In 1851, the Legislature of Ohio passed a general law relating
to railway companies which empowered them at any time, by means of
their subscription to the capital stock of any other company or
otherwise, to aid such other railroad company, provided no such aid
shall be furnished until, at a called meeting of the stockholders,
two-thirds of the stock represented shall have assented
thereto.
In 1852, another act was passed for the creation and regulation
of incorporated companies in Ohio, reenacting the above section and
providing further, that any existing company might accept any of
its provisions, and when so accepted, and a certified copy of their
acceptance filed with the Secretary of state, that portion of their
charters inconsistent with the provisions of this act shall be
repealed.
The Cleveland, Columbus & Cincinnati Railroad Company, when
they endorsed the bonds hereafter mentioned, had not formally
complied with either of these requirements -- had neither convoked
a meeting of the stockholders nor signified their acceptance to the
secretary of state.
In April, 1854, the Cleveland, Columbus & Cincinnati
Railroad Company endorsed a guaranty upon four hundred bonds of one
thousand dollars each, with interest coupons at seven percent
interest, issued by the Columbus, Piqua & Indiana Railroad
Company.
A stockholder in the Cleveland &c. company filed a bill to
enjoin the directors from paying the interest upon the bonds which
they had thus guaranteed, upon the ground that these directors had
exceeded their legal authority in making the guaranty. Some of the
bondholders came in as defendants with the corporation.
As between the parties to this suit, the acceptance of the acts
of 1851 and 1852 may be inferred from the conduct of the
corporators themselves. The corporation has executed the powers and
claimed the privileges conferred by it, and it cannot exonerate
itself from the responsibility by asserting that it has not filed
the evidence required by the statute to evince its decision.
Amongst the acts of the corporators was this -- that at a
meeting of the stockholders of the Cleveland company in July, 1854,
the endorsement of the bonds was approved, adopted, and sanctioned,
and this resolution has never been rescinded at any subsequent
annual meetings, of which there have been several, at which the
complainant was represented. His proxy was also present at the
meeting of July, 1854, but declined to vote when his vote would
have controlled the action of the meeting.
These negotiable securities have been placed on sale in the
community, accompanied by these resolutions and votes, inviting
public confidence, and a corporation
Page 64 U. S. 382
cannot, by their representations or silence, involve others in
onerous engagements and then defeat the calculations and claims
their own conduct has superinduced.
Zabriskie was a citizen of the State of New York and a
stockholder in the Cleveland, Columbus & Cincinnati Railroad
Company. He filed a bill against the company and obtained an
injunction to restrain them from paying any money in discharge of
the interest to become due on four hundred bonds of the Columbus,
Piqua & Indiana Railroad Company, which said bonds had been
endorsed by the former company conjointly with the Bellefontaine
& Indiana Railroad Company, and the Indianapolis, Cleveland,
and Pittsburgh Railroad Company. Butler, Belknap, and Callender,
citizens of Connecticut, obtained leave to become parties to the
suit as defendants upon the allegation that each of them was the
holder of a bond or bonds which had been thus endorsed.
After much testimony was taken and other proceedings had, the
circuit court, in March, 1858, dissolved the injunction and
dismissed the bill. The complainant appealed to this Court.
Page 64 U. S. 390
MR. JUSTICE CAMPBELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant is a stockholder of the Cleveland, Columbus &
Cincinnati Railroad Company, a corporation existing by the law of
Ohio and empowered to construct a railroad from Cleveland south,
and having a capital of more than $4,300,000 distributed among
above nine hundred stockholders. The appellant complains that this
corporation, in April, 1854, illegally endorsed a guaranty upon
four hundred bonds of one thousand dollars each, with interest
coupons at the rate of seven percent per annum, payable to Elias
Fossett or bearer in New York, in 1869, that had been issued in
that month by the Columbus, Piqua & Indiana Railroad Company,
and which were also endorsed by the Bellefontaine & Indiana
Railroad Company, and the Indianapolis & Bellefontaine Railroad
Company, to the prejudice of the stockholders and the burden of the
resources of the said Cleveland corporation. The object of the bill
was to obtain a decree to restrain the company, pending the suit,
from paying the interest, and upon a declaration of the illegality
of the bonds, to enjoin the corporation from applying any of its
effects to their redemption.
