dissenting: I admit that the decision in the case of Sheppard v. Power Co., to which I assented, is controlling here except in respect of section 2 of the agreement; but subsequent investigation and reflection have convinced me that the principle there enunciated should be somewhat modified. I do not think this Court should adhere to a cast-iron rule regardless of conditions, which will .deprive the stockholders of a private corporation of the only effectual remedy which will prevent the control of their property from falling into the hands of a single individual, to be used, possibly, to further his own purposes. In saying this I mean no reflection upon the gentleman who is charged with attempting to monopolize the defendant bank. I know him and believe him to be a young man of integrity and of unusual energy and ability. It is the principle of the thing that influences my judgment. In my opinion, it is the worst possible policy to deny to stockholders, who have invested their money in private corporations, such as banks and manufacturing enterprises, the right to guard their property by “stockholders’ agreements” such as the one now before us, from the often blighting effect of one-man power.
We have a recent illustration of this in the case of a great New York capitalist, who wrecked several moneyed institutions he absolutely controlled, and is now repenting at leisure in a Federal penitentiary while stockholders and depositors are bewailing their losses.
Although there is nothing in this record casting a suspicion upon the ulterior motives and purposes of the person seeking control of the bank, yet the facts sworn to in the answer and *303affidavits disclose that the mere rumor of his purposes has had a most harmful effect upon, its business and prosperity.
The defendant bank, according to those statements, has been remarkably well conducted by the officers selected by the stockholders and who are the trustees named in this agreement. It has paid regularly dividends with steadily increasing surplus and undivided profits and carried a quarter of a million as deposits.
The salaries paid to its president, Mr. Holdemess, and to other officials were extremely modest and under their watchful and judicious management the bank has obtained'extraordinary success.
About the first of February, 1909, H. C. Bridgers, son of the plaintiff above named, who, it is alleged by the defendants, is the real party in interest, directing, and financing this fight, began to acquire the stock of the defendant bank for the purpose of securing absolute control. The. defendants aver that the book value as well as the market value of stock at that time was about $108 per share. At the very beginning of his campaign to acquire a majority of the stock, Bridgers offered and paid from $150 to $160 per share for the stock. Its purchase was quietly made — that is, made through another. Gradually he increased his .price, until at length he was paying $500 per share for stock worth in the market by actual book value only $108.
This was all very well for those stockholders who were fortunate enough to sell, but subsequent averments'of fact show how it has destroyed the shares of the other stockholders.
The defendants allege and offer to prove that the majority stockholders, believing that the object of Mr. Bridgers was injurious, and realizing the menace to them and to their fellows, who had gone into the enterprise at their solicitation, if he should acquire control under such conditions, sought to devise some method by which to avert what they honestly believed to be an impending calamity to the bank. Therefore, on 2 March, 1909, these men, actuated, as they solemnly avow, solely by a desire to protect the interests of the stockholders, minority as well as majority, against what they believe to have been the injurious and hostile designs of Bridgers upon the bank, and actuated by no other motives or purposes, entered into the contract, which is now sought to be annulled. This contract was executed by a majority of the stockholders and those signing it owned from two to seventy shares each.
In justification of such protective measures and as evidence of their good faith and honest purposes in entering into it, the defendants allege and offer'to prove that H. C. Bridgers ha;s *304bought what be contends is a controlling interest in tbe stock of tbe bank, and tbat tbe mere circulation of tbe rumor tbat be controls tbe institution bas so affected tbe public confidence tbat tbe deposits bave been withdrawn until they amount now to only about $120,000. Tbe bank bas lost customers, and tbe remaining stock has declined in value until there is no market for it. These defendants further aver tbat this decline in deposits and loss of customers did not begin for several months after said H. C. Bridgers began bis crusade against tbe bank, because of tbe confidence inspired by tbe act of tbe majority in making tbe agreement hereinafter set out, nor did it begin until it was currently claimed by Bridgers tbat be bad acquired a majority of tbe stock in spite of said agreement.
These allegations of tbe answer, supported by affidavits, are not denied by replication or counter affidavits.
Tbe agreement, which is set put in tbe opinion of tbe Couif, is declared to be void upon its face and tbe defendants are enjoined from executing it.
This decision is ruinous to tbe minority stockholder, and leaves him to tbe tender mercies of one man.' It is not in furtherance of, but makes against tbe soundest principles of public policy in placing a monopoly of power in tbe bands of one stockholder and depriving the others of their only effectual method of preventing it. This, in my opinion, is exceedingly detrimental to tbe banking, manufacturing and other business interests of tbe State, which very largely take tbe form of corporate association.
No prudent person will care to invest bis means or deposit bis money in a financial institution dominated wholly by tbe will of one man who .elects himself without anybody’s help.
It is much tbe wiser policy to commit tbe management to three persons, as in this instance, selected by tbe majority of tbe stockholders because of their proved capacity. Suppose some large capitalist should secure absolute control of all tbe banks of Baleigb, can any one doubt tbat tbe effect would be very injurious to tbe minority stockholders and highly detrimental to tbe true interests of tbe city ?
