In order to give a standing in a court of equity to a small
minority of stockholders contesting as
ultra vires an act
of the directors against which a large majority makes no objection,
it must appear that they have exhausted all the means within their
reach to obtain redress of their grievances within the corporation
itself, and that they were stockholders at the time of the
transactions complained of, or that the shares have devolved on
them since by operation of law.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought to set aside a contract by which the Ohio
and Mississippi Railway Company became the owner of a portion of
its road known as the Springfield Division, and to obtain a decree
from the court declaring that the bonds issued by the company and
secured by a mortgage upon that division are null and void. It was
commenced by Dimpfel, an individual stockholder in the company, who
stated in his bill that it was filed on behalf of himself and such
other stockholders as might join him in the suit. Callaghan,
another stockholder, is the only one who joined him. The two claim
to be the owners of 1,500 shares of the stock of the company. The
whole number of shares is 240,000. The owners of the balance of
this large number make no complaint of the transactions which the
complainants seek to annul.
Page 110 U. S. 210
And it does not appear that the complainants owned their shares
when these transactions took place. For aught we can see to the
contrary, they may have purchased the shares long afterwards
expressly to annoy and vex the company in the hope that they might
thereby extort from its fears a larger benefit than the other
stockholders have received or may reasonably expect from the
purchase, or compel the company to buy their shares at prices above
the market value. Unfortunately, litigation against large companies
is often instituted by individual stockholders from no higher
motive.
But assuming that the complainants were the owners of the shares
held by them when the transactions of which they complain took
place, it does not appear that they made any attempt to prevent the
purchase of the additional road and the issue by the company of its
bonds secured by a mortgage on that road. We are not informed of
any appeal by them to the directors to stay their hands in this
respect, nor of any representation to them of a want of power to
make the purchase and issue the bonds, nor of any probable injury
which would arise therefrom. The purchase was made in January,
1875, and this suit was not commenced until September 12, 1878. In
the meantime, the new road purchased was operated as an integral
part of the line of the Ohio and Mississippi Railway Company,
without objection from any stockholder. During these three years
and eight months, the earnings of the new road went into the
Treasury of the company, and the bonds issued upon the mortgage of
that road, executed by the company in payment of its purchase,
passed into the hands of parties who bought them on the faith of
contracts which had been carried out without complaint from anyone.
Objections now come with bad grace from parties who knew at the
time all that was being done by the company, and gave no sign of
dissatisfaction. The purchase and the issue of the bonds were
public acts known to them, and presumably to all the
stockholders.
A stockholder must make a better showing of wrongs which he has
suffered, and also of efforts to obtain relief against them, before
a court of equity will interfere and set aside the transactions
Page 110 U. S. 211
of a railway company or of its directors. It is not enough that
there may be a doubt as to the authority of the directors or as to
the wisdom of their proceedings. Grievances, real and substantial,
must exist, and before an individual stockholder can be heard he
must show, in the language of this Court, that
"he has exhausted all the means within his reach to obtain,
within the corporation itself, the redress of his grievances or
action in conformity to his wishes."
Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U. S. 450.
In that case, the Court added that the efforts to induce such
action as he desired on the part of the directors or of the
stockholders, when that was necessary, and the cause of his failure
should be stated with particularity in his bill of complaint,
accompanied with an allegation that he was a stockholder at the
time of the transactions of which he complains, or that his shares
have devolved on in since by operation of law.
According to the rule thus declared, and its value and
importance are constantly manifested, the complainants have no
standing in court, and the demurrer was properly sustained for want
of equity in the bill.
This view renders it unnecessary to consider whether, as held by
the court below, the railway company had the right to acquire the
Springfield Division and to execute the mortgage and issue the
bonds mentioned by virtue of the legislation of Illinois. The
complainants have not shown any ground which would justify the
court, on this application, to inquire into the validity of the
transaction.
Decree affirmed.