The three defendants are holders of five of the bonds who have
availed themselves of the invitation of the bill to all their class
to become defendants and who assert that they are
bona
fide holders and that their securities are valid obligations
of the company. This issue of the obligations of these four
corporations originated in a negotiation among their officers,
in
Page 64 U. S. 391
1854, to determine upon a uniform gauge for all their roads and
to promote intimate connections in their transit operations.
The Piqua road and the Indianapolis road were projected to
extend from Columbus to Indianapolis, one hundred and eighty-five
miles, and were partially finished at a gauge of four feet eight
and one-half inches, and had agreed to maintain this gauge for
their common interest. At Columbus, they were to connect with roads
of the same gauge leading through Ohio and Pennsylvania to
Philadelphia.
The Cleveland and the Bellefontaine railroads were constructed
upon the Ohio gauge of four feet ten inches, and the companies were
interested to detach the other corporations from their Pennsylvania
connection and to combine them with their own and other companies,
whose roads passed through Cleveland, along the shores of the lakes
into New York, and connected there with the railroad and canal
communications of that state. The Piqua road was at this time
finished only forty-six miles, and the company was embarrassed, and
their work suspended for want of money. The Indianapolis company
were willing to change the gauge of their road to the Ohio pattern,
but were withheld by their contract with the Piqua Company. In
January, 1854, the Piqua Company appointed a committee from their
board of directors to negotiate for money or securities sufficient
to complete their road and to discharge their debts, other than
bond debts, and were authorized to prepare six hundred bonds of one
thousand dollars each, of the usual form, to be secured by a
mortgage, being the third mortgage of their franchises and road.
They were also empowered to determine the gauge of the road and
either to maintain their existing connections or to consent to the
adoption of the Ohio gauge in conjunction with the Indianapolis
Company.
This committee opened their negotiations in Philadelphia, but
pending these, the vice president of the company, Dennison "sounded
the inclinations" of the Cleveland Company, by intimating that if
that company would endorse a portion of the bonds, and take some of
the stock of the Piqua Company, the Pennsylvania connection would
be abandoned. Some assurance having been given by the president of
the Cleveland
Page 64 U. S. 392
Company to him, he, with the financial agent of the company
Niel, arranged a contract with the committee of the Piqua Company
to purchase the six hundred bonds, to guaranty a subscription for
$50,000 of their stock at par, and to assume the control of the
settlement of all controversies and questions concerning the gauge
of the road. These negotiations were pending from the first week in
February until the 25th of the month, when the contract was reduced
to writing and the price to be paid settled at $305,000. On the 7th
of March, 1854, Dennison and Niel concluded a contract with the
three corporations, Cleveland, Indianapolis, and Bellefontaine, by
which they consented to the permanent adoption of the Ohio gauge
for the Piqua and Indianapolis roads, and those corporations agreed
to guaranty four hundred of the bonds of the Piqua Company before
mentioned, and to subscribe for thirty thousand dollars of their
stock. This contract was reported shortly after to the boards of
the several corporations, and approved, and the bonds were issued
and endorsed, and the stock subscribed for in April, 1854. The
tracks of the several roads were altered to conform to this
arrangement shortly after. The negotiations and contracts of
Dennison and Niel were for their own account and benefit. The
testimony is conclusive of the fact that the members of the Piqua
board were ignorant of the assurances they had received of the
disposition of the Cleveland and other companies to enter into such
engagements. Dennison had been a director of this company from its
organization, but before signing the contract of the 25th February
with the Piqua Company, he exhibited a written resignation, and
that resignation was entered upon the minutes of the board before
the approval of the contract or the issue of the bonds to him and
his associate.
