|
Page 483
250 U.S. 483  39 S.Ct. 533 63 L.Ed. 1099 SOUTHERN PAC. CO.
v.
BOGERT et al.
No. 305.
Argued April 17 and 21, 1919.
Decided June 9, 1919.
[Syllabus from pages 483-485
intentionally omitted]
Page 486
Messrs. Lewis H. Freedman,
Gordon M. Buck, and Arthur H. Van
Brunt, all of New York City, for
petitioner.
Messrs. Charles E. Hughes
and H. Snowden Marshall, both of New
York City, for respondents.
Mr. Justice BRANDEIS delivered
the opinion of the Court.
In 1888, and for some years
prior thereto, the Southern Pacific Company
dominated the Houston & Texas Central
Railway Company, electing directors and
officers through one of its subsidiaries,
which owned a majority of the Houston
Company stock. In 1888, pursuant to a
reorganization agreement, mortgages upon the
Houston Company properties were foreclosed,
and these were acquired by the Houston &
Texas Central Railroad Company; the
old company's outstanding bonds were
exchanged for bonds of the new; all the new
company's stock was delivered to the
Southern Pacific; its lines of railroad were
incorporated in the transcontinental system
of that corporation; and the minority
stockholders of the old Houston Company
received nothing. In 1913 the appellees,
suing on behalf of themselves and other
minority stockholders, brought this suit in
the Supreme Court of New York to have the
Southern Pacific declared trustee for them
of stock in the new Houston Company and for
an accounting. The plaintiffs below being
citizens and residents of New York, and the
Southern Pacific, a Kentucky corporation, it
removed the case to the District Court of
the United States for the
Page 487
Eastern District of New York; and that
court, after a hearing on the evidence,
entered a decree for the plaintiffs.
Bogert v. Southern Pacific Co., 226 Fed. 500.
See, also, Bogert v. Southern Pac. Co. (D.
C.) 215 Fed. 218, and Id. (D. C.) 211 Fed.
776. There had been issued by the old
Houston Company 77,269 shares of stock, and
by the new 100,000 shares. The decree
declared that the Southern Pacific held for
plaintiffs and other stockholders who
intervened 24,347.9 shares in the new
Houston Company, directed that it should
deliver to them these shares and also in
cash the sum of $702,336.61 (being the
aggregate of all dividends paid thereon) and
interest thereon from the times the several
dividends were received, upon receiving from
them 18,816 shares in the old Houston
Company and also with each share of old
stock delivered $261 in cash and
interest thereon from February 10, 1891.
This decree was affirmed by the Circuit
Court of Appeals (Bogert
v. Southern Pac. Co., 244 Fed. 61, 156 C. C.
A. 489); and the case comes here on
certiorari (245 U. S. 668, 38 Sup. Ct. 190,
62 L. Ed. 539).
In considering the many
objections urged against the decree, it is
important to bear constantly in mind the
exact nature of the equity invoked by the
bill and recognized by the lower courts. The
minority stockholders do not complain of a
wrong done the corporation or of any wrong
done by it to them. They complain of the
wrong done them directly by the Southern
Pacific and by it alone. The wrong consists
in its failure to share with them, the
minority, te proceeds of the common property
of which it, through majority stockholdings,
had rightfully taken control. In other
words, the minority assert the right to a
pro rata share of the common property; and
equity enforces the right by declaring the
trust on which the Southern Pacific holds it
and ordering distribution or compensation.
The rule of corporation law and of equity
invoked is well settled and has been often
applied. The majority has the right to
control; but when it does so, it
Page 488
occupies a fiduciary relation toward the
minority, as much so as the corporation
itself or its officers and directors. If
through that control a sale of the corporate
property is made and the property acquired
by the majority, the minority may not be
excluded from a fair participation in the
fruits of the sale.2
The facts on which the decree
is based are carefully set forth in the bill
of complaint; and the decree declares in
terms that every allegation contained in its
is true. No adequate reason is shown for
challenging, in any respect material for the
purposes of this opinion, the correctness of
this concurrent finding of the two lower
courts; and it is accepted as correct.
