United Electric Securities Co. v. Louisiana Electric Light Co.

68 F. 673, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3491
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana
DecidedJune 28, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 68 F. 673 (United Electric Securities Co. v. Louisiana Electric Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Electric Securities Co. v. Louisiana Electric Light Co., 68 F. 673, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3491 (circtedla 1895).

Opinion

PARDEE, Circuit Judge.

As the restraining order already issued in this case maintains the statu quo, I had intended to take the record, and, after thoroughly digesting it, file an elaborate opinion covering the law and the facts; but being advised that other matters are pressing affecting the interests of the Louisiana Electric Light Company and the preservation of the trust fund, I have concluded to announce my already formulated views of the case, and file hereafter, if necessary, a full exposition of the equities involved.

At the outset, it is to be noticed that the question now before the court is in relation to the steps which the court ought to take with a view of preserving the rights of parties and the safety of the trust fund pendente lite. Of course, the court does not now undertake to settle and determine the rights of parties, and decree relief, as might be its duty upon a hearing on the merits of the case. At this time, therefore, I will not make any decided and conclusive finding as to the rights of parties, except as they ajjpear upon the ex parte showing that: has been made in the case,

[674]*674It is next proper to notice tbe exact status of the case as to the jurisdiction and parties. The suit is brought” by the Electric Securities Company, a citizen of the state of Maine, against the Louisiana Electric Light Company, a citizen of the state of Louisiana, and in the suit the American Loan & Trust Company, of Massachusetts, and the New Orleans Traction Company,, of Louisiana, have intervened, adopting, as interveners, the charges made and contained in the complainant’s bill. The American Loan & Trust Company, as trustee under the first mortgage granted by the Louisiana Electric Light Company, asserts no interest in the case, outside of its interest as trustee; and as the case made shows no outstanding default on the part of the Louisiana Electric Light Company under the mortgage, no further consideration of the American Loan & Trust Company’s position in this suit is necessary. The New Orleans Traction Company is a citizen of the same state as the New Orleans Electric Light Company, and it is therefore plain that this court has no jurisdiction over controversies between these two, unless the jurisdiction of the court attaches by reason of the controversy between the Electric Securities Company and the Louisiana Electric Light Company. The jurisdiction of the court must, therefore, depend upon the controversy between the securities cqmpany and the light company; and, unless there is such controversy, and one, too, that draws to the court the possession and control of the property of the light company, the case or controversy of the traction company with the electric light company must be left out of consideration.

The Electric Securities Company complains in a double capacify,— as a creditor and as a stockholder. Under the showing made in the case, it seem to be too plain for dispute, that, as a creditor, the Electric Securities Company has no such controversy with the light company as would justify the court in interfering with the property and management of the Louisiana Electric Light Company. There seems to be no doubt that all the interest due on bonds secured by the first mortgage under the trust of the American Loan & Trust Company is paid up, and that there is no other default under the mortgage which would authorize an interference on the part of the trustee, or any bondholder. The case shows that the Louisiana Electric Light Company has property covered by the mortgage worth nearly a million of dollars, without, considering in any way its business and good will as a going concern; that it is able to earn a net revenue on its present business more than twice sufficient to pay accruing interest, so that it must be acknowledged that unless hereafter the trustee and the bondholders shall be negligent in asserting their rights under the mortgage, which, by the way, is full of provisions to protect the bondholders, the bonds held by the Electric Securities Company are as secure as bonds of a private corporation can be made. The controversy, then, must depend upon the rights of the Electric Securities Company as a stockholder in the Louisiana Electric Light Company. Although in the bill it is charged that $425,000 of stock .issued to the Fort Wayne Company on the organization of the Louisiana Electric Light Company was issued without consideration, in which case it would be fictitious stock, and void [675]*675under tire constitution and laws of Louisiana; and although, the showing here is that one-half of that same stock is owned by the Electric Securities Company, and forms the basis of its standing before this court as a stockholder; and although there is an affidavit on hie, made by a former officer of the company, showing that at the time the Electric Securities Company acquired the stock he knew it was watered, and this affidavit is not contradicted, — yet I am disposed to consider that, notwithstanding the stock may' have been illegally issued, still the Electric Securities Company may be able to show that it is a bona fide holder; and if noi, then the court may find, as strongly appears on the showing now made, that the said stock was not originally illegally issued, and that it lias been at all times valid stock. I may say, further, that, as a general proposition, the purchaser of stock in a corporation is not allowed to attack the acts and management of the company prior to the acquisition of his stock; otherwise, we might have a case where stock duly represented in a corporation consented to arid participated in bad riuumgement and waste, and, after reaping the benefits from such transactions, could be easily passed into the hands of a subsequent purchaser, who could make his harvest by appearing and contesting the very acts and. conduct which his vendor had consented to. However all this may be, for the purposes of this case I take it that the Electric Securities Company is a bona fide stockholder (if the Louisiana Electric Light Company, and entitled to be heard in this case.

The matters complained of in the bill are some; of them so far explained by the showing made that it is very doubtful if they ought to be made the basis for any relief at this time; hut (.here are other transactions complained of, which are not sufficiently explained, and which leave upon my mind the impression that the directors of the Louisiana Electric Light Company have, by mismanagement, and by dealings in which some of the active directors were representing more their own individual interests than the interests of the electric light company, involved the light company in contracts, partly executed, which ought to be sot aside, either as fraudulent or ultra vires. The showing also leaves the impression upon my mind that, unless the court shall interfere in behalf of the stockholders, the present board of directors may, between now and the next election of directors, further involve and entangle the light company in contracts amounting to waste and endangering the trust fund.

The relief asked by the complainant, the Electric Securities Company, is that the court shall appoint a receiver and take the entire property and its management out of the hands of the present board of directors; and, if this were the only way in which relief could be granted, it would probably be the duty of the court to grant such application.

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Bluebook (online)
68 F. 673, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-electric-securities-co-v-louisiana-electric-light-co-circtedla-1895.