This transaction was reported to the stockholders of the
endorsing corporations in July, 1854, and accepted by them as the
act of the company. The board of directors of the Cleveland
Company, on the 16th June, resolved that there should be submitted
to a vote of the stockholders, at a meeting on the 1st July
proximo, four propositions for the aid of other roads desiring to
form a connection with that company, under the
Page 64 U. S. 393
4th section of a statute of Ohio, passed 3 March, 1851. Among
these was the endorsement of four hundred bonds of the Piqua
Company. Notice was given of this meeting by advertisement in the
daily papers of Cleveland and Columbus and a daily paper in New
York, but it did not disclose the object of the meeting. Above
eighteen thousand shares of stock were represented, and the
following resolution was adopted without a dissenting vote:
"Resolved that the endorsement jointly and severally with the
Bellefontaine & Indiana Railroad Company, and the Indianapolis
& Bellefontaine Railroad Company, of four hundred thousand
dollars of the third mortgage bonds of the Columbus, Piqua &
Indianapolis Railroad Company, by order of the board, March 6,
1854, be and the same is approved, adopted, and sanctioned, by this
meeting, as the proper act of this company."
But although there was no dissent in the vote, there was
dissatisfaction openly expressed by the proxy of the appellant and
of a majority of the stockholders represented at the meeting, and
who declined to vote on the resolution. The bonds were offered for
sale in the City of New York in the summer of 1854 and the spring
of 1855, under an uncontradicted representation of their validity
through the votes above mentioned, and were freely purchased at
fair prices. The interest was paid by the Piqua Company until
October, 1855, when the installment due in that month was
discharged by the endorsers in equal proportions. In the spring of
1856, the Piqua Company having become insolvent, the appellant
served a notice upon the Cleveland Company not to pay any portion
of the principal and interest that might become due on the bonds,
and required them to sue for the cancellation of their guaranty,
and demanded his share of the profits of the company, without the
reservation of any part for the payment of the bonds, and
immediately after filed the bill in this cause.
He contends that the sale by the Piqua Company to Dennison and
Niel is void under a statute of Ohio that prohibits any director of
a railroad company to purchase, either directly or indirectly, any
shares of the capital stock, or any of the
Page 64 U. S. 394
bonds, notes, or other securities, of any railroad company of
which he may be a director for less than the par value thereof, and
it declares:
"That all such stocks, bonds, and notes, or other securities,
that may be purchased by any such directors for less than the par
value thereof shall be null and void."
He insists that the endorsement of the bonds of the Piqua
Company was of no advantage to the Cleveland Company, but was
merely to consummate the success of a speculation of Dennison and
Niel -- a speculation reprobated by the law of Ohio; that the
Cleveland Company were not empowered by their charter to guaranty
the contracts of corporations or individuals; that this endorsement
was not required for the construction of the road, or in the course
of the business of the company, or to promote an end of the
incorporation; and that none of the acts of the General Assembly of
Ohio authorize it.
He denies any efficacy to the vote of the stockholders in July,
1854, because the notice was insufficient, in the length of the
time and in the failure to disclose the purpose of the call; that
more than one-half of the stock of the company was not represented,
and two-thirds of that present did not vote, for the want of proper
information and counsel on the subject. That the meeting were
ignorant of material facts; they were not advised of the relations
of Dennison and Niel to the Piqua Company, and their connection
with the bonds, when the vote was taken, and were deceived as to
the condition of the Piqua Company. He avers that the bondholders
are chargeable with notice of the fact that the endorsement was
made before the meeting of the stockholders, and by the authority
of the directors only.