Baker v. Schofield, 243 U. S. 114, 118, 37
Sup. Ct. 333, 61 L. Ed. 626. The
detailed facts and the evidence upon which
they rest are fully recited in the opinions
delivered below or in the earlier litigation
hereafter referred to; and the facts will be
recited here only so far as necessary to an
understanding of the several errors of law
now insisted upon.
First. The Southern Pacific
contends that plaintiffs are barred by
laches. The reorganization agreement is
dated December 20, 1887; the decree of
foreclosure and sale was entered May 4,
1888; the sale was held September 8, 1888;
and the stock in the new company was
delivered to the Southern Pacific on
February 10, 1891. This suit was not begun
until July 26, 1913; and not until that time
was there a proper attempt to assert the
specific equity here enforced, namely, that
the Southern Pacific received the stock in
the new Houston Company as trustee for the
stockholders of the old. More than 22 years
had thus elapsed since the wrong complained
of was committed. But the essence of laches
is not merely lapse of time. It is essential
that there be also acquiescence in the
Page 489
alleged wrong or lack of diligence in
seeking a remedy. Here plaintiffs, or others
representing them, protested as soon as the
terms of the reorganization agreements were
announced; and ever since they have with
rare pertinacity and undaunted by failure
persisted in the diligent pursuit of a
remedy as the schedule of the earlier
litigation referred to in the margin
demonstrates.3 Where the cause of
action is of such a nature that a suit to
enforce it would be brought on behalf, not
only of the plaintiff, but of
Page 490
all persons similarly situated, it is not
essential that each such person should
intervene in the suit brought in order that
he be deemed thereafter free from the laches
which bars those who sleep on their rights.
Cox v. Stokes, 156 N. Y. 491, 511, 51 N. E.
316. Nor does failure, long continued,
to discover the appropriate remedy, though
well known, establish laches where there has
been due diligence, and, as the lower courts
have here found, the defendant was not
prejudiced by the delay.
Second. The Southern Pacific
contends that adverse decisions in the
earlier litigation are a bar either as an
estoppel or by way of election of remedies;
since the prosecution of some, if not all,
of the earlier suits also was actively
supported by the minority stockholders'
committee, and the plaintiffs are bound as
privies to the full extent to which the
decrees therein constitute res judicata. But
in none of these suits was the question here
in issue decided. Except in so far as those
cases were disposed of on objections to
jurisdiction, they decided merely that the
foreclosure could not be set aside as
fraudulent; that the minority stockholders
could not have the reorganization agreement
declared fraudulent; and that they could not
compel a reduction of the assessment made
under it or enjoin distribution of the stock
according to its terms. The minority
stockholders sought, when presenting the
case in the Court of Appeals of New York (MacArdell
v. Olcott, 189 N. Y. 368, 372, 373, 82 N. E.
161), to have declared the trust which
was later decreed in this suit; but that
court refused to consider the contention,
for the reason that this claim to relief was
based upon a theory 'widely at variance'
with that upon which that action was
commenced and tried. Because of such wide
divergence the earlier decrees do not
operate as res judicata. And there is no
basis for the claim of estoppel by election;
nor any reason why the minority, who failed
in the attempt to recover on one theory
because unsupported by the facts, should
Page 491
not be permitted to recover on another
for which the facts afford ample basis. Wm.
W. Bierce, Ltd., v. Hutchins, 205 U. S. 340,
347, 27 Sup. Ct. 524, 51 L. Ed. 828;
Barnsdall v. Waltemeyer, 142 Fed. 415, 420,
73 C. C. A. 515;
Standard Oil Co. v. Hawkins, 74 Fed. 395, 20
C. C. A. 468, 33 L. R. A. 739;
Henry v. Herrington, 193 N. Y. 218, 86 N. E.
29, 20 L. R. A. (N. S.) 249.
