Rubin v. Chicago South Shore & South Bend Railroad

217 F.2d 177
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 24, 1954
DocketNo. 11230
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 217 F.2d 177 (Rubin v. Chicago South Shore & South Bend Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rubin v. Chicago South Shore & South Bend Railroad, 217 F.2d 177 (7th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

SCHNACKENBERG, Circuit Judge.

A complaint was filed in the District Court by plaintiffs, who are Illinois stockholders of the defendant Indiana corporation, against the corporation1 and its president and secretary, as well as the members of a proxy soliciting partnership known as Kissel Organization. The complaint prays for a temporary injunction restraining the corporation from proceeding with its annual meeting to be held on March 25, 1954, until the further order of the court, that the court decree that a bylaw of the corporation requiring a majority of the directors to be residents of the state of Indiana is illegal and void, that a permanent mandatory injunction issue causing the directors to remove said by-law from the minute-books, that the officers and directors of the corporation be permanently restrained from using certain proxies secured for said meeting until said by-law has been rescinded by the board of directors and from paying for the solicitation of said proxies, that the court appoint a master in chancery to conduct the meeting, and for general relief.

On March 23, 1954, on motion of plaintiffs, the court authorized the contemplated meeting to be called and organized, and directed that it be continued to March 29, 1954.

Thereafter South Shore filed a motion to dismiss the complaint, which motion was sustained. This appeal followed.

The principal question in this case is raised by plaintiffs’ contention that the following by-law adopted by the directors of the corporation is invalid: “A majority of the directors shall be residents of the state of Indiana.”

The motion to dismiss admits, inter alia,, the facts set forth in the complaint as now stated.

Plaintiffs are owners of shares of the common stock of South Shore which maintains an office in Chicago, Illinois. Although it was originally incorporated in 1925 under an Indiana statute entitled “An Act for the incorporation of street railroad companies,” 2 it later became subject to the general corporation act of Indiana by filing articles of reorganization on September 18, 1929, providing “This Corporation hereby accepts all of the terms and conditions of the Indiana ‘General Corporation Act,’ of 1929.”

South Shore is a common carrier engaged in transportation of freight and passengers in interstate commerce between the cities of South Bend, Indiana, and Chicago, Illinois, and operates a bus line through a subsidiary from Michigan [179]*179City, Indiana, to Benton Harbor, Michigan. In excess of 50 per cent of its revenue is derived from freight moving in interstate commerce. It is a party to a large number of tariffs publishing joint rates to and from points throughout the country and has arrangements with all other railroads for the division of inter-line freight revenues. It has traffic solicitation offices in various states. It operates an electric railroad between Chicago and South Bend, which is approximately 90 miles in length and parallels and competes with lines of the New York Central System.

Following South Shore’s filing a petition under Section 77 of the Bankruptcy Act3, in the United States District Court on September 30, 1933, a plan of reorganization was approved, which plan “could not be consummated until authority was granted” by the Interstate Commerce Commission.

In 1935, in a proceeding before the Interstate Commerce Commission there was a finding and decision that South Shore was not a street, interurban, or suburban electric railway within the meaning of the exemption proviso of the first paragraph in § 1 of the Railway Labor Act, as amended June 21, 1934 4

In a proceeding instituted by South Shore before the Interstate Commerce Commission on June 2, 1938, the commission decided that on and after said date the defendant corporation was not within the terms of similar exemptions in section 1(a) of the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937 5 or section 1(a) of the Carriers Taxing Act of 1937 6.

In 1939 South Shore filed a suit in the District Court of United States for the Northern District of Indiana to enjoin James R. Fleming, United States district attorney, from instituting a proceeding against it for violation of the Railway Labor Act7, wherein the Interstate Commerce Commission intervened. Thereupon the court determined that South Shore was not within the scope of the Railway Labor Act. Upon appeal to this court8 that determination was reversed.

In 1944 South Shore requested permission of the Interstate Commerce Commission to issue shares of capital stock, and the commission rendered a report finding that South Shore was a common carrier and approved the issue. The application recited that South Shore is a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the state of Indiana, having been incorporated June 23, 1925, and having accepted the provisions of the Indiana general corporation act by executing articles of reorganization dated September 16, 1929, which were filed with and approved by the Secretary of State of the state of Indiana, that it is engaged as a common carrier in the transportation of passengers and property by electric railroad between Chicago, Illinois, and South Bend, Indiana, and intermediate points, and that its principal place of business is Michigan City, Indiana.

Prior to plaintiffs’ acquisition of their stock, directors of South Shore adopted a by-law known as section 1 of article IV as hereinbefore set forth9. There is no provision in the general corporation act requiring a majority of directors to be residents of Indiana.

The complaint alleges that the Kissel Organization was employed by plaintiff Rubin to solicit proxies for the annual meeting held on March 26, 1953, and thereby it “obtained information in trust and in confidence and is now in the employ of the defendant railroad, whose [180]*180interests are adverse to that of plaintiffs” and further that said firm “is using said information that was received in trust and in confidence to obtain proxies in favor of management and against that of plaintiff Rubin.”

According to plaintiffs there are two contested issues:

a. “Is defendant railroad a common carrier engaged in interstate commerce, or an interurban or street car line? If defendant railroad is a common carrier engaged in interstate commerce, then the restrictive by-law limiting a majority of the corporation’s directors to residents of the state of Indiana is void and of no force and effect.”

b. “Is defendant railroad authorized to hire a proxy-soliciting firm which had heretofore been retained and engaged in proxy solicitation for one of the plaintiffs and during the course of said employment with plaintiff obtained certain confidential and privileged information which is being used against the plaintiffs?”

However, defendant insists that the only contested issue is whether South Shore’s by-law requiring a majority of its directors to be residents of Indiana is valid.

Inasmuch as it appears that the annual meeting originally set for March 25, 1954, was continued to March 29, 1954, and that the meeting was held and its business transacted, it may be that this entire case became moot. However we shall resolve any doubt against that conclusion and proceed to a determination of certain aspects of the merits.

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Related

Rubin v. Chicago South Shore & South Bend Railroad
217 F.2d 177 (Seventh Circuit, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
217 F.2d 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rubin-v-chicago-south-shore-south-bend-railroad-ca7-1954.