The Court agrees with the district court in concluding that
appellants' allegations of fraud were not sustained.
Generally speaking, when fraud is alleged and denied, the party
making the charge will be confined to that issue.
When a constitutional question, asserted as the basis for the
jurisdiction of this Court on direct appeal from the district
court, is pleaded
Page 244 U. S. 408
as resulting from the execution of a fraudulent scheme, the
question ought not to be considered (
semble) if the charge
of fraud fails.
By claiming the benefits of state laws, the right to question
their constitutionality may be waived.
216 F. 242 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the court:
The appellants, as owners of 1,210 of the 229,850 shares of the
capital stock of the Parrot Silver & Copper Company, a
corporation organized under the laws of Montana, filed their bill
in the United States District Court for the District of Montana,
seeking to avoid an executed sale of all the property and assets of
that company, made on May 31, 1910, to the Anaconda Copper Mining
Company, the consideration being a stipulated number of shares of
the vendee company.
The claim of the appellants is that, in 1899, certain persons
acquired control of a majority of the shares of the capital stock
of the Parrot Company with the fraudulent purpose of so managing
its affairs as to deplete and depreciate its assets "and then to
acquire them" for less than their real value, thereby depriving the
minority stockholders of "the just and fair value of their right
and interest" as shareholders, or "of an appraisal of the value of
their stock on any adequate basis of value."
It is further claimed that this fraudulent scheme found
consummation in the sale to the Anaconda Company, which was made
under authority of §§ 4409-4412 of the Revised Codes of
Montana.
Page 244 U. S. 409
Section 4409 provides that a sale may be made of all the assets
of any mining corporation when at least two thirds of the whole
number of shares of the capital stock outstanding shall vote in
favor of making such a sale at a meeting called and notified as
provided in the section. Such a sale of the "whole property of the
corporation" works a dissolution of the corporation under §
4410, and its affairs must be wound up. Section 4411 provides that
any stockholder who shall not have voted for or authorized such
sale may, within twenty days from the date of the stockholders'
meeting authorizing it, give written notice that he does not assent
thereto, and demand payment of the value of his stock, and ten days
after the service of such notice, he must, or the corporation may,
apply to a designated court and have the value of the stock fixed
and appraised. Upon such application, the court shall appoint three
appraisers who shall take evidence in relation to and shall find
the value of the stock of such dissenting stockholder "at the time
of his dissent." To any stockholder not satisfied with the award of
the appraisers, the next section, 4412, allows an appeal to the
district court, where the value of the stock shall be reassessed by
a jury in the same manner as in "appeals from the assessments of
commissioners in condemnation proceedings provided by law." The
judgment on such an award must be entered against both the vendor
and the vendee corporation, and by the statute it is made a lien
superior to the rights of the vendee upon all of the real property
sold.
After the sale to the Anaconda Company complained of, the
appellants served a notice of dissent on the Parrot corporation and
commenced a statutory proceeding for the appraisal of their stock,
which has not been brought on for hearing, but is still
pending.
The claim upon which the appellants come into this Court by
direct appeal is that the statutes of Montana
Page 244 U. S. 410
referred to are unconstitutional because they provide for a sale
of all the property of the corporation upon a favorable vote of
less than all (not less than two thirds) of the shares of the
capital stock of the corporation, and that dissenting stockholders
must accept an award of the value of their stock, made as of the
date of sale. Such an award in this case, it is claimed, would be
based upon a valuation of the assets of the company after they had
been fraudulently depleted and depreciated, and without its being
possible in such a proceeding to add anything to the value of their
stock on account of the damage which the persons in control of the
defendants by their fraudulent conduct had done to the property of
the Parrot Company, and thereby to the value of the appellants'
stock prior to the sale. This, it is contended, would result in
taking the property of the appellants without just compensation and
in violation of the "due process of law" and of the "equal
protection of the laws" clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States.
This summary of this record shows that the claims of the bill
presented to the district court for decision two questions,
viz:
(1) Did the defendants fraudulently dissipate and depreciate the
assets of the Parrot Company prior to the sale complained of, to
the damage of the interest of the appellants as stockholders?
(2) If the Montana statutes were given effect, would they so
deprive the appellants of a part of the value of their stock as to
offend against the designated provisions of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Constitution of the United States?
An examination of this record leads us to fully agree with the
trial court in its conclusion that the appellants failed utterly to
sustain their allegations that the property of the Parrot Company
was fraudulently dissipated and depreciated through the management
of the defendants
Page 244 U. S. 411
prior to the sale, or that the sale made was in any respect
fraudulent. Upon this conclusion, the judgment of the district
court might well be affirmed, for the reason that, where fraud is
charged in a bill or set up in an answer, and is denied, the party
making the charge will be confined to that issue, and also for the
reason that, where the claimed constitutional question on which a
direct appeal to this Court is based is pleaded as resulting from
the carrying into effect of a fraudulent scheme, when such charge
of fraud fails, the asserted constitutional question ought not to
be considered.
French v.
Shoemaker, 14 Wall. 314;
Eyre v.
Potter, 15 How. 42;
Chicago, Burlington &
Quincy Ry. Co. v. Babcock, 204 U. S. 585,
204 U. S.
593.
But we prefer not to have the case go off on this seemingly
technical but really sound and substantial rule.
There remains the contention that the statutes of Montana which
we have epitomized, if enforced, will deprive the appellants of
their property without due process of law because they provide that
sale may be made of all the assets of the corporation when
authorized by not less than two thirds of the outstanding capital
stock of the corporation, and that the plaintiffs must accept
either the payment for their shares which this large majority of
their associates think sufficient, or, if they prefer, the value in
money of their stock, to be determined by three appraisers, or,
still at the election of appellants, by a court and jury.
This record does not call upon us to examine into this challenge
of the validity of these statutory provisions, similar as they are
to those of many other states and of a seemingly equitable
character, for the reason that the appellants, by their action in
instituting a proceeding for the valuation of their stock, pursuant
to these statutes, which is still pending, waived their right to
assail the validity of them.
Great Falls Mfg. Co. v. Attorney
General, 124 U. S. 581;
Electric Co. v. Dow, 166 U. S. 489;
Pierce v. Somerset Railway, 171 U.
S. 641;
Leonard v.
Vicksburg,
Page 244 U. S. 412
Shreveport & Pacific R. Co., 198 U.
S. 416,
198 U. S. 422.
They cannot claim the benefit of statutes and afterwards assail
their validity. There is no sanctity in such a claim of
constitutional right as prevents its being waived as any other
claim of right may be.
The decision of the district court is
Affirmed.