Third. The Southern Pacific
challenges the claim for relief on the
ground that it took the new Houston Company
stock, not as majority stockholder, but as
underwriter or banker under the reorganizt
ion agreement. The essential facts are
these: While dominating the old company
through control of a majority of its stock,
the Southern Pacific entered into its
reorganization, under an agreement by which
the minority stockholders of the old company
could obtain stock in the new only upon
payment in cash of a prohibitive assessment
of $71.40 per share (said to be required to
satisfy the floating debt and reorganization
expenses and charges), while the Southern
Pacific was enabled to acquire all the stock
in the new company upon paying an assessment
of $26 per share (said to be the amount
required to satisfy reorganization expenses
and charges). The Southern Pacific asserts
that, unlike the minority stockholders, it
assumed an underwriter's obligation to take
the new company's stock not subscribed for
by the minority, and also guaranteed part of
the principal and all the interest on the
new company's bonds, which were given in
exchange for those of the old company. But
the purpose of the Southern Pacific in
assuming these obligations was in no sense
to perform the function of banker. It was to
secure the incorporation of the Houston
Railroad into its own transcontinental
system. And it was never called upon to pay
anything under its guaranty.
Fourth. The Southern Pacific
contends that the doctrine under which
majority stockholders exercising control are
deemed trustees for the minority should not
be applied here, because it did not itself
own directly any
Page 492
stock in the old Houston Company; its
control being exerted through a subsidiary,
Morgan's Louisiana & Texas Railroad &
Steamship Company, which was the majority
stockholder in the old Houston Company. But
the doctrine by which the holders of a
majority of the stock of a corporation who
dominate its affairs are held to act as
trustee for the minority does not rest upon
such technical distinctions. It is the fact
of control of the common property held and
exercised, not the particular means by which
or manner in which the control is exercised,
that creates the fiduciary obligation.
Fifth. Equally unfounded is the
contention that the Southern Pacific cannot
be held liable because it was not guilty of
fraud or mismanagement. The essential of the
liability to account sought to be enforced
in this suit lies, not in fraud or
mismanagement, but in the fact that, having
become a fiduciary through taking control of
the old Houston Company, the Southern
Pacific has secured fruits which it has not
shared with the minority. The wrong lay, not
in acquiring the stock, but in refusing to
make a pro rata distribution on equal terms
among the old Houston Company shareholders.
Sixth. The Southern Pacific
also urges that the suit must fail because
the old Houston Company is an indispensable
party and has not been joined. The
contention proceeds upon a misconception of
the nature of the suit. Since its purpose is
merely to hold the Southern Pacific as
trustee for the plaintiffs individually of
the property which it has received, the old
Houston Company is in no way interested and
would not be even a proper party.
Seventh. The Southern Pacific
also contends that the decree is erroneous
because the effect is to give to the
minority their pro rata share in the new
Houston Company without their having made
any contribution towards satisfying the
floating indebtedness of the old; whereas
the floating debt creditors had a claim
against the property
Page 493
prior in interest to that of the old
company's stockholders.
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Guardian
Trust Co., 240 U. S. 166, 36 Sup. Ct. 334,
60 L. Ed. 579;
Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Boyd, 228 U. S.
482, 33 Sup. Ct. 554, 57 L. Ed. 931. The
fact that no provision was made for the
floating indebtedness is not a bar to the
minority obtaining relief. They did not come
into court with unclean hands because there
were floating debt creditors unpaid. If any
floating debts creditors have been illegally
deprived of rights, it was not by the
minority's acts. Whether the e rms on which
relief should be granted the minority should
be affected by the fact that the Southern
Pacific had, through a subsidiary, a large
interest in the unpaid floating debt,
presents a more serious question, which will
be considered later.
Eighth. Objection is made by
the Southern Pacific to the terms of the
decree also on the ground that, in requiring
distribution of stock in the old Houston
Company to the minority stockholders instead
of providing merely for an accounting and
compensation in damages, the decree imposes
upon it a heavy and unnecessary hardship.
