Wilson v. Proprietors of Central Bridge and Others

9 R.I. 590
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 6, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 R.I. 590 (Wilson v. Proprietors of Central Bridge and Others) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Proprietors of Central Bridge and Others, 9 R.I. 590 (R.I. 1870).

Opinion

Bkayton, C. J.

The motion made by the defendants is to * dissolve the injunction heretofore dereed by this court enjoining them, and each of them, from demolishing the Central Bridge, and from otherwise interfering and taking possession of the same, or the other estates or property of the bridge corporation, for the purpose of locating upon or using for any other bridge the site of said Central Bridge, until further order.

The motion is made in pursuance of the leave given at the time this injunction was ordered, to move its dissolution whenever the defendant corporation should have had a legal meeting. That meeting has now been held, and the corporation has now voted to surrender its franchise to the state, and has executed, on its part, such surrender, and has voted to sell and convey to the city of Providence all their property, being the lands upon which the Central Bridge is built and abutted, and the lands used therewith, with the bridge and the materials of the • same remaining. And they now move the dissolution of the injunction against them, in order that the commissioners, appointed by the Greneral Assembly for that purpose, may locat¿ a free bridge, to be built by the city of Providence and the town of East Providence, and that the city and town may proceed to build, under *596 the authority given them, a free bridge across the Seekonk river. This committee were authorized to locate such free bridge, and the city and town to construct it, only in the contingency that the franchise of this bridge company should be by them surrendered, with all their right to build and maintain the Central Bridge.

There is no objection now made,' as heretofore has been, that the meeting was not properly held, upon sufficient notice, and properly organized. It was their annual meeting appointed by the charter. But it is objected that the acts of the company, in disposing of their property and in surrendering the franchise and all right to maintain a bridge over Seekonk river, are nevertheless inoperative and void for various reasons.

1. That a majority of the stock was not properly represented. There were certain shares of stock in this company, thirty-three in number, which had been in his lifetime held by one Samuel B. Tobcy, and which on his death, passed to his executors. These shares were sold at private sale by the executors to Charles EL Parkhurst, and the purchase money paid by the city of Providence. This sale, it is objected, is void, because the executors were not directed by the court of probate to sell, and that without it the executors had no power thus to sell. * This objection is based upon the provision of the statute, that unless an executor or administrator sell at public auction, he shall account for the property sold at double its value as appraised in the inventory, unless he shall be directed to sell at private sale by the court of probate. This provision seems to relate to the mode of accounting only. It does not prohibit such sale, nor declare it void, neither expressly, nor does that effect seem to have been intended. The provision for the mode of accounting assumes the sale to be valid. 9 he purchaser is not affected. The effect is upon the executor or administrator only. The validity of the *597 sale is not affected by the fact that it is still undetermined in the court of probate if the executor shall be directed so to sell. The lis pendens is not the question of the validity of the sale, but of the mode of accounting.

2. It is objected that the stock was held in trust for the city of Providence, the legal title being in the stockholders voting, and the legal holders could not rightfully vote upon the shares by them held in trust. To this point the objectors have referred us to Angelí & Ames on Corporations, § 131, which does not seem to support the position. That section refers to Ex parte Holmes, 5 Cow. 426, in which the court say that the real owner of the stock should vote, especially when his name is truly expressed on the books; though it might be otherwise, they say if he chose to have the entry simply in the name of another, without expressing any trusty But that was stock held in trust for the corporation itself, and the court said that could not be voted upon at all, and could only be voted upon by the other stockholders in proportion to their interest in the corporation. In the case of State v. Hunter, 28 Vt. 594, the stock proposed to be voted upon was bank stock held in trust for a person not a citizen of the state, and who was for that reason prohibited by statute from holding stock in a bank in Yermont, and the court held that the statute could not be evaded by putting the stock in the name of another, who might be an inhabitant. Even where the trust appears on the books, it is said the trustee cannot vote, except at the direction of the real owner. At his direction he may; the implication is that he may. It is not even suggested here that the votes given were not in accordance with the wishes and desire of the real owners, or that they were not content that the stock should stand in the names of the persons who did vote without disclosing any trust. The inference, from all the evidence in the case is, that they were satisfied in both respects.

3. It is again objected, that whatever validity the sale of the property may have, the surrender of the charter of the corporation was void, the vote therefor not having been unanimous; and the objectors say that a surrender cannot legally be made by *598 any majority, however large, or against the dissent of any one member. The text books state no such rule. So far from it, Angelí & Ames, the book referred to, state no such rule and cite no case to any such point. The only case cited touching the question is the case of Smith v. Smith, 3 Dess. 557, which holds that it would require the assent of the great body of the society, and that the directors could not of themselves surrender and dissolve the corporation without the action of the body. Many cases have been cited to the proposition announcing a rule that the business and objects of the incorporation cannot be perverted by a majority. They cannot apply its capital to purposes foreign to those for which the company was incorporated. The nature of the corporation cannot be changed. Such is the case of Ward v. Society of Attorneys, 1 Coll. 370, strongly urged upon our consideration, where the majority,of the stockholders were enjoined from applying to parliament to surrender their charter, in order to be incorporated with their capital for another and different purpose. They were enjoined from proceeding, because it was one to change the nature of the company, to pervert its purpose. So it has been held that an amendment of a charter of incorporation, substantially changing the nature of the corporate body, cannot be accepted by a majority.

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Related

Boston, Etc., R.R. v. New York, Etc., R.R.
13 R.I. 260 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
9 R.I. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-proprietors-of-central-bridge-and-others-ri-1870.