Erie Railway Co. v. Vanderbilt

DaNiels, J.

(dissenting):

The object of this action was to rescind and annul the purchase or redemption of 50,000 shares of the plaintiff’s stock, and the recovery of the consideration paid for the same. It appeared by the evidence, that the defendant and other persons acting with him were engaged in buying the stock of the Erie Railway Company, late in the year 1867, and early in the year 1868, during which period he purchased it to the extent of $10,000,000, par value. The effect of the purchases, as they advanced, was to enhance the market-price of the stock; and during their progress the plaintiff issued $10,000,000 of what were called convertible bonds. These bonds were convertible into the stock of the company, by being surrendered, and the stock, created for that purpose, taken in their place. And when it was understood, by at least one of the directors of the company, that the defendant had given his brokers an unlimited order for the purchase of the stock of the company, $5,000,000 of the amount was placed by such directors upon the stock market for sale. Without knowing that stock of that description had been issued, the defendant’s brokers purchased about 50,000 shares of the plaintiff’s stock, which afterward proved to be made up to a great extent of the stock created by the surrender of the convertible bonds. Actions were thereupon commenced in this court, one in the name of the people by the attorney-general, and three others by persons substantially identified in interest with the defendant, against the Erie Railway Company, its officers and directors, to restrain certain alleged contemplated misconduct of such directors and officers, and to protect the interests of the company, and for other similar relief. The .defendant was not directly concerned in either of the suits, except the one prosecuted by Bloodgood, though the protection of his interests seemed identified with the success of all of them. While the ostensible purpose of the litigation was to protect the interests of the railway company, great reason exists for doubting that to have been the actual object designed to be promoted. The probability is that the suits were all commenced and prosecuted in the interest of those who had purchased the stock of the company and had been subjected to loss by means of the stock placed upon the market, and in great part purchased by them, which resulted from the issue and surrender of the convertible bonds. *135Other litigation was also engendered in the strife, in which the defendant was made a party as one of the defendants. It is not necessary to refer more fully to these actions, because they are no farther involved in the present controversy than their adjustment and disposition were connected with the transaction out of which this action arose and to a certain extent produced it. The actions brought to restrain the alleged threatened acts of the plaintiff, its officers and directors, were prosecuted through a period of about five months, and during their existence appear to have restrained and embarrassed the operations of the defendants, including the business and financial affairs of the company. For that reason, relief from them was desirable, and to secure that was one of the objects its officers had in view in effecting the arrangement now sought to be annulled. The defendant testified that he had nothing to do with that litigation, but, from the other evidence given upon the trial, there is very good reason for believing that in that respect he was certainly mistaken. His interests were identified with it, and it was carried on by those who had previously acted with him in the stock transactions inducing it, and it was only disposed of, and the company relieved from its effects, after a satisfactory settlement had been made with him. Before that was done the litigation could not 'be controlled or adjusted, but, after that, the difficulty existing in that respect at once disappeared. There can be no doubt, taking all the evidence together, that a satisfactory arrangement and adjustment of the defendant’s claim was in the nature of a condition to the termination and removal of the suits pending against the plaintiff and its directors, and that accordingly will be assumed as an established fact in considering the disposition which should be made of this case.