This, it is said, will result from the fact
that all the stock of the new Houston
Company (except 17 shares to qualify
directors) has been pledged by the Southern
Pacific as part collateral for an issue of
35-year 4 per cent. bonds to the amount of
250,000,000 francs, and that by reason of a
clause in the collateral agreement by which
the Southern Pacific covenants that it is
the lawful owner of the securities, and that
they 'are not subject to any prior pledge,
charge, or equity,' a decree requiring
distribution of stock to the minority
stockholders may conceivably entitle the
trustee for these bonds to declare them due,
that such default might preclude it from
withdrawal of the stock and from
substituting other collateral, and that, in
any event, if substitution of collateral is
permissible, additional securities will have
to be deposited, because the agreement
provides that in case of withdrawal of any
Page 494
securities upon request made after
September, 1911, those 'offered in
substitution and those remaining on deposit
(in each instance) shall be equal in value,
as appraised or reappraised, at the time of
such proposed substitution, to one hundred
and twenty per centum (120%) of the amount
of bonds then outstanding hereunder,' and
that there had been a heavy depreciation in
such other securities since the time of
their deposit. The alleged hardship involved
in requiring a delivery to plaintiffs of new
Houston Company stock in specie was made by
the interlocutory decree a subject of
investigation by the special master; and his
report that the requirement would not impose
undue hardship appears to have been
carefully considered before entry of the
final decree; but neither of the lower
courts set forth the reasons which led to
the rejection of the Southern Pacific's
contention. The final decree was entered in
the District Court on October 5, 1916. Since
then the World War and the participation in
it of the United States have greatly
affected financial conditions and security
values, especially those involving
transportation properties. It may be that
the clause in the collateral agreement
requiring reappraisal of all securities upon
the withdrawal of any might now prove very
burdensome. The pledge was made in 1911;
and, as the Southern Pacific contends, it
was justified then in depositing this stock
as collateral, because up to that time the
minority stockholders had not made any claim
to stock in specie. For reasons hereinafter
stated, the case must be remanded to the
District Court for further proceedings with
a view to modifying the terms of the decree
in other respects. It seems to us proper
that the Southern Pacific should also have
liberty to present to that court reasons, if
any, for believing that the decree as framed
will under then existing conditions impose
undue hardship upon it.
Ninth. The Southern Pacific
objects to the terms of the decree also on
the ground that, if the minority
stockholders
Page 495
are held entitled to a pro rata share of
the new company stock, it should be upon
payment, not merely of the $26 per share
required to meet reorganization expenses and
charges, but also of the additional sum
required to discharge the floating
indebtedness. At the time of the
reorganization there was outstanding a large
floating indebtedness for which on May 17,
1889, judgments were recovered: by the
Lackawanna Iron & Coal Company in the sum of
$555,914.25; by Morgan's Louisiana &T exas
Railroad & Steamship Company in the sum of
$1,795,570.81; and by the Southern
Development Company in the sum of
$858,133.15. The last two companies held as
collateral for their claims $880,000 of
bonds of the old Houston Company, for which
they later received in exchange bonds of a
new company to be applied at their par value
toward payment of the debts for which
judgment had been recovered. The
reorganization agreement provided in
substance that the whole $10,000,000 of
stock of the new company, if not taken by
the old company's stockholders, should be
divided pro rata among such of the floating
debt creditors as should provide the cash
required to pay the floating indebtedness
and reorganization expenses and charges; but
no floating debt creditor took advantage of
this provision, and all were thus wiped out
in the reorganization.
The Southern Pacific asserts
that the Morgan Company was and still is its
subsidiary; that it owned and now owns a
large part of the stock of that corporation;
and that through such stock ownership it is,
in effect, a large floating debt creditor of
the old Houston Company. It suggests also
that it has paid out moneys to protect the
property of the new company from other
floating indebtedness. If the Southern
Pacific had been allowed to retain all the
stock in the new Houston Company, it would
obviously lose nothing by the wiping out of
its interest in the floating indebtedness of
the old company; and any
Page 496
money expended by it in protecting the
property of the new company would be fully
reflected in the increased value of the
stock therein, if it owned all. But, if part
of the new company stock is taken from it
and distributed among the minority
stockholders, the Southern Pacific will lose
and the minority stockholders will gain the
pro rata increase in value of the new
company stock, due to wiping out of the
Southern Pacific's share in the floating
debt and to its expenditures made for wiping
out other indebtedness.