The testimony does not convict the defendants -- the bondholders
-- of complicity in the negotiations or contracts that preceded the
issue of the bonds, nor does any equivocal circumstance appear in
their purchase of those securities. It is proved that it is a
common practice for railroad corporations to make similar
arrangements to enlarge their connections and increase their
business. The Cleveland Company had encouraged this practice by
precept and example. In a report of their board of directors, in
January, 1854, the company
Page 64 U. S. 395
were informed of their establishment of a line of first-class
steamboats between Cleveland and Buffalo, and of their guaranty of
the bonds of other companies for three hundred thousand dollars; of
subscriptions for stock to the extent of one hundred thousand
dollars, and of promised aid to still another company. They
say:
"These companies may need additional assistance, and others
proposing to intersect ours may, by a moderate loan of money or
credit, be enabled to finish their roads and establish with us
business relations for the mutual benefit of both parties, while
the advances on our part may be made safe and remunerative. Unless
advised of your disapprobation, the board will continue to pursue
this policy."
No such disapprobation was expressed as to check the board of
directors until the guaranty of these bonds had been sanctioned, in
July, 1854, at a meeting of the stockholders. The discussion was
confined to the circle of the corporation until after the failure
of the Piqua Company to pay a second installment of interest. Then
the appellant filed this bill.
The frame of the bill implies that this contract exceeds the
power of the corporation, and cannot be confirmed against a
dissenting stockholder. His authority to file such a bill is
supported upon this ground alone.
Dodge v.
Walsey, 18 How. 331;
Mott v. Penn. R. Co.,
30 Pa. 1;
Manderson v. Commercial Bank, 28 Pa. 379.
The usual and more approved form of such a suit being that of
one or more stockholders to sue in behalf of the others.
Bemon
v. Rufford, 1 Simon N.S. 550;
Winch v. Birkenhead H.
Railway Co., 5 De G. & S. 562;
Mosley v. Alston,
1 Phil. 790;
Wood v. Draper, 24 Barb.N.Y.R.
A court of equity will not hear a stockholder assert that he is
not interested in preventing the law of the corporation from being
broken, and assumes that none contemplate advantages from an
application of the common property that the Constitution of the
company does not authorize.
The powers of the Cleveland Company are vested in a board of
directors chosen from the company. They are authorized to construct
and maintain their road, and for that purpose can employ the
resources and credit of the company, and execute
Page 64 U. S. 396
the requisite securities, and are required to exhibit annually a
clear and distinct statement of their affairs to a meeting of the
stockholders. In the year 1851 a general law relating to railway
companies empowered them
"at any time, by means of their subscription to the capital
stock of any other company, or
otherwise, to aid such
company in the construction of its railroad, for the purpose of
forming a connection of said last-mentioned road with the road
owned by the company furnishing such aid; . . . and empowered any
two or more railroad companies whose lines are so connected to
enter into any arrangement for their common benefit, consistent
with and calculated to promote the objects for which they were
created, provided that no such aid shall be furnished nor any . . .
arrangement perfected until a meeting of the stockholders of each
of said companies shall have been called by the directors thereof,
at such time and place and in such manner as they shall designate,
and the holders of at least two-thirds of the stock of such company
represented at such meeting in person or by proxy and voting
thereat shall have assented thereto."
This section was reenacted in the following year, in a general
act for "the creation and regulation of incorporated companies in
Ohio," which last act provides that
"Any existing company might accept any of its provisions, and
when so accepted, and a certified copy of their acceptance filed
with the Secretary of State, that portion of their charters
inconsistent with the provisions of this act shall be
repealed."
Curwen's Ohio laws 949, 1110.
It is contended that neither of these acts was accepted by the
Cleveland Company; that the act of 1852 superseded that of 1851,
and that the former could be accepted and become obligatory upon
the company only in the mode it prescribed. Both of these are
general acts, and were designed to enlarge the faculties of these
corporations, so as to promote their utility, and to enable them to
accomplish with more convenience the objects of their
incorporation. This act of 1851 does not divest any estate of the
company, or make such a radical change in their constitution as to
authorize the members
Page 64 U. S. 397
to say that its adoption without their consent is a dissolution
of the body. But for an intimation in an opinion of the Supreme
Court of Ohio (
Chapman & Harkness v. M.R. & L.E. R.