From the manner in which the Stock, issued for the convertible bonds, was placed upon the stock market and received by his agents, the defendant appears to have claimed, and such was probably the truth, that he had been made the victim of a dishonest expedient, and that the officers of the.company had no right to resort to it for the purpose of causing him to purchase stock which he neither designed to buy nor supposed he was buying. The original object of the defendant and his associates was the purchase of the company’s *136stock, as it then existed in the market, not the purchase of that which might be issued in consequence of a device resorted to for the purpose of increasing its quantity and correspondingly reducing its value in order to subject them to a loss. He, therefore, was in a position where he had grounds of complaint, which, even according to the moral code of stock operators, might not be wholly without foundation. And that, according to the evidence, was the view taken by himself of the purchases he had made through the success of the expedient resorted to for making him the owner of the newly issued stock. He could, with, a reasonable degree of plausibility, insist that the stock itself was unlawfully issued, and that the artifice through which he was made to purchase it entitled him to redress. And that he did that is clearly manifested by the evidence which was given upon the trial by the witnesses Gould and Eisk. If he was right in those positions, then the company was liable to him for the loss he had sustained by becoming the owner of the convertible bond stock. (Bruff v. Mali, 36 N. Y., 200, and cases cited in opinion.) The claim was substantially made with the determination of maintaining it by such means as might prove advantageous for that purpose, and among them the design seems to have, been included of harassing the company by litigation for the purpose of securing its adjustment. Under those circumstances Drew, the treasurer at that time of the company, at first entered into an arrangement with the defendant for the purchase from him of 50,000 shares of the stock, and for his holding another 50,000 shares for an indefinite period of time. This was apparently made, on the part of Drew, to provide him with the means of' controlling the company until after the next succeeding election, and on the part of the defendant for the purpose of retrieving the losses he had sustained by his purchases. But that arrangement was never carried into effect between the persons who were the parties to it. 'Drew was either unable or disinclined afterward to fulfill his agreement, and consented that Eldridge, the president of the company, and Gould, who was a director and finally succeeded Drew as treasurer, should become the purchasers of the stock instead of himself. And they accordingly entered into, and afterward performed, the agreement which it was the object of this action to rescind. By that agreement the *137defendant agreed to sell to them 50,000 shares of the Erie Railway Company stock, at seventy cents on the dollar, and they were to pay him $1,000,000 for the losses he had sustained by means of his purchases, and for withholding from sale for four months 50,000 other shares of the plaintiff’s stock; and the suits against the company and its directors were to be adjusted and withdrawn. The agreement made by them for the purchase of the stock contemplated and provided for its sale to them, as distinguished from the company itself, but they, in fact, were acting at the time for the company. And from the evidence which Eisk gave, it would seem to have been so understood by the defendant, although he himself denied the existence of any understanding of that nature. But, under the supposition that the agreement which they made with the defendant would be performed, the’persons in whose names the suits were prosecuted adjusted their claims, and the litigation was brought to an end at once. And then, upon the order of the defendant, 50,000 shares of its stock were delivered to the agents of the plaintiff’s officers, and the consideration for that, and for withholding another 50,000 shares from sale for a period of four months, was paid to the defendant and his agents. This payment was made by the delivery of $1,250,000 in the bonds of the Boston, Hartford and Erie Railroad Company, guaranteed at eighty per cent by the plaintiff, amounting to the sum of $1,000,000, and by checks for cash, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $3,500,000. The bonds transferred and the money paid were, in fact, the property and money of the plaintiff, and the stock was received for it by its president and treasurer, who were only its nominal purchasers, and it is that money and property which the plaintiff endeavored to recover in this action, after having tendered a return of 50,000 shares of its stock to the defendant. When the tender was made, it was not proposed to restore the litigation, nor to adjust any claim which might arise out of withholding the other 50,000 shares for four months from sale, but in the view which, under the circumstances proved, should be taken of the rights of the parties, no consideration of the effect of that omission will be rendered necessary. It was claimed upon the argument of the appeal, that the arrangement made for the adjustment of the controversy was collusive and fraudulent, and that the corporation had no power to *138make il. And if it had appeared that the defendant was a party to any fraudulent scheme for misappropriating or misapplying the plaintiff’s property, and had acquired its money and bonds in that way, there would be no ground whatever for doubting its right to maintain this action, upon a complete rescission of the agreement and a restoration of all that had been received under it. But the evidence entirely fails to establish the conclusion that he was complicated in any fraudulent device or expedient of that nature. All that was given in the case relating to his position, showed that he claimed that the stock issued through the means of the convertible bonds, was improperly imposed upon him, and that he was consequently entitled to be relieved from it and compensated for the losses it had occasioned him. The evidence of Gould and Fisk is clear and explicit on that subject, and the court assumed its truth in dismissing the complaint. That was the nature of the demand made by him, and, so far as the litigation against the company was subject to his control, it was maintained for the purpose of enforcing that demand. His position throughout was one of unequivocal hostility, 'rather than of connivance or collusion, and the officers of the company only yielded to it so far as they seemed' to prove incapable of resisting it. Each party acted independently, and conceded only what there was no prospect of successfully withholding.

The argument that the company had no authority to enter into or perform the agreement which was made, seems equally incapable of being sustained. For what was done, was clearly distinguishable from dealing in and purchasing its own stock. The claim, in substance, which was made, was that the stock that was the object of the arrangement, had been collusively and unlawfully issued for the purpose, by increasing the supply, of defrauding those who, at the time, were engaged in buying it, and that the obligations of the company concerning it were of ah exceptional character, on account of those circumstances. The defendant insisted that he should be relieved of the stock, and compensated for his losses incurred by purchasing it, substantially for those reasons. And that claim was persistently urged and maintained through, all the negotiations which were had for the adjustment of the controversy. If the claim should prove to be well founded, the company was probably liable to make the defendant good. *139And, if that was the case, it could do so by compromise as well as by the result of a suit. For, where an apparent liability is asserted against a corporation, it must have the same power as an individual to adjust and settle it, without first subjecting itself to the trouble and expense of litigation before it can be at liberty to act in such a manner as its interests may require. Whether the circumstances attending the issuing and sale of the stock were such as to create a liability, was a question which addressed itself directly to those to whose charge the interests of the plaintiff had, for the time being, been committed. And they appear to have given it sufficient consideration and reflection to convince them that the company was liable. For, after procuring the opinion of reliable counsel, as to the legality of the step which was contemplated, it was sanctioned and approved by the board of directors, and then carried into execution. This action of theirs constituted a substantial concession that the adjustment proposed by the defendant was not only lawful, but, beyond that,, a proper and expedient mode of settling the existing controversy. And the power of the corporation to make it, certainly seems to be reasonably free from substantial doubt. A material part of the business of its board of- directors must have consisted in the consideration of claims made upon the company, and the expediency of settling them without legal proceedings. After full examination and reflection, aided by the advice of eminent counsel, and a' decision finally made and consummated by a settlement, it must be too late to gainsay what was done, as long as no mistake or misrepresentation can be shown to have induced the adjustment made. The directors and officers of the company acted with full and complete knowledge of the claim made, the circumstances relied upon to Sustain it, and of all that affected the propriety of its allowance and settlement; and, after doing that, concluded that an acceptance of the defendant’s terms was the best alternative for adoption, and satisfied his demands.

Their action in that respect was within the province of their authority, and the courts can do nothing less than to sustain it, for the law favors the amicable adjustment of controversies; and when they are fairly made in good faith, and not induced by artifice, mistake or fraud, its policy is to consider all further controversy upon the subject closed. This rule is very well settled. (Russell *140v. Cook, 3 Hill, 504; Stewart v. Ahrenfeldt, 4 Denio, 189; Farmers’ Bank of Amsterdam v. Blair, 44 Barb., 641; Adams v. Sage, 28 N. Y., 103; Vosburgh v. Teator, 32 id., 561; Lucy’s Case; In re Midland Railway Co., 4 De Gex, McN. & G., 356; Palmer v. North, 35 Barb., 282; Cook v. Wright, 101 Eng. Com. Law. 559; Nelson v. Inhabitants of Milford, 7 Pick., 18; Home Ins. Co. v. Northwestern Packet Co., 32 Iowa, 224; Augusta v. Leadbetter, 16 Maine, 47.) And no good reason exists which would justify the omission to apply it to this case. Under the most favorable view which can be taken of the facts for the plaintiff, the judgment which was directed at the trial was right, and it should therefore be affirmed, with costs.

LawreNoe, J-, concurred in opinion of DoNOhue, J.

Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide event.