The Circuit Court of Appeals
recognized that there was great force in
this contention of the Southern Pacific, but
overruled it because it 'was never raised in
the case by pleading or otherwise until an
exception was taken to the report of the
special master' and because 'there is
nothing in the record to show what, if
anything, the Southern Pacific Company did
give up.' The memorandum filed by the
district judge on settlement of the
interlocutory decree indicates that some
such contention was made then. At all events
it was clearly made before entry of the
final decree; and it does not appear that
the minority stockholders were in any way
prejudiced by the failure to make the exact
contention earlier. There is no reason to
believe that the parties cannot determine
now, as easily as they might have done a few
years ago, to what extent the floating
indebtedness due the Morgan Company
represents money in effect expended by the
Southern Pacific for the benefit of the old
Houston Company and to what extent the
wiping out of any indebtedness and any
expenditure made by the Southern Pacific in
connection therewith will inure to the
benefit of such of the minority stockholders
of the old company as receive stock in the
new. Some adjustment should obviously be
made so as to compensate the Southern
Pacific for any contribution made at its
expense to the value of the stock in the new
company of which the minority stock
Page 497
holders may get the benefit. The purpose
of this proceeding is not to punish the
Southern Pacific, but to declare and enforce
its obligation as trustee. The minority
stockholders who seek equity should do
equity; and a court of chancery has power in
granting relief to prevent unjust enrichment
of the minority stockholders at the expense
of the Southern Pacific. To determine the
amount of such contribution by the Southern
Pacific and of such benefit to the minority
stockholders further investigation by the
trial court will be necessary; and the
judgments on the floating indebtedness
entered in 189 against the old company
should not be held a bar to any inquiry into
relevant facts. Whether this compensation
shall be made by way of addition to the
assessment of $26 per share provided for in
the decree, or whether it can and should be
made by requiring the minority stockholders
to consent to the creation in favor of the
Southern Pacific of some charge against or
interest in the new company which would have
priority over the 100,000 shares of stock
outstanding, as, for instance, an income
bond or preferred stock, or whether the
compensation should be made in some other
manner, should also be determined in the
first instance by the District Court where
all the relevant facts can be ascertained.
The final decree must be set aside and the
interlocutory decree be modified so as to
provide for the necessary inquiry; and, when
all the relevant facts shall have been
ascertained, a final decree should be
entered which will embody such terms as
shall be found to be appropriate to afford
to the Southern Pacific appropriate
compensation for its contribution.
Tenth. The Southern Pacific
objects to the orders permitting Gernsheim
and the estate of Minzesheimer to intervene
after the entry of the interlocutory decree,
and objects also to the final decree in so
far as it declares these interveners
entitled to the relief granted other
Page 498
minority stockholders. The suit was
brought on behalf of all stockholders of the
old Houston Company, situated similarly to
the plaintiffs. The court found on competent
evidence that these parties were such. If
they could not have intervened as of right,
it was at least within the discretion of the
court to permit them to do so; and no reason
is shown for questioning the exercise of its
discretion. It is also urged that the
earlier litigation by Gernsheim bars his
claim to relief on the grounds of estoppel
or of inconsistency of remedy; but that
contention has already been shown to be
unfounded.
Eleventh. The certiorari and
return were filed May 3, 1918. On October 8,
1918, separate petitions were filed in this
court by Henry J. Chase, by Fergus Reid, by
Albert M. Polack, by Francis P. O'Reilly,
and by the Corn Exchange Bank, alleging that
they were respectively owners of stock in
the old Houston Company and praying leave to
intervene, and that they be permitted to
share in the benefits of the decree, or, in
the alternative, that they be permitted to
make such application to the District Court.
