Young v. Toledo & South Haven Railroad

43 N.W. 632, 76 Mich. 485, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 976
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 43 N.W. 632 (Young v. Toledo & South Haven Railroad) 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
Young v. Toledo & South Haven Railroad, 43 N.W. 632, 76 Mich. 485, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 976 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Sherwood, C. J.

The complainant, as a stockholder owning 75 shares of stock in the Paw Paw Railroad Company,, filed the bill in this case on the twenty-first day of January, 1887, and prayed the court to set aside the sale of the Paw Paw railroad to the Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company, made on the ninth day of September, 1886, and that-the subsequent mortgage, given on the twenty-seventh day of' October to the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company by the' Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company, be annulled, and that the sale of the bonds secured thereby be enjoined, and that a reconveyance of the Paw Paw railroad be decreed to the company; that an accounting be had of the rents and profits accruing from the use of the Paw Paw road since the sale to the Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company on the ninth of September, 1886; and that a receiver be appointed for that purpose.

The two railroad companies were served with process. The trust company was not served, and the Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company alone appeared and made answer.

[487]*487In its answer the Toledo & South Haven Company averred the validity of its purchase from the Paw Paw Eailroad Company on the ninth of September, 1886, and of the bonds subsequently issued, and charged that complainant purchased his stock in bad faith, and for the purpose of compelling ita purchase at an exorbitant price by the Toledo & South Haven Company.

After replication had been filed, and the cause was at issue, the several railroad companies interested were consolidated, under section 3343, How. Stat. The bonds previously issued were ratified, as were the other terms of the September purchase, and, so far as the companies could do so, both were ratified.

After the consolidation was completed, the Toledo & South Haven Company set up the consolidation proceedings as a defense, “puis darrein continuance,” by cross-bill, and which was subsequently brought to an issue. The testimony was taken in open court, and, upon the hearing, the circuit judge rendered a decree granting the complainant in the original bill relief substantially as asked, except as to the appointment of a receiver, and dismissed the cross-bill, without passing upon the validity of the consolidation proceedings.

The Toledo & South Haven Eailroad Company appeals to this Court.

The Paw Paw Eailroad Company was incorporated under the general laws of the State in 1866, and the road runs from the village of Lawton to Paw Paw. The company commenced running trains upon its road in 1867, which it continued to do until about the ninth of September, 1886. The capital stock of the company consisted of 750 shares, of $100 each.

It is claimed by complainant that the road was fully built, equipped, and completed. This, however, is denied by the defendant, in its answer; and, as to this, defendant says that the Paw Paw Eailroad Company, a long time previous to [488]*488September 9, 1886, had been engaged, in good faith, in constructing its road and tracks, but had not been at that time, and never was, able to complete the construction of the same; that only the road-bed was constructed, and that very imperfectly ; that it had no side tracks, no turn-tables, no station-houses, and no rolling stock; that all of those in use by it were constructed by, and belonged to, the Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company.

The Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company was organ, ized in 1876. It extends from Lawton to South Haven, as completed, — a distance of 36 miles. It passes through Paw Paw, Lawrence, and Hartford. The road is a narrow-gauge, nine miles of which, between Paw Paw and Lawrence, was built in 1876; and in 1883 the company completed its road from Lawrence to Hartford, — a distance of six miles; and on September 9,1886, it purchased of the Lake Michigan division of the Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company a partially completed extension between Hartford and South Haven, — a distance of sixteen miles, — and at the same date purchased the Paw Paw road, as before stated.

The Paw Paw road was at this time mortgaged for $3,000. In 1875 its stock was worth but about 40 per cent.; and in 1878 it leased its road-bed to the Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company for 8 per cent, on $30,000, or 40 per cent, of the par value of the stock.

At an early day it became very desirable for the Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company to make its connection with the Michigan Central on the east, at Lawton, and with the lake on the west, at South Haven; and on the twenty-first of June, 1884, the complainant in this case went into the employment of that company and the Paw Paw Company to aid in accomplishing that result, under the following agreement:

The following agreement is this day entered into between F, B. Adams, president, Edwin Martin, treasurer, John Ihling, superin[489]*489tendent, of the Paw Paw and the Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company, parties of the first part, and Charles F. Young, of Paw Paw, Michigan, party of the second part:
“ The provisions of this agreement are that the party of the second part shall place, on or before September 1,1884, one hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) of 4 per cent. 20 (or thirty) year first mortgage bonds of the Toledo & South Haven Railroad Company (both corporations to be consolidated under the one name, and title perfected); said bonds to be sold at ten per cent, discount (or 90-100 from their face value, or one hundred and thirty-five thousand dollars ($135,000) net. The proceeds from such sale of bonds shall be used as follows, to wit, viz.:
“First. Fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) to pay up in full the funded and compounded indebtedness of the ‘ Toledo & South Havan R. R.' Co:
“ Second. Twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) to purchase the interest of parties of the first part in and to the ‘ Paw Paw R. R. Co. ’
Third. Twelve thousand dollars ($12,000) — this amount being one-half (i) the purchase price; balance to be paid in new stock — to apply on purchase of the Toledo & South Haven railroad.
“Fourth. Fifty-three thousand dollars ($53,000) to be used as a sinking fund for the completion of ten miles (or more) of new railroad to some point east of Lawton, or west of Hartford, as may be deemed to the best interest of the company hereafter. This estimate includes cost of ten miles of ‘ tubular rail ’ to be contracted for by party of second part at times of placing bonds, cost of said tubular rail not to exceed cost of standard T rail of same weight.
“ Of the said $135,000 proceeds of the sale of said bonds, $90,000 shall be subject to call of said parties of the first part immediately after the issue of said bonds, duly executed and accepted; provided, that $50,000 of the said $90,000 shall be deposited with the trustee or trustees, or as may be hereafter agreed upon, for the purpose of paying up the entire funded and compounded indebtedness of the said Railroad Co. The balance of the amount ($45,000), shall be drawn upon at the rate of $5,000 per mile as new road becomes completed; such amount to be paid, on certificate of engineers in charge, to the trustee or trustees.

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Related

Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Toledo & S. H. R.
54 F. 759 (Sixth Circuit, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.W. 632, 76 Mich. 485, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-toledo-south-haven-railroad-mich-1889.