Ryan v. Leavenworth, Atchison & Northwestern Railway Co.

21 Kan. 365
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 21 Kan. 365 (Ryan v. Leavenworth, Atchison & Northwestern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan v. Leavenworth, Atchison & Northwestern Railway Co., 21 Kan. 365 (Ark. 1879).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Horton, C. J.:

The first and most important inquiry in this case is, whether upon the allegations of the amended petition the contract made by Len. T. Smith, in the name of the Missouri River railroad company, with A. Caldwell, for the construction of the railroad of that company from Wyandotte to Leavenworth, was fraudulent and void? If fraud- . ulent and void, the next inquiry is, are the plaintiffs, who are stockholders in the Leavenworth, Atchison & Northwestern railroad company, in a position to maintain this suit? In answering and passing upon these inquiries, and matters incident thereto, we will consider whether the petition states facts sufficient to authorize the plaintiffs to maintain their action, and, also, all the material points presented in the arguments of counsel.

statement or facts. The allegations of the petition in relation to the alleged fraudulent contract for the construction of the railroad of the Missouri River railroad company, are substantially as follows: The capital stock of the company was originally only $200,000. On May 13th, 1865, the stock was increased to $1,000,000. To the original capital stock there was subscribed on or about April 6th, 1865, the sum of $48,500. Of this sum, $970 was paid at the time, and nothing has ever been paid thereon since. In May, 1865, the city of Leavenworth, under authority of law, subscribed $250,000 to the stock of the company, and, in June following, issued $250,000 in bonds, paid its subscription, and received its certificate of stock. In July, 1865, the county of Leavenworth, under like authority, subscribed $250,000 more to the stock of the company, issued $250,000 of its bonds, paid the subscription, and received its stock certificates. After the city and county had paid for their stock, an association, composed of Thomas A. Scott and fourteen other persons, agreed among themselves, if they could complete the arrangements, to build the road on- the following terms, viz.: For the bonds issued by the county and city of Leavenworth in payment of their stock, being $500,000 in all, if $300,000 of these were cashed at par by citizens of Leavenworth, for $700,000 in stock of the railroad company and $500,000 in bonds of the company. The road when completed was to be leased to the Missouri Pacific company, most of whose officers and directors, with other officers of prominent railroads, were engaged in this association or copartnership. In pursuance of this agreement with each other, Thomas A. Scott and A. Caldwell appeared before the board? of directors, two of whom were members of the said association; and offered on behalf of themselves and their associates, whose names were concealed, to build the road on the terms above stated, and as agreed upon among the copartners. At the meeting only a bare quorum was present, and two of the quorum, Smith and Gruber, were president and treasurer of the company, and at the same time members of the partnership seeking to obtain a contract to build the road, and among the concealed associates for whom Scott and Caldwell made the proposal. The board of directors, at said meeting referred the matter to Smith, the president and a member of the partnership, and authorized him to make a contract for building the road. To conceal the nature of the transaction, it was agreed among the partners that the contract should be in the name of A. Caldwell, but that the others should be secret partners with him, and their interest concealed from public knowledge. The name “A. Caldwell” was used' for the firm, and in that name the contract as originaíly talked over among the partners, and as agreed upon by them, was executed on the part of the partners with Smith, also one of the partners, but acting as president and agent of the railroad company. To conceal the character of the transaction, Caldwell transferred the contract to D. R. Gar- ' rison & Co., and under the latter name the work was done. This transfer was merely colorable; the work was performed, expenses paid and profits divided by Caldwell and his partners. D. R. Garrison & Co. represented Caldwell and his associates. Before anything had been done in per- . formance of the contract on the part of the partner’s, $700,-000 in stock of the company was issued to Caldwell and his associates without other consideration than said contract. Of this stock, $200,000 was in excess of the capital stock of the company, as $500,000 of stock had been issued previously to Leavenworth county .and city, and the capital stock was only $1,000,000. This stock was issued prior to the January election of 1866, and at that election was voted on. Afc this election Thomas A. Scott, Alexander Caldwell, Len. T. Smith, E. H. Gruber, Daniel R. Garrison, Charles H. Peck, Oliver A. Hart and Thomas L. Price, members of said co-partnership, and all interested in said contract, together with Charles N. Palmer, Alexander McDonald and M. S. Grant, were elected directors of the corporation, L. T. Smith was reelected president., and E. H. Gruber elected secretary. About January 1st, 1866, before the work of construction had been commenced, the bonds of the company to the amount of $500,000 were issued to Caldwell and his partners, secured by a first mortgage on the road and .all the property of the. company, on hand or to be acquired, Caldwell being the trustee in the mortgage. After the copartnership had thus obtained control .of the corporation, and had within its members a majority of the directors, the construction of the railroad between Wyandotte and Leavenworth was commenced, and a road about nineteen miles in length built, at a cost not exceeding $500,000: Not includ- ' ing the value of $700,000 of the stock of the corporation issued to the partners, the members of this copartnership, without the use of any means of their own other than that gathered by their arts from the city and county of Leavenworth and the corporation, realized over $400,000 in their construction of the road. With' $250,000 of this money they paid for 92,598-j^- acres of land, worth $14 per acre, known as the Delaware Diminished Reserve, which lands, under a treaty ratified August 10th, 1866, the said railroad corporation had the precedent right to purchase at $2.50 per acre. The president of the corporation, with intent to deprive'his company of the benefits to accrue from completing the purchase of said lands, and fraudulently to obtain the same for the partnership, made a conveyance of these lands to Caldwell, in the name of his corporation, without consideration, and. as such president induced the secretary of the interior to issue the patent for them to Caldwell. The sum of $165,000, arising from the sale of some 8,000 acres of these lands, was divided among the original partners, and the balance of the land disposed of among the same persons.

It is further alleged in the petition, that after the said partnership was formed, and before the execution of the contract for the construction of 'the road, certain persons, who were responsible, and able to give good security for the performance of their contract, made an offer in writing to the president and treasurer of the corporation to do the clearing, grubbing, grading, masonry and track-laying of the entire road, and furnish materials therefor, for $300,000; (had'this been done, the whole cost of the road would not have exceeded $18,000 per mile;) .that the said partnership was formed and the construction contract made with the intent, of the members of the firm, who were officers and directors of the corporation, and of such as.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Kan. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-leavenworth-atchison-northwestern-railway-co-ark-1879.