Action on these petitions was postponed to
the hearing of the case on the merits. As
the case must be remanded to the District
Court for further proceedings as above
stated, we deny these several petitions
without expressing any opinion on their
merits and without prejudice to the right to
apply to the District Court for leave to
intervene and to share in the benefits of
the decree.
Decree modified, and cause
remanded to the District Court for further
proceedings in conformity with this opinion;
the costs in this court to be equally
divided between the parties.
The CHIEF JUSTICE took no part
in the consideration or the decision of this
case.
Page 499
Mr. Justice McREYNOLDS
dissenting.
It seems to me quite clear that
the judgment below is wholly wrong.
Respondents' complaint should be dismissed.
This suit was brought in 1913,
some 25 years after those who complain came
into possession of all material facts.
During that period they were parties or
privies to suit after suitthe first begun
in 1889 and all unsuccessfulwhich sought to
upset what petitioner had done because of
its actual fraud.
The original bill of complaint
in the present cause alleges:
'As soon as the terms of the
said reorganization agreement were announced
and published [1888], S. W. Carey, Cornelius
MacArdell, Walter B. Lawrence, plaintiffs'
testator, and other stockholders of the
railway company protested against the terms
of the said agreement, claiming that it
practically gave the railway company to the
Southern Pacific Company in fraud of the
individual stockholders.' 'Immediately after
the entry of the said consent decree of May
4, 1888, the said Carey, MacArdell,
Lawrence, and other stockholders of the said
railway company formed a committee of
stockholders to protect themselves from the
frauds committed and proposed to be
committed by the Southern Pacific Company
under the said reorganization agreement and
consent decree, and said committee of
stockholders employed as counsel Frederick
R. Coudert, Edward M. Shepard, and A. J.
Dittenhoefer, of New York City, Jefferson
Chandler, of St. Louis, and later on H.
Snowden Marshall, Russell H. Landale, and
David Gerber, and from the commencement of
their first suit [December, 1889]
hereinafter mentioned, to the present day,
the firm of Dittenhoefer, Gerber & James has
been their attorneys of record.'
Having long emphatically
condemned, attacked, and sought without
success to annul petitioner's action, re
Page 500
spondents finally come before a court of
equity saying in effect: Although
represented by counsel of great eminence, we
have not heretofore known the law;
notwithstanding all solemnly declared to the
contrary, we now maintain that petitioner
was really acting for us, our trustee
indeed; and we wish to share in the plan
which it has carried to success against our
persistent opposition. Such a claim exhales
a very bad odor; and I think the parties
presenting it should be dismissed, burdened
with an appropriate bill of costs, for two
very simple reasons:
First. They are barred by
laches. Rational men are presumed to know
the law; knowledge of consequent rights and
appropriate means of asserting them is
necessarily implied from full acquaintance
with the facts. Respondents' attempt to rely
upon an alleged belated discovery of a
well-known remedy after years of litigation
conducted in full view of all the
circumstances affronts both established
principles and common experience. And this
is emphasized by the names of distinguished
counsel who have continuously represented
the minority stockholders since 1888.
'Nothing can call a court of
equity into activity but conscience, good
faith, and reasonable diligence; and when a
party with full knowledge of the facts,
acquiesces in a transaction, and sleeps upon
his rights, equity will not aid him.'
Hayward v. Eliot National Bank, 96 U. S.
611, 24 L. Ed. 855.
Due diligence in asserting a
constructive trust is incompatible with
persistent denial of such relationship after
full knowledge of all the circumstances and
a furious chase for 25 years in the opposite
direction by the soi-disant beneficiary.