Yet by its decision this Court bas destroyed tbe only means by which such a calamity could be averted should it be attempted. Unless stockholders are bound by some such agreement as this, entered into for a good purpose and in tbe common interest, tbe temptation of a fancy price is generally too strong to be resisted.
Tbe decision in Sheppard v. Power Co. is based upon tbe theory tbat all such voting agreements, whether accompanied *305by transfer of stock certificates to trustees or not, are void per se solely because they are contrary to public policy.
In making no exceptions or qualifications, I think the decision is too broad; is not based upon a sound principle, and is contrary to the best and weightiest authority.
1. I am of opinion that such, agreements among stockholders of a private corporation are not per se void or against public policy, but that their validity should be determined by the propriety and justness of the ultimate purpose which is sought to be accomplished. ' This is now the generally accepted view, as will be seen by consulting the Am. and Eng. Ency., vol. 29, p. 1077, and cases there cited.
These agreements, accompanied by deposits of stock certificates with trustees, is the usual method of placing the control of a .corporation in the hands of persons selected by the majority of stockholders and of preventing absorption by one individual. They have given rise to much litigation, and the decisions as to their legality are numerous. I will not undertake to review them, as it has been most thoroughly done by Mr. Cook, who states his conclusions as follows: “The above decisions seem to lead to the conclusion that a deposit of certificates of stock with trustees for a specified period of time, either with or without a transfer of the same to trustees, is legal, and is not in violation of the usual statute.against restraints on the alienation of personal property; and is not opposed to public policy as a restraint upon trade; and is not an implied fraud upon stockholders who are not allowed to participate; and is not an illegal separation of the voting power from the stock; provided always, that no actual fraud is involved in the transaction. In other words, such a pooling of stock is not illegal in itself, but, like all contracts, may be illegal if actual fraud is involved.” 2 Cook on Oorp., p. Í722-1723, 6 Ed.
In 10 Oye., 341, Judge Thompson, in his article on corporations, in discussing this question, says: “It seems that the legality of such arrangements will be determined by the design of those entering into them and the purpose they were intended to subserve. They are not necessarily illegal.” ^
And in an elaborate monographic note to Morel v. Hoge, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1136, in-which this question is exhaustively treated, the editor, summarizing the result of his investigation, says: “The practical question, then,-is whether an agreement in this form is per se void, as contrary to public policy. * * * Probably the prevailing tendency is toward the view that such an agreement is not per se void as against public policy; in other words, that the agreement cannot be declared void irre*306spective’ of tbe propriety of the ultimate purpose to be accomplished, simply because it seeks to accomplish that purpose by severing the voting power of the stock from the beneficial ownership thereof.” '
The author reviews a great number of adjudicated cases which fully sustain his views. I call attention to only a few.
In White v. Thomas Inflatable Tire Co., 52 N. J. Eq., 178 (1893), it was decided that “A voting trust for a period of ten years, formed for a proper' purpose in compliance with a contract made at the time of the organization of the corporation, pursuant to which all the shares were transferred to a trustee under an agreement that he should vote the same for directors in such a manner that the holder of the majority interest should name a minority of the directors, was valid and enforcible so long only as 'the parties retained their original interests and no other rights intervened.”
And practically to the same effect is Clowes v. Miller, 60 N. J. Eq. 179, 345.
In Kreisel v. Distilling Co., 61 N. J. Eq., 5 (1900), Magie, Chancellor, said, “That if a stockholder undertakes to make irrevocable his grant of power to vote his stock, and denude himself for a fixed period of the power tO' judge and determine and vote as to the proper management and control of the affairs of the corporation, then whether the grant .of power is good or not must depend upon the purpose for which it is given; and that the same principles apply when the scheme devised does not embrace a grant of irrevocable power by proxy, but seeks a similar object by the creation of a trust and the appointment of a trustee, to whom the title of the stock is conveyed.” Again, he says, “If stockholders, upon" consideration, determine and adjudge that a certain plan for conducting and managing the affairs of the corporation is judicious and advisable, I have no doubt that they may, by power of attorney, or the creation of a trust, or the conveyance to a trustee of their stock, so combine or pool, their stock as to- provide for the carrying out of the plan, so determined upon.”
The Supreme Court of Massachusetts has rendered a logical and clear decision on this question. It holds that an agreement of various persons to purchase the majority of the stock of a corporation, the stock when purchased to be voted by a committee of five of the subscribers for at least three years, is not illegal, even though the title to the stock is given to a trustee during that time. The Court, speaking through Holmes, C. J., said: “We know nothing in the policy of our law to prevent a majority of the stockholders from transferring their stock to *307a trustee with, unrestricted, power to vote it. * * * A stock-bolder bas a right to put bis shares in trust, whatever bis motive. If the trust is an active one be cannot terminate it at will, and the attempt to cut him off by contract, instead of by the imposition of duties, from ending it, certainly is' not enough to poison the covenant with the plaintiff. It might be held that the duty of voting incident to the legal title made such a trust an active one in all cases. 4-s 1° the arrangement for the trustees uniting to> elect their candidates, the decisions of other States show that'such