Kissel v. St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad

Ingraham, J.:

The plaintiffs, as the owners of what are known as common stock trust certificates, commenced this action on behalf of themselves and all other holders of such certificates who desired to come in and be made plaintiffs under an agreement, a copy of which is annexed to *895the complaint, between, the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Missouri, and the Colonial Trust Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Mew Fork, which has subsequently been merged in the defendant the Trust Company of America, by which the Colonial Trust Company became the holder of certain shares of the stock of the defendant, the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company, in trust, to secure certain obligations of the San Francisco company ; the judgment demanded is to remove the Trust Company of America from it's position as trustee under the said agreement; to revoke a proxy given by the Trust Company of America to the San Francisco company to vote the stock of the Chicago company; that an accounting be had as to the extent to which the Chicago company had issued obligations or parted with assets improperly and in contravention of the trust agreement; requiring the defendant, the San Francisco company, or the defendant Rock Island company,to place in the treasury of the Chicago company to the credit of its capital account the equivalent in money of such obligations and assets; and that until such payment be made the defendants be enjoined from further selling, issuing or in any manner disposing of any obligations of, parting with any trust assets of, or selling any of the preferred or common stock of the Chicago company, and from declaring any dividend on its common stock, and that plaintiffs have such other and further relief as may seem just. Upon this complaint the court granted a temporary injunction restraining the defendant, the San Francisco Railroad Company, the Rock Island company and the Chicago.and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company from further selling, issuing or in any manner disposing of bonds or any other forms of obligation of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company; from further parting in any manner with any of the trust assets of the said Chicago company; from further selling any of the preferred or common treasury stock of the said company; and from declaring or paying any dividends on its common stock or from permitting any of said things to be done.

The trust agreement, a copy of which is annexed to the complaint, is between the San Francisco company of the first part and the Colonial Trust Company of the second part. It recites that the San *896Francisco company is about to purchase certain of the shares of capital stock of the Chicago company at the price of $250 per share and to issue for the purchase price thereof what are called ten per cent common stock trust certificates by which the San Francisco company agreed to pay the holders of the certificates the sum of $250 in respect of each share of said common stock of the Chicago company purchased by it and transferred to the Colonial Trust Company as trustee under, the trust agreement on the 1st day of July, 1942, and to secure the payment of these stock trust certificates the shares of stock of .the Chicago company purchased by the San Francisco company are transferred to the trust company to be held by it in trust, under the provisions of this agreement. The terms of this trust agreement are stated in the case of Kissel v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad Co. (126 App. Div. 852, decided herewith), and I there expressed my views in relation to. the legal obligations imposed by this trust agreement upon the parties to it and the rights of the trustee and the holders of the trust stock certificates under it. If I am' right in the views there expressed it would -follow that the plaintiffs cannot maintain this action and were not entitled to an injunction restraining the Chicago company from issuing its obligations duly authorized by its directors and stockholders or from paying dividends upon stock out of its surplus earnings, and for the reasons therein stated the order granted in this case was improper and it should be reversed and the motion for an injunction denied.

If, however, I am wrong in the construction given to this agreement, and if under the agreement the Chicago company is prevented from issuing any obligations or transacting any of its business because of an agreement between stockholders of that corporation as to the method by which such shareholders should exercise their power as such, but to which the corporation itself is not a party, then it certainly seems to me that this injunction was much too broad and that all that the court should have done under any circumstances was to enjoin the Chicago company from issuing any obligations or making any contracts except those expressly authorized by this trust agreement. An active corporation engaged in business is expressly authorized by law to divide its surplus earnings among its stockholders. This agreement contemplates such a *897division of the surplus earnings and expressly provides that all dividends paid on the stock before a default by the San Francisco company in its obligations to the holders of the stock trust certificates shall be paid to the San Francisco company. Ko such default is alleged, but it is not disputed but that the San Francisco company has faithfully performed all of its obligations to the holders of the stock trust certificates. The power of the court to grant an injunction is regulated by sections 603 and 604 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Section 603 authorizes an injunction restraining the commission or continuance of an act, the commission or continuance of which during the pendency of the action would produce injury to the plaintiff; ” and section 604 authorizes an injunction where it appears by affidavit that the defendant, during the pendency of the action, is doing, or procuring, or suffering to be done, or threatens, or is about to do, or to procure, or suffer to be done, an act in violation of the plaintiff’s rights respecting the subject of the action and tending to render the judgment ineffectual.” Assuming that the plaintiffs are right in their contention and that these obligations issued by the Chicago company or some of them were not expressly authorized under that trust agreement, and that under it the Chicago company is without power to issue such obligations, then the extent to which an injunction should be granted is to prohibit the defendant corporation during the pendency of the action from issuing, selling or disposing of any obligations of the Chicago company or from disposing of trust assets of the Chicago company. I think there was no justification for an order restraining the Chicago company from dividing its surplus as dividends upon the stock of the Chicago company and paying such dividends to the San Francisco company under the trust agreement. Under the trust agreement the San Francisco company is required to pay interest on the stock trust certificates semi-annually. There is no proof that the San Francisco company has used for its own purposes any of the property or the proceeds of any of the obligations of the Chicago company, and if the claim of the plaintiffs as to the effect of this trust agreement is correct and under the trust agreement no securities can be issued by the Chicago company except those expressly authorized by the trust *898agreement, then I think the court would have power to restrain the issue of any of the obligations of the Chicago company not expressly provided for by the trust agreement, and so far as such securities have been authorized and are unissued, or so far as the Chicago company contemplates the issuing of additional obligations not so authorized, the issue or disposition of such obligations could be enjoined pending the trial of the action. But it seems to me that that is the extent to which the court was authorized to enjoin the defendants.

I think, therefore, that the order appealed from should be reversed and the motion for an injunction absolutely denied ; but if, however, my associates should be of the opinion that the plaintiffs’ construction of this trust agreement is correct, then the order should be modified so as to restrain the defendant corporation from issuing or disposing of bonds or other obligations of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Bailroad Company, or from further parting with any of the assets of said company except such assets the sale of which is permitted by the trust agreement; nothing in the order to prevent the arranging for and making of ordinary renewals of obligations of the defendant the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Bailroad Company outstanding nor prior to January 16,. 1908, the renewal in any case to be for no greater sum than the amount of the former obligation.

McLaughlin, J., concurred ; Laughlin and Houghton, JJ., concurred in the modification of the in junction suggested in the opinion of Mr. Justice Ingraham and that the order as so modified be affirmed, without costs.

Scott, J.:

For the reasons stated somewhat at length in Kissel v. Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad Co. (126 App. Div. 852, decided herewith) I am in favor of the continuance of the irijunction pendente lite in its main provisions. The acts enjoined are all apparently, and I think actually, violative of the Ith article of the trust agreement executed by the St. Louis and San Francisco Bailroad Company to the Colonial Trust Company for the benefit and security of the stock trust certificates issued to the former owners and vendors of *899the stock of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad Company. I am, however, disposed to agree with Mr. Justice Ingraham that the injunction should be so far modified as to permit the declaration and payment of dividends upon the common stock of the Chicago company, provided that the payment of such dividends be strictly limited to be made out of actual cash in the treasury of the company representing net earnings or accumulated surplus. The defendants should not, however, be permitted to declare and pay a dividend out of what may be a mere bookkeeping surplus and raise the actual cash to make such payments by the issue of permanent obligations of the Chicago company. With this modification I am in favor of an affirmance of the injunction order.

Order modified as directed in opinion, and as so modified affirmed, without costs. Settle order on notice.