Certificates of preferred stock of the Ohio and Mississippi
Railway Company were issued, containing the following language:
"The preferred stock is to be and remain a first claim upon the
property of the company after its indebtedness, and the holder
thereof shall be entitled to receive from the net earnings of the
company seven percent per annum, payable semiannually, and to have
such interest paid in full, for each and every year, before any
payment of dividend upon the common stock, and whenever the net
earnings of the corporation which shall be applied in payment of
interest on the preferred stock and of dividends on the common
stock shall be more than sufficient to pay both said interest of
seven percent on the preferred stock in full, and seven percent
dividend upon the common stock, for the year in which said net
earnings are so applied, then the excess of such net earnings after
such payments shall be divided upon the preferred and common shares
equally, share by share."
Held that the preferred stockholders had no claim on
the property superior to that of creditors under debts contracted
by the company subsequently to the issue of the preferred stock,
and that their only valid claim was one to a priority over the
holders of common stock.
Bill to foreclose two railroad mortgages, and cross-bill by
preferred stockholders to have their stock declared a lien on the
property prior to one of the mortgages. On a demurrer the
cross-bill was dismissed. The plaintiffs in that bill appealed.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court
In November, 1876, William King and others, holders of second
mortgage bonds and of Springfield Division bonds of the Ohio and
Mississippi Railway Company, filed a bill in the Circuit Court of
the United States for the District of Indiana to foreclose two
mortgages on the property of the company,
Page 108 U. S. 390
subject to a first mortgage. In August, 1877, Allan Campbell, a
defendant in that suit and trustee of one of the two mortgages,
called the second mortgage, and also of the first mortgage, filed a
bill and a cross-bill in the same court to foreclose those two
mortgages. In January, 1879, the two suits were consolidated. In
December, 1879, George Henry Warren and others, as owners of
preferred stock of the company, having been made parties defendant
to the consolidated suit, filed a cross-bill. To this cross-bill a
general demurrer for want of equity was interposed. The court
sustained the demurrer and entered a decree dismissing the
cross-bill for want of equity.
King v. Ohio & Mississippi
Railroad Company, 2 F. 36. From this decree the plaintiffs in
that bill have appealed to this Court.
The sole question involved is whether the preferred stockholders
are entitled to have their shares of stock declared to be a lien on
the property of the company next after the first mortgage. As the
question arises on demurrer, the allegations of the cross-bill are
to be taken as true. The Ohio and Mississippi Railroad Company,
having been incorporated by Indiana in February, 1848, was
incorporated by Ohio in March, 1849, and by Illinois in February,
1851. Under a second mortgage made by it in January, 1854, all the
property and franchises of the Illinois company were sold on a
foreclosure of that mortgage in June, 1862, to the Ohio and
Mississippi Railroad Company, an Illinois corporation created in
February, 1861, for the purpose of purchasing the property and
franchises of the Illinois corporation of February, 1851. The
property and franchises of the Indiana and Ohio corporations were
sold under judicial decrees in January, 1867, subject to certain
mortgage debt recited in the decrees, to Allan Campbell and others,
"trustees of creditors and stockholders of said Ohio and
Mississippi Railroad Company (Eastern Division.)" This trust was
created by an instrument in writing dated December 15, 1858, and
known as the "trust agreement of creditors and stockholders of the
Ohio and Mississippi Railroad Company of Indiana and Ohio." By it,
Allan Campbell and others were created trustees for the purpose of
providing for and protecting claims of
Page 108 U. S. 391
judgment creditors and other persons holding liens on the
property and franchises of the company and also certain holders of
unliquidated demands against it, and also the interests of the
stockholders of the company. Such interests of the creditors and
stockholders became vested in the trustees from time to time, so
that on the 14th of September, 1867, they were the owners, subject
to the terms of the trust agreement, of the rights, claims, and
interests of all the creditors and stockholders of the company in
its property and franchises, except those existing under a first
mortgage made in May, 1853. The trustees issued, in exchange for
the interests they so acquired, certificates in two classes,
preferred and common. Under an amendment made in April, 1863, to
the trust agreement, the trustees purchased, for the benefit of the
trust and the persons interested therein under the agreement of