Second. Certainly the
petitioner never consciously undertook to
act as respondents' trusteefor years nobody
seems to have thought any such relation
existed. When the latter obtained full
information of the real facts
Page 501
(1888), AT MOST, THEIR OPTION WAS
PROMPTLy to treat petitioner as their
constructive trustee, or to reject that
view. And I had supposed in such
circumstances, under an elementary rule,
failure affirmatively to ratify, approve, or
adopt the alleged fiduciary's action within
a reasonable time amounted to disapproval. A
potential cestui que trust may not
indefinitely speculate on the outcome. In
the present case respondents not only failed
promptly to approve the action whose
benefits they now seek; they deliberately
engaged in a long series of actions
inconsistent with their present claim; and
while they did so petitioner, supposing its
title absolute and unquestioned, dealt with
the stock accordingly and as it probably
would not have done if the present claim had
been asserted.
1
The exact figure is $26.026.
2
Menier v. Hooper's Telegraph
Works, L. R. 9 Ch. App. 350, 354; Ervin v.
Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co. (C. C.) 20 Fed. 577;
Id. (C. C.) 27 Fed. 625; Farmers'
Loan & Trust Co. v. New York & Northern Ry.
Co., 150 N. Y. 410, 44 N. E. 1043, 34 L. R.
A. 76, 55 Am. St. Rep. 689;
Sparrow v. E. Bement & Sons, 142 Mich. 441,
105 N. W. 881, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 725.
3
The earlier litigation is
summarized thus in the opinion of the
District Court: Carey v. H. & T. C. mp; T. C. Ry. Co.
(C. C.) 45 Fed. 438 (1891), and 52 Fed. 671
(1892), C. C., E. D., Tex.; stockholders
held not entitled to decree enjoining
carrying out plan of reorganization or to
have foreclosure set aside asf raudulent.
Carey v. H. & T. C. Ry. Co., 150 U. S. 170,
14 Sup. Ct. 63, 37 L. Ed. 104 (1893);
appeal to Supreme Court from decree of
Circuit Court dismissed.
Carey v. H. & T. C. Ry. Co., 9 C. C. A. 687,
13 U. S. App. 729 (1894); decree of
Circuit Court affirmed by
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Circuit. Carey v. H. & T. C. Ry. Co., 161 U.
S. 115, 16 Sup. Ct. 537, 40 L. Ed. 638
(1896); Appeal to Supreme Court from
decree of Circuit Court of Appeals
dismissed. Gernsheim v. Olcott (Sup.) 7 N.
Y. Supp. 872 (1889), and 56 Hun, 644, 10 N.
Y. Supp. 438 (1890), and
Gernsheim v. Central Trust Co., 16 N. Y.
Supp. 127, 61 Hun, 625 (1891);
stockholders held not entitled to reduction
of assessment or to injunction against
distribution of stock of new company under
reorganization.
MacArdell v. Olcott, 104 App. Div. 263, 93
N. Y. Supp. 799 (1905), and 189 N. Y.
368, 82 N. E. 161 (1907); action by
stockholders to set aside foreclosure sale
and annul reorganization agreement on ground
of fraud dismissed.
MacArdell v. Olcott, 62 App. Div. 127, 70 N.
Y. Supp. 930 (1901); application of
stockholder for leave to interven denied for
laches. Lawrence v. Southern Pacific Co. (C.
C.) 165 Fed. 241 (1908), 177 Fed. 547
(1910), and 180 Fed. 822 (1910), C. C., E.
D., N. Y.; action by stockholder for
accounting and other relief; motions to
remand denied and suit dismissed.
Bogart v. Southern Pacific Co., 228 U. S.
137, 33 Sup. Ct. 497, 57 L. Ed. 768 (1913);
appeal to Supreme Court from decree of
Circuit Court in Lawrence v. Southern
Pacific Co., supra, dismissed. MacArdell v.
Olcott, N. Y. Court of Appeals, October 29,
1907, 189 N. Y. 368, 82 N. E. 161, affirming
104 App. Div., supra, with statements of
limitations in the complaint. In the
last-named case the court (two judges
dissenting) did not attempt to consider the
merits of this transaction, but expressly
stated that the present form of action was
not presented by that complaint. |