Co., 6 Ohio N.S. 119) to the contrary, we should have been
inclined to adopt the conclusion that the act of March, 1851, might
be operative without the specific or formal assent of the
corporations to which it refers, and was not superseded by the act
of 1852, as to preexisting corporations.
Everhart v. P. &
U.C. R. Co., 28 Pa. 340;
Gray v. Monongahela N. Co.,
2 W. & S. 156;
Great W. R. W. Co. v. Rushant, 5 De G.
& S. 290.
The jurisprudence of Ohio is averse to the repeal of statutes by
implication, and in the instance of two affirmative statutes, one
is not to be construed to repeal the other by implication unless
they can be reconciled by no mode of interpretation.
Cass v.
Dillon, 1 Ohio N.S. 607.
The learned compiler of the laws of Ohio retains the act of 1851
as valid in respect to the corporations then existing. But as
between the parties on this record, the acceptance of those acts
may be inferred from the conduct of the corporators themselves. The
corporation have executed the powers and claimed the privileges
conferred by them, and they cannot exonerate themselves from the
responsibility by asserting that they have not filed the evidence
required by the statute to evince their decision. The observations
of Lord St. Leonards in the House of Lords,
Bargate v.
Shortridge, 5 H.L.Ca. 297, in reference to the effect of the
conduct of a board of directors as determining the liability of a
corporation, are applicable to this corporation, under the facts of
this case. "It does appear to me," he says,
"that if, by a course of action, the directors of a company
neglect precautions which they ought to attend to, and thereby lead
third persons to deal together as upon real transactions, and to
embark money or credit in a concern of this sort, these directors
cannot, after five or six years have elapsed, turn round and
themselves raise the objection that they have not taken these
precautions, and that the shareholders ought to have inquired and
ascertained the matter. . . . The way, therefore, in which I
Page 64 U. S. 398
propose to put it to your lordships, in point of law, is this:
the question is not whether that irregularity can be considered as
unimportant, or as being different in equity from what it is in
law, but the question simply is whether, by that continued course
of dealing, the directors have not bound themselves to such an
extent that they cannot be heard in a court of justice to set up,
with a view to defeat the rights of the parties with whom they have
been dealing, that particular clause enjoining them to do an act
which they themselves have neglected to do."
This principle does not impugn the doctrine that a corporation
cannot vary from the object of its creation, and that persons
dealing with a company must take notice of whatever is contained in
the law of their organization. This doctrine has been constantly
affirmed in this Court, and has been engrafted upon the common law
of Ohio.
Pearce v. M. & I. R.
Co., 21 How. 441;
Strauss v. Eagle Ins.
Co., 5 Ohio N.S. 59. But the principle includes those cases in
which a corporation acts within the range of its general authority,
but fails to comply with some formality or regulation which it
should not have neglected, but which it has chosen to
disregard.
The instances already cited of the course of dealing of this
corporation, and others of a similar nature, of which there is
evidence in the record, sufficiently attest that the corporation
accepted the acts of 1851 and 1852 as valid grants of power, and it
would be manifestly unjust to allow it to repudiate the contracts
which it has made, because their acceptance of these grants has not
been clothed in an authentic form. The Supreme Court of Ohio has
recognized the obligation of corporators to be prompt and vigilant
in the exposure of illegality or abuse in the employment of their
corporate powers, and has denied assistance to those who have
waited till the evil has been done, and the interest of innocent
parties has become involved.
Chapman v. Mad River R. Co.,
6 Ohio N.S. 119;
State v. Van Horne, 7 Ohio N.S. 327.
We conclude, that the validity of the contract of the Cleveland
corporation under the circumstances must be determined on the
assumption that it was authorized to exert the
Page 64 U. S. 399
power conferred in the fourth section of the act of March, 1851,
and 24th section of the act of May, 1852.