December, 1858, all the stock and a portion of the bonds of the
Illinois company of 1851, sometimes called the Western Division. On
the 14th of September, 1867, the certificate holders, by an
instrument known as "Amendments to the trust agreement of December,
1858," resolved that the trustees had made the purchase of January,
1867, for the benefit of those interested in the trust agreement of
December, 1858, and had, in virtue of the amendment of April, 1863,
purchased all the stock and a portion of the bonds of the Illinois
company of 1851; that by such purchases the whole road from
Cincinnati to St. Louis had become the property of the trust,
subject only to outstanding mortgages; that it was the intention of
all parties interested in the trust to form a new corporation, to
which the entire property of the trust might be transferred, in
accordance with the original agreement, such property to consist of
all the rights and interests in the railroad in the three states;
that the capital stock of the new corporation should consist of
35,000 shares of preferred stock and 200,000 shares of common
stock, being in all $23,500,000 of stock, which should be issued
and distributed to the owners of trustees' certificates registered
on the books of the trust, as follows, namely, to owners of
preferred certificates, preferred full-paid stock, for the amount
of such preferred certificates at the rate of one share of
preferred stock
Page 108 U. S. 392
for every $100 of preferred certificates; that it should "be
declared upon the face of said preferred stock that it is to be and
remain a first claim upon the property of the corporation after its
indebtedness;" that the holders thereof shall be entitled to
receive from the net earnings of the company 7 percent per annum
upon the amount of said stock, payable semiannually,
"and to have such interest paid in full, for each and every
year, before any payment of dividend upon the common stock of said
corporation, and that whenever the net earnings of the corporation
which shall be applied in payment of interest on the preferred
stock and of dividends on the common stock shall be more than
sufficient to pay both said interest of 7 percent on the preferred
stock in full, and 7 percent dividend upon the common stock for the
year in which said net earnings are so applied, then the excess of
such net earnings, after such payments, shall be divided upon the
preferred and common stock equally, share by share;"
that the common stock should be issued to holders of common
certificates at the same rate; that the new corporation should be
authorized to create a new mortgage on its entire property,
consisting of 340 miles of railroad from Cincinnati to St. Louis,
and upon the contemplated improvements thereon, for an amount not
exceeding $6,000,000, $4,000,000 whereof should be used exclusively
to take up the then outstanding bonds issued under the mortgages
theretofore created on said road; that if a branch should be built
to Louisville, the new corporation might increase the preferred
stock at the rate of $10,000 for each mile in length of such
branch, and the $6,000,000 mortgage to the amount of $15,000 for
each mile of such branch, and that holders of the outstanding bonds
of the old company, both eastern and western divisions, and holders
of bonds to be issued by the new corporation, should be entitled to
one vote for each $100 of bonds so held at all stockholders'
meetings, and on all affairs of the corporation.
Under statutes of Indiana and Ohio, Allan Campbell and others,
as such trustees, became a corporation in those states by the name
of the Ohio and Mississippi Railway Company. Its capital stock was
fixed at 35,000 shares, of $100 each, of preferred stock, and
200,000 shares, of $100 each, of common
Page 108 U. S. 393
stock, and provision was made, in the certificate of
incorporation, for increasing its preferred stock in an amount not
exceeding $10,000 a mile for each mile of a branch to Louisville.
In November, 1867, the Illinois company and the Indiana and Ohio
company were consolidated under the name of the Ohio and
Mississippi Railway Company, by articles of consolidation which
provided for issuing preferred and common capital stock of the
consolidated company to the extent above stated, and that the
consolidated corporation should be authorized to create a new
mortgage on the road for $6,000,000, of which $4,000,000 should be
appropriated and used to take up the then existing mortgage bonds
of the property, and should have
"All such further powers and rights as are conferred and
contemplated in certain amendments adopted by the certificate
holders at a meeting held by them on the 14th day of September,
A.D. 1867, of an agreement dated December 15, A.D. 1858, of the
creditors and stockholders of the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad
Company of Indiana and Ohio, said agreement representing a trust
which at the date of said amendments, embodied the entire ownership
of the property of both said companies so consolidated."
The consolidated company issued preferred stock to the amount of
35,000 shares, upon certificates in the following form:
"
OHIO AND MISSISSIPPI RAILWAY COMPANY"
"
Reorganized and consolidated 1867"
"
Preferred Stock"
"This is to certify that _____ is entitled to ___ shares of the
preferred capital stock of the Ohio and Mississippi Railway
Company, of one hundred dollars each, transferable only on the
books of said company, in the City of New York, in person or by
attorney, on the surrender of this certificate. The preferred stock
is to be and remain a first claim upon the property of the
corporation after its indebtedness, and the holder thereof shall be
entitled to receive from the net earnings of the company seven
percent per annum, payable semiannually, and to have such interest
paid in full, for each and every year, before any payment of
dividend
Page 108 U. S. 394
upon the common stock, and whenever the net earnings of the
corporation which shall be applied in payment of interest on the
preferred stock and of dividends on the common stock shall be more
than sufficient to pay both said interest of seven percent on the
preferred stock in full, and seven percent dividend upon the common
stock, for the year in which said net earnings are so applied, then
the excess of such net earnings after such payments shall be
divided upon the preferred and common shares equally, share by
share."
These preferred shares were issued in exchange for the trustees'
preferred certificates, in pursuance of the resolutions of
September 14, 1867.
The cross-bill alleges that the certificate holders, by the
resolutions of September 14, 1867, intended and declared that the
preferred stock to be issued should give to its holders, not only a
preference in respect to dividends over the common stock, but also
the preference of a specific and continuing lien and security upon
the property of the new corporation, next after the then existing
mortgage indebtedness; that it was in accordance with and in
execution of this intention that the certificate holders further
resolved that it should be declared upon the face of the
certificates of such preferred stock that it should be and remain a
first claim upon the property of the corporation after its
indebtedness; that the indebtedness referred to in the resolutions,
and in the preferred stock certificates, was such indebtedness only
as should arise under the $6,000,000 mortgage, that amount being
designed to represent, and having been authorized for the purpose
of taking up and canceling, the indebtedness existing at the time
of the consolidation on the property of the two consolidating
companies, and that the consolidated company, under the articles of
consolidation, became bound to perform the provisions of the
amendments of September, 1867, to the trust agreement, as to
preferred stock, and the securing the same on the property of the
consolidated company to the full intent thereof.
Besides the preferred stock to the amount of $3,500,000, further
preferred stock, in the above form, to the amount of
Page 108 U. S. 395
$800,000, was issued on the building of the Louisville branch.
The plaintiffs in the cross-bill, as owners of shares of such
preferred stock, aver that they, in common with the other preferred
stockholders, had and have a lien and security and first claim upon
all the property and franchises of the consolidated company which
existed at the time of the original issue of such preferred stock,
in or about the year 1867, next after and subject only to the
indebtedness under the $6,000,000 mortgage, as authorized by said
articles of consolidation, as representing and designed to cover
and cancel the only indebtedness on either of the consolidated
roads which was outstanding at the time of such consolidation, and
are entitled to the payment of interest, as stipulated in the
certificate, out of such net earnings of the company as may remain
after the payment of interest on first mortgage bonds, and in
priority and preference to the payment of any interest or
indebtedness under any mortgage subsequent in date to the first
mortgage, that being a mortgage executed in December, 1867, under
which bonds to the amount of about $6,800,000 have been issued.
Under the so-called second mortgage, issued in March, 1871, and
sought to be foreclosed in the original suit, $4,000,000 of bonds
have been issued. The other mortgage sought to be foreclosed in the
original suit is called the Springfield Division mortgage, and was
executed in January, 1875, to secure $3,000,000 of bonds.
The bill prays for a decree that such preferred stockholders are
entitled as such to and have always had a specific and continuing
lien and security and first claim upon and in all the property and
franchises of the company next after and subject only to the
interest and security therein which is given under the first
mortgage of December, 1867, and have been and are entitled to
receive 7 percent interest upon their shares out of the net
earnings of the company remaining after the payment of interest to
the holders of the first mortgage bonds. It also prays that in any
decree of foreclosure of either of the mortgages so sought to be
foreclosed, the rights of the preferred stockholders may be
declared to be a lien and security on the property and franchises
of the company next after that secured by the first mortgage of
December, 1867;
Page 108 U. S. 396
that in case of foreclosure of the first mortgage, all surplus
after the satisfaction of claims thereunder be applied first, to
payment in full or
pro rata of the par value of their
shares to the preferred stockholders, and that in case of
foreclosure of either the second mortgage or the Springfield
Division mortgage, the decree therein shall provide that any sale
in either of such cases shall be subject to not only the amount due
under the first mortgage, but also, and next in order, to the
amount at par of the preferred stock with all unpaid interest due
thereon at 7 percent
The rights of the holders of preferred stock in this case must
be determined by the language of the stock certificate. That is
exactly the same as the language of the written instruments which
preceded the issuing of the certificates. The shares are shares of
the capital stock of the company, though shares with different
privileges from shares of the common stock. The certificate
declares the quality of the preferred stock in two respects: (1)
its relation to the property of the company (2) its relation to the
net earnings.
As to the property, it is declared that the preferred stock is
to be and remain a first claim on the property of the company
"after its indebtedness." But it is stock, and part of the capital
stock, with the characteristics of capital stock. One of such
characteristics is that no part of the property of a corporation
shall go to reimburse the principal of capital stock until all the
debts of the corporation have been paid. It would require the
clearest language to admit of the application of a different rule
to any capital stock. Section 5 of the statute of Indiana of June
15, 1852, "establishing provisions respecting corporations," 1
Davis' Stat. 369, enacted as follows:
"If any part of the capital stock of such company shall be
withdrawn and refunded to the stockholders before the payment of
all the debts of the company, all the stockholders of such company
shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of such
debts."
The railroad law of Indiana of March 3, 1865, 1 Davis' Stat.
728, entitled
"An act to authorize, regulate, and
Page 108 U. S. 397
confirm the sale of railroads, to enable purchasers of the same
to form corporations and to exercise corporate powers, and to
define their rights, powers, and privileges, to enable such
corporations to purchase and construct connecting and branch roads,
and to operate and maintain the same,"
under which law this company was reorganized, provided, in
section 5, that the corporation should have power to
"make preferred stock, make and establish preference in respect
to dividends in favor of one or more classes of stock over and
above other classes, and secure the same, in such order and manner,
and to such extent, as said corporation may deem expedient;"
and section 20 of the general law of Indiana of May 11, 1852,
providing for the "incorporation of railroad companies," 1 Davis'
Stat. 706, provided that a corporation organized under it might
issue
"a preferred stock to an amount not exceeding one-half of the
amount of its capital, with such priority over the remaining stock
of such company, in the payment of dividends, as the directors of
such company may determine, and shall be approved by a majority of
the stockholders."
It would be difficult to say that these statutory provisions
allowed any preference in shares of capital stock, except a
preference among classes of shares, or any preference of any class
of shareholders over creditors. It is not to be supposed that those
engaged in reorganizing this company intended to violate the law of
Indiana or the general principles of law applicable to private
corporations. Nor is there anything to show that they did. The
language of the certificate is entirely satisfied by referring it
to a priority in rank of the preferred stock over the common stock;
to a first claim of the preferred stock on the property of the
corporation, after its indebtedness should be paid, when there
should be moneys to be divided among stockholders -- a claim which
should be first as compared with the claim of other stock. Claims
of stockholders, as such, on the corpus of the property of the
company in which they are stockholders, do not arise until the
debts of the company are paid. Until then, the shares confer rights
merely as regards profits and voting power.
Page 108 U. S. 398
It is urged, for the appellants, that the expression "after its
indebtedness" means, next after the indebtedness then existing or
then authorized; that the preferred stock was issued to the holders
of preferred certificates, owners of the property, as a
quasi-purchase money mortgage on its sale, and that they
intended to preserve their position except as to the new $6,000,000
mortgage, because they authorized that and did not authorize any
other. It is very certain that, at best, the words "after its
indebtedness" are, by themselves, ambiguous on their face, and are
as capable of being applied to future indebtedness as of being
limited to then existing indebtedness. Under the general rules
applicable to the position of the stockholders of a corporation as
regards its creditors, a claim of the kind here made should rest on
clear and not doubtful language. But the provision which follows,
as to the rights of the preferred stock in the net earnings of the
company, leaves no doubt as to the meaning of the whole. There is a
unity of right in the claim of the preferred stock on the property
of the company, and in the title of its holder to receive a share
of the net earnings of that property. His proprietorship in those
earnings is a right to receive from them so much a year, if earned,
before the common stock receives any dividend therefrom, and, when
the two classes of stock have each received the same specified
amount out of the year's net earnings, he has the right to share
equally in the surplus with the holder of common stock. Thus, he
can have no income on his stock unless there are net earnings.
Those net earnings are what is left after paying current expenses
and interest on debt, and everything else which the stockholders,
preferred and common, as a body corporate, are liable to pay. The
holders of preferred stock have the same relation, by virtue of the
certificate, to the corpus of the property, which they have to its
net earnings. Their position in regard to both is one inferior to
that of all creditors. They are not preferred as to reimbursement
of principal, or as to a right to net earnings, over anyone but the
holders of common stock. The interest to be paid to them is not to
be paid absolutely, as to a creditor, but only out of net earnings
-- the same fund out of which the dividends on common stock are to
be
Page 108 U. S. 399
paid. Though called "interest," it is really a dividend, because
to be paid on stock and out of net profits. There was no
restriction on the creation of future indebtedness, and,
necessarily, the net earnings of future business would be
ascertained in reference to such future indebtedness and the
interest on it, and the words "its indebtedness," in the same
sentence, naturally mean "its future indebtedness," in reference to
which the net earnings subsequently treated of are to be
ascertained. Creditors may resort to the body of their debtor's
property for interest as well as principal. But these holders of
preferred stock are limited, for any income or interest, to the net
earnings. There is nothing in the certificate which clothes them
with a single attribute of a creditor, while it specially gives
them, as stockholders, an equal interest with the common
stockholders in the excess of net earnings in each year, after
paying therefrom 7 percent on each share of stock, preferred and
common.
Whatever position the holders of preferred certificates occupied
before they accepted preferred stock, whatever special right of
lien they had, they became corporators, proprietors, shareholders,
and abandoned the position of creditors, and took up toward
existing and future creditors the same position which every
stockholder in a corporation occupies toward existing and future
creditors. His chance of gain, by the operations of the
corporation, throws on him, as respects creditors, the entire risk
of the loss of his share of the capital, which must go to satisfy
the creditors in case of misfortune. He cannot be both creditor and
debtor, by virtue of his ownership of stock. In this case, all the
parties holding trustees' certificates united to form the new
corporation, and converted themselves into stockholders in it.
It seems very clear that if the trustees representing the
holders of trustees' certificates had gone on and operated the road
for them, not organizing a new company, any debts contracted by the
trustees in the business would have had priority over the claims of
the holders of such certificates. So, in becoming stockholders in
the new company, with the right to vote as to its management, and
to share in its earnings, they
Page 108 U. S. 400
must have intended to allow, through the corporation, a priority
of like debts over their claims as stockholders.
The same principles must govern the present case which were
applied by this Court in
St. John v. Erie Railway
Company, 22 Wall. 136, where creditors took
preferred stock. It was held that they ceased to be creditors and
could be regarded only as stockholders, with a chance for dividends
out of net earnings and the power of voting and a priority over
holders of common stock, but not a priority over debts subsequently
contracted.
Much stress is laid on the averment in the cross-bill that the
existence of the preferred stock and of the certificates therefor
and of their contents was known to the trustees under the
subsequent mortgages before those mortgages were made, and to the
bondholders under those mortgages before they became such, and it
is urged that the assent of the preferred stockholders to the
creation of the subsequent mortgages should have been obtained. The
answer to this view is that the preferred stockholders had no
rights which made their assent necessary to the validity, as
against them, of the mortgages in question, and that, represented
as they were by the corporation and its directors, the act of
making the mortgages was a sufficient assent of the preferred
stockholders, if assent were necessary, there being no allegation
in the cross-bill inconsistent with the fact that the issuing of
the mortgages was known to and participated in and sanctioned by
those who were holders of the preferred stock when the mortgages
were created.
As to the claim that the appellants, if they have no priority
over the second mortgage, have at all events, as against the
company, a lien next after the second mortgage on the property not
covered by the Springfield Division mortgage, and have, in any
aspect of the case, a valid claim on the surplus assets of the
company, after paying its debts, superior to the claim of the
common stockholders, it is sufficient to say that we do not deem it
proper that those questions should be disposed of on a demurrer to
this cross-bill, as they can be raised and decided under the answer
which these appellants have filed as defendants in the consolidated
suit.
The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.