Stevens v. Rutland & Burlington Railroad

29 Vt. 545
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 29 Vt. 545 (Stevens v. Rutland & Burlington Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. Rutland & Burlington Railroad, 29 Vt. 545 (Vt. 1851).

Opinion

Bennett, Chancellor.

This is a bill preferred before the chancellor of the third judicial circuit, against the Rutland and Burlington Railroad Company and three of its directors, by a stock holder in the company; the object of which is to obtain an injunction against the defendants, restraining them from applying the funds of the corporation, or pledging its credit for the purpose of constructing a railroad from Burlington, in the county of Chittenden, to Swanton, in the county of Franklin.

It appears that the legislature of this state, at their session in 1843, granted a charter of incorporation to divers individuals, and to their successors, for the purpose of building a railroad from some point in Burlington, through the counties of Addison, Rutland and Windsor or Windham, to some point on the west bank of the Connecticut river, under the name of the Champlain and Connecticut River Railroad Company. This name was subsequently changed by the legislature, to the Rutland and Burlington Railroad Company. The charter, among other things, provides that the capital stock of the company shall be one million of dollars, with the right in the corporation to increase it to an amount sufficient to complete said road, and furnish all necessary apparatus for conveyance. The company, after having procured some minor amendments to the charter, which it is not necessary to notice, caused the books [547]*547to be opened, the stock to be taken, and organized in due time, under the law, and have caused the road to be constructed, and it has for some time been in successful operation. The plaintiff, upon opening the books, subscribed for five shares of the capital stock, has regularly páid his subscription, each share being one hundred dollars, and he has ever since been the owner of said shares. After this road was constructed, and while in operation, the legislature of this state passed an additional act to authorize this corporation to extend their railroad, at any time within three years, from Burlington to Swanton, in the county of Franklin, it being a distance of about thirty miles. This additional act also provides, that the corporation, in the construction of this extension, shall have all the rights and privileges, and be subject to all the liabilities contained in the original charter, and the previous supplementary acts. The orator then proceeds to allege that the directors who are made parties to this bill, and without authority from the board of directors or from the corporation, and without any previous notice, and in bad faith, and for the purpose of prejudicing the interests of the shareholders, procured the legislature to pass this additional act of 1850, and have caused it to be accepted by the board of directors; and that the directors have caused a meeting of the stockholders to be called, to see if they will accept of this act, as an amendment of their charter; and that they threaten, if this act shall be accepted by a majority of the corporation, that they will proceed immediately in the construction of this extension, and for that purpose will apply the funds and pecuniary resources of the corporation, and pledge its credit, to whatever extent they shall find it necessary, to effect the object; and this too without the consent and against the will of the minority of the stockholders, and particularly of the orator, who alleges that he has not and will not consent to accept of said act of 1850, and construct said extension, and that he has, ever since the passage of the act, requested the defendants to desist from the same.

These are the material facts stated in the bill, which has been verified by affidavit. No affidavits have been filed on the other side, and no application for a delay of the hearing, for the purpose of answering the bill; and since it has been pending before the chancellor, it appears the corporation, at a meeting previously [548]*548called for that purpose, have voted to accept of the act of 1850 as an amendment of their charter.

The question is, can the orator, upon such a state of facts, claim, at the hands of the chancellor, his injunction.

It is an admitted principle, that in partnerships, and joint stock associations, they cannot by a vote of the majority change or alter /their fundamental articles of copartnership or association, against the will of the minority, however small, unless there is an express or implied provision in the articles themselves that they may do it. It is equally well settled, that a court of chancery will, upon the application of an individual member of á partnership, or joint stock association, restrain, by injunction, the majority from using the funds or pledging the credit of the partnership or association in a business not warranted, and not within the scope of their funda-. mental articles of agreement. Courts of equity treat such proceedings by a majority, as a fraud upon the other members, which they will neither sanction or permit. To prevent the commission of fraud, by injunction, has been one of the earliest and most appropriate heads of equity jurisdiction, as well as to relieve against it, when committed. It was upon this principle that Lord Eldon, when High Chancellor, upon the application of a humble individual member of a company, which had been organized for the purpose of carrying on a fire and life insurance business, restrained the company, by injunction, from embarking also in the marine insurance business; though the applicant had paid into the funds of the company only one hundred and fifty pounds as a deposite upon fifteen shares, and the company gotten up by the Rothschilds of England, and composed of six or seven hundred individuals, with a capital of five millions sterling. See Natusch v. Irving and others; Gow on Part. Appendix, 576. The same principle was applied to a corporation by the Vice Chancellor, and by Lord Chancellor Brougham, in the case of Ware v. The Grand Junction Water Company, 2 Rus. and Mylne, 461 S. C. 13 Cond. Ch. Rep. 126. The Vice Chancellor, upon the application of a single shareholder, restrained the corporation, not only from embarking their funds and credit in a matter beyond the provisions of their charter, but also from applying to parliament for a change [549]*549in tlie charter, which would warrant it. The change desired to be made in that case was, that the company might be enabled to get their supply of water by means of an aqueduct from the river Colne instead of the river Thames, as authorized to do under -their original charter. Lord Be otjgham, on appeal, dissolved that part of the injunction, it is true, which restrained the company from applying to parliament for an alteration of the charter in the particular desired, but retained the residue of it. So in Cunliff v. The Manchester and Bolton Canal Company, 13 Cond. Equity Rep. 131. n. the Vice Chancellor restrained the corporation, upon the application of a shareholder, from applying to parliament for a change in their charter, to enable them to convert a portion of their canal into a railway, and from applying any of the corporate funds to the proposed object.

It was well conceded, in the argument on the defense, that if the t corporation had been about to proceed to a construction of the con-j templated extension without the act of 1850, it would have been a proper case for an injunction.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Vt. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-rutland-burlington-railroad-vt-1851.