In deciding upon the validity of this contract, we deem it
unimportant to settle whether Dennison was a director of the Piqua
Company the 25th February, 1854, when he signed the contract with
the committee of the Piqua board of directors, or whether that
contract was affected by its ratification by the board after his
resignation was entered upon the minutes, or by the subsequent
consummation of the contract, in the reciprocal transfer of the
securities and payment of the consideration, or whether, as matter
of law, the bonds of the Piqua Company, commercial in their form,
payable to another party, and issued after his resignation, are
null and void.
The contract of the guarantors endorsing the bonds is a distinct
contract, and may impose an obligation upon them independently of
the Piqua Company. In the absence of a personal incapacity of
Dennison to deal with his principal, the issue of the bonds by the
directors of the Piqua Company is an ordinary act of
administration, and bonds in such form, it is admitted, "challenge
confidence wherever they go." We perceive no illegality in their
delegation to them of the power to determine whether the Ohio or
Pennsylvania gauge should be adopted, or their sale of the
privilege to adjust the controversies and questions relating to it.
Their adoption of the Ohio gauge was a solution of all the
difficulties; it enabled the Indianapolis Company to adopt it; it
superinduced the resulting consequence of running connections among
the four corporations; it secured profits to the guarantors; it
imposed the burden of relaying their track upon the Piqua Company.
Their contract to adopt this gauge and to form the corresponding
connections is a valuable consideration, and the Piqua Company have
fulfilled the engagements that Dennison and Niel were authorized to
stipulate on their behalf. There is testimony that the bargain was
a hard one for the guarantors, and argument that it was probably an
unjust one, and possibly fraudulent in reference to the
stockholders of the Cleveland Company. But the bill is framed not
to obtain relief from error or fraud in the administration of the
powers of the company
Page 64 U. S. 400
by their trustees, but against the exercise of powers that did
not belong to the corporation, and which the body could not
confirm, except by a unanimous vote.
Foss
v. Harbottle, 2 How. 461; 2 Phil.Ch. 740.
We proceed to consider of the effect of the sanction given to
the arrangements of the Cleveland Company, through Dennison and
Niel, with the Piqua Company, by the vote of the meeting in July,
1854. It is objected that the notice of this meeting was
insufficient and that, unprepared as the corporators were, the
proxy appointed by the nonresident stockholders was overpowered by
the heat and passion of the directors and their adherents. There is
some force in the complaint that this meeting was not conducted
with a due respect for the social rights of a portion of the
stockholders. But the time, place, and manner of the meeting were
appointed by the directors, as the act of 1851 permits. The proxy
of the appellant was there, exhibited his instructions, discussed
the propositions submitted, and declined to vote, when his vote
would have controlled the action of the meeting. Since that time,
several annual meetings have been held, at which the appellant was
represented. The circumstances of the contract and its effects have
been developed, and yet the resolution sanctioning this contract
has not been rescinded. It may be that among the stockholders and
within the corporation the cause of this procrastination and
hesitancy to act upon the subject may be estimated properly. But we
are to regard the conduct of the corporation from an external
position. The community at large must form their judgment of it
from the acts and resolutions adopted by the authorities of the
corporation and the meeting of the stockholders, and by their
acquiescence in them. These negotiable securities have been placed
on sale in the community, accompanied by these resolutions and
votes, inviting public confidence. They have circulated without an
effort on the part of the corporation or corporators to restrain
them or to disabuse those who were influenced by these apparently
official acts. Men have invested their money on the assurance they
have afforded.
A corporation, quite as much as an individual, is held to a
Page 64 U. S. 401
careful adherence to truth in their dealings with mankind, and
cannot, by their representations or silence, involve others in
onerous engagements and then defeat the calculations and claims
their own conduct had superinduced. The opinion of the Court is
that the injunction granted upon the bill of the appellant was
improvidently granted, and that he is not entitled to the relief he
has sought, and that the decree of the circuit court dissolving the
injunction and dismissing the bill is correct, and must be
Affirmed.