The plaintiffs are a minority of the stockholders of the Derby Rubber Company. They ask that a certain contract called a lease, between the said company and the other defendants, be set aside and declared to be void. The record shows that this contract was made by the directors of the company; that it was, before delivery, submitted to. a meeting of the stockholders duly called for that purpose, and that by a unanimous vote of the stockholders present at that meeting and holding a majority of all the stock, it was affirmed and ratified. The plaintiffs, although duly notified of said meeting and the purposes for which it was to be held, voluntarily remained away.
If the contract was really ultra vires of the corporation, the plaintiffs may claim that it should be set aside. The contract contains an option to the lessee to become the purchaser of the property at a price to be fixed by a sort of *528arbitration. The complaint avers that it is the intention of the directors and the majority stockholders, in case the option is used, to divide the mone3r received among all the stockholders and wind np the affairs of the corporation. As a conditional contract to sell the property, this agreement is not questioned; nor could it well be questioned. It is competent for any business corporation to sell its property, pay its debts, divide its assets and wind up its affairs. Especially is this so if the corporation is in an embarassed condition. It is as a lease for ten years without a sale, that the contract is said to be ultra vires. We speak of the contract hereafter as a lease. The sole question then is: Was the vote ratifying the lease, and so the lease itself, ultra vires and void?
We are inclined to think the lease was not void. The lessee is to continue the same business which the corporation was organized to carry on. The lease, therefore, is not a change in the business, but only a change in the management of the business. The financial condition of the corporation is now depressed, and its business cannot be made profitable under its own management, for want of capital. Additional capital is not available. But neither the directors nor the majority stockholders have so far lost confidence in the concern as to be willing peremptorily to wind up its affairs. The lease was entered into as the best, perhaps the only, means of carrying the corporation over this period of depression, and in the meantime obtaining some income for the stockholders. If a sale takes place it is certain that the property will be worth more in operation than if left idle. Such leases have repeatedly been sustained b3r the courts of equity.
The case of Featherstonhaugh v. Lee Moor Porcelain Clay Co., L. R. 1 Eq. 318, 326, was like the one in hand, in this: Minority stockholders asked to have a lease of the entire property of the corporation set aside. That company was incorporated for “ the working, preparation, and sale of porcelain cla3r,” with power to combine “mining operations” with the original business. After a period of unsuccessful *529working, a majority of the stockholders voted to and did lease the whole of the works and buildings of the company for the period of twenty-one years. It was held that this was a valid lease, not beyond the power of the company to make. The Vice-Chancellor, Sir William Page Wood, in giving the opinion, said: “It appears to me that I should be controlling improperly the effect of this deed, if I did not allow this company to do that act which through the medium of their directors they have done. . . . Have the company by this act which they intend to carry into effect . . . either on the one hand abandoned their purposes, ... or on the other hand, exceeded their purposes ? Have they done either one or the other? It appears to me they have not abandoned the purposes of the company. They have granted a lease for twenty-one years, and, so far, they have agreed to take a rent for their property instead of working it themselves, and taking the profit. At the end of twenty-one years they are to have the whole of the property back, and, as it appeared to them (that is the true way to put it, for they are the sole judges on that part of the case), they would have it back in a more profitable condition. . . . They have not exceeded their powers, because nobody can contend that parting with their property for a certain time is exceeding their powers, beyond this, that during all that time they are not carrying on the business. But, as to that view, I apprehend that it is perfectly competent for a meeting (i. e., of the stockholders) to say: ‘ China clay is in a very depressed state—the market is very bad— and we agree it is better not to work it for two or three years.’ That would be entirely within their functions, and they would not be said, in that respect, to have abandoned their work, or to have exceeded the functions allowed them.” „ The bill was dismissed with costs.
In Simpson v. Westminster Palace Hotel Co., 8 H. L. Cas. 712, 718, a company was established “ for the erection, finishing, and maintenance of a hotel, . . . and the doing all such things as are incidental or otherwise conducive to the attainment of ” that object. The directors of the company let, for a stipulated period of five years, to the head of a gov-*530eminent- department for the business of his office, a large part of the hotel. There was evidence that this use would be advantageous to the company in its intended business. This, too, was a bill by minority stockholders asking that the lease might be declared invalid. It was held that the arrangement was valid. In the House of Lords, the Lord Chancellor (Lord Campbell), said: “From the large rent immediately to be received by the company for the occupation of the one hundred and sixty-nine rooms by the India Board; from the monopoly to be enjoyed by the company in supplying so many persons with refreshments; and from the fashionable reputation to be conferred on the hotel by this association, the opinion expressed by the majority of the stockholders, that the arrangement is beneficial to them, is likely to be verified. This anticipation would not be sufficient if the original undertaking had been abandoned, or if there was any extension of the original undertaking; but as there is neither abandonment nor extension of the original undertaking, and the arrangement may assist instead of obstructing the prosecution of the original undertaking, I must advise your Lordships to affirm the decree appealed against.”
In Temple Grove Seminary v. Cramer, 98 N. Y. 121, a company incorporated as an academy, or seminary of learning, was held not to have exceeded its powers by leasing one of its buildings during the vacations for a boarding-house. See also Lafond v. Deems, 81 N. Y. 507. In Brown v. Winnisimmet Co., 11 Allen, 326, a company chartered as a ferry company let one of its vessels not needed in its ferry business to be used in another business. This was held not to be an ultra vires contract. See also City Hotel v. Dickinson, 6 Gray, 586; French v. Quincy, 3 Allen, 9; Lyndeborough Glass Co. v. Mass. Glass Co., 111 Mass. 315; Calloway Mining, etc., Co., v. Clark, 32 Mo. 305; Watts’s Appeal, 78 Pa. St. 370; Dupee v. Boston Water Power Co., 114 Mass. 37.
We have considered this case on the assumption that the action of the directors and the majority stockholders was done in good faith and in the honest belief that they served the best interests of all concerned. If fraud had been charged *531a very different case would have been presented. Counsel for the plaintiffs says in his brief that the lease was fraudulent on its face. But fraud is not charged in the complaint. Fraud is never to be presumed. While fraud may in some cases be inferred from the facts, it is never to be inferred unless it is charged; and then only where the facts and circumstances indicate'clearly that fraud has been committed.
The Superior Court is advised that the complaint is insufficient, and to sustain the demurrer.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.