when the knowledge began to come to him, he immediately applied to the president, said M. A. Hanna, to initiate steps to relieve the situation as to plaintiff, and to call a meeting of the Board of Directors for that purpose.
“That said Hanna utterly neglected and refused such relief, declaring that he had called the Board together, and they had left the entire matter in his hands for adjustment, and declaring it to be the defendant company’s and his own intention to ‘stand pat,’ as he expressed it. Plaintiff then asked him as representing said Board, to meet plaintiff and other stockholders of the former Cable Company to adjust the situation,, and he did so, and at said meeting refused all action looking to relief or remedy., stating that each man’s case must be made separately and settled on its own merits — and said the company would never pay anything till a court should' order it to, — that perhaps a friendly suit might be brought to determine the rights, in question. The plaintiff applied to the attorneys of the company, who had formerly been his own attorneys, and they declined to interfere or attempt any relief of the situation, saying they saw no way of relief but for each person supposing himself aggrieved, to bring his action, and for the company to meet each as it arose as best it might, etc.
“That at the last annual meeting of stockholders, plaintiff made known a part of his'grievances, and a committee at his request was appointed to investigate and report to a "future meeting of directors, which has been done for many weeks, and shown the facts to be substantially and in the main as herein set out — and plaintiff says, since the said committees’report,said company has neglected and refused to take any steps to recover for the company the stock so over-issued, the sums due it from its officers or said Shipherd, or the damage by it sustained by their wrongful conduct, though often requested so to do, and has wholly neglected and refused to afford or take any steps toward affording plaintiff and his co-stockholders' similarly situated as himself, any relief whatsoever — and plaintiff says-every possible effort to get any relief in-the premises within said corporation or by its action has been exhausted without effect,and has and will prove utterly unavailing.”

A part of the prayer of the petition is addressed to aiid has reference to the statements, and is predicated upon the statements contained in paragraphs 33 and 34, so that the question arises whether the situation is such as to found any right to any relief whatever in the premises, and if so, whether the situation is such as to found a right to the relief distinctly prayed for.

Now, upon this question some authorities have been submitted, both in the way of adjudicated eases and text writers, some' of which were submitted in the argument,and some of which I myself have found. In the first place, upon this subject I call attention to a single paragraph in sec. 312, of Angell & Ames on Corporations — perhaps, to two sentences, the second of which is in point,and I read the first as introductory to the second, and as necessary, perhaps, to its proper apprehension: “And generally, ” reading now from page 344, “where there has been a waste or misapplication of corporate funds, by the officers or agents of the corporation, to compel [295]*295them to account for such waste or misapplication, directors being regarded as trustees of the stockholders, and subject to the obligations and disabilities incidental to that relation.” This much byway of preface.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robison-v-cleveland-city-railway-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1898.