Wagner Electric Corp. v. Hydraulic Brake Co.

257 N.W. 884, 269 Mich. 560, 1934 Mich. LEXIS 954
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1934
DocketDocket No. 21, Calendar No. 37,838.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 257 N.W. 884 (Wagner Electric Corp. v. Hydraulic Brake Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner Electric Corp. v. Hydraulic Brake Co., 257 N.W. 884, 269 Mich. 560, 1934 Mich. LEXIS 954 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

Potter, J.

Hydraulic Brake Company, a California corporation, is the owner of a number of patents covering the transmission of power from the brake pedal to the brakes for use on motor vehicles. Many of these patents - had been originally secured by Malcolm Loughead, and these brakes were marketed under the trade name of “Lockheed Hydraulic Brakes.” Wagner Electric Corporation, a Delaware corporation, is a manufacturer of hydraulic brake equipment for motor vehicles under a license agreement with the Hydraulic Brake Company, for which it pays a license fee or royalty on each set of hydraulic brake accelerating equipment manufactured and sold. Bendix Brake Company is an Illinois corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of mechanical actuating brake equipment for the operation of mechanical brakes for automobiles and other motor vehicles. Bendix Aviation Corporation is a Delaware corporation, a holding company, and owns and controls a majority of the capital stock of both the Bendix Brake Company and the Hydraulic Brake Company, and through its officers and directors controls and directs the policy of each of said subsidiary corporations by reason of its stock ownership. Wagner Electric Corporation is *563 also a stockholder in the Hydraulic Brake Company to the extent of 50 shares of capital stock, although the entire capital stock of the Hydraulic Brake Company consists of something over 53,000 shares.

The bill of complaint here was filed by plaintiff, Wagner Electric Corporation, against defendants for the purpose of enjoining defendants from enforcing the terms and conditions of the licensing agreement made between plaintiff and Hydraulic Brake Company; to enjoin defendants from declaring the Hydraulic Brake Company in default under its licensing contract; to restrain the diversion of money from the Hydraulic Brake Company by the Bendix Aviation Corporation to the payment of indebtedness of the Bendix Aviation Corporation, or for the benefit of any of the subsidiaries of the Bendix Aviation Corporation; and to restrain the Bendix Aviation Corporation from causing the employees of the Hydraulic Brake Company to promote sales of motor vehicle braking apparatus other than that of the Hydraulic Brake Company, and particularly that manufactured and sold by the Bendix Aviation Corporation through its other subsidiaries and particularly the Bendix Brake Company. Plaintiff asks for both temporary and permanent injunctions. Defendants answered. Much testimony and many depositions were taken, the cause tried, and decree for defendants entered by the trial court, and the case is here upon appeal.

The statement of the questions involved and the discussion of the same and the briefs of counsel bring us finally to a consideration of three propositions : first, the right of the plaintiff, under the facts disclosed by the bill of complaint and the proof, to invoke the aid of equity; second, how far a court of equity will go in interfering with or directing the *564 internal affairs of a private corporation at the suit of a stockholder; and, third, under the facts involved, though the court has a legal right to interfere with the internal affairs of the corporation involved at the suit of a minority stockholder therein, should the court do so under the facts in this case?

Under the law of this State and elsewhere, the directors of a private corporation stand in a fiduciary relation to its stockholders, and are bound to act in good faith for the benefit of the corporation. Bendix Aviation Corporation controls the majority of the stock of the Hydraulic Brake Company, elects its officers, and determines its policy. It is a holding company and, so far as it controls the policy of the corporation, it and the officers selected by it are bound to act in good faith and for the benefit of the stockholders of the Hydraulic Brake Company.

Plaintiff was a licensee of the Hydraulic Brake Company before the controlling interest in its capital stock was sold to the Bendix Aviation Corporation. When plaintiff learned of the prospective sale of the controlling interest of the stock of the Hydraulic Brake Company to the Bendix Aviation Corporation, which likewise controlled the Bendix Brake Company, so that the control of the motor vehicle brake business was largely consolidated in the hands of the Bendix Aviation Corporation, it acquired 50 shares of the capital stock of the Hydraulic Brake Company. It is claimed so small a share of the capital stock holdings of the Hydraulic Brake Company ought not to be permitted to maintain suit; but the right of a stockholder to maintain suit does not depend upon the amount of his capital stock holdings, but upon the conduct of the affairs of the corporation; though where the owners of a great majority of the capital stock of a corporation are *565 apparently satisfied with the conduct of its affairs by the directors, any court having the power to enjoin the corporation from carrying out its corporate policy ought carefully to scrutinize the facts and make sure that equity requires it.

In theory, an injunction is issued for the purpose of preventing irreparable mischief; and it is only granted to stay an evil, the consequences of which could not be adequately compensated in damages if it were suffered to go on. The court should look beyond the actual injury to contemplate the consequences and, though palpably wrong, it should balance the inconveniences of awarding or denying the writ, and adjudge as these may incline the judicial mind.

It is claimed the 50 shares of stock which plaintiff holds were acquired for the purpose of enabling plaintiff, who was a licensee of the Hydraulic Brake Company and a large manufacturer of hydraulic brakes, to have a voice, as a minority stockholder, in the internal affairs of the Hydraulic Brake Company; at least, to be in a position where it could know something of the internal affairs of the corporation which granted it its license.

Ordinarily, no one is concerned with the motives of one who becomes the purchaser of corporate stock. It was lawful for the Wagner Electric Corporation to become a holder of the 50 shares of stock in the Hydraulic Brake Company, which it purchased and acquired. Anyone who keeps within the limits of lawful action is entitled to the protection of the law, whatever may have been his motive. The Wagner Electric Corporation is entitled to its legal rights as a minority stockholder of the Hydraulic Brake Company, even though it purchased the stock for the specific purpose of interfering with the af *566 fairs of the Hydraulic Brake Company as it desired. Presumptively, the rules of law will give adequate redress for any injury suffered, and when one avers that under the circumstances of the particular case equity should hear his complaint, it becomes important to inquire how plaintiff came to be placed in the position where he seeks the interposition of a court of equity.

One who buys a minority interest in the stock of a private corporation for the sole purpose of instituting suit to interfere with or to control the internal policy of the corporation is not a particular favorite in a court of equity which does not lend itself to the furtherance of unconscionable conduct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 N.W. 884, 269 Mich. 560, 1934 Mich. LEXIS 954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagner-electric-corp-v-hydraulic-brake-co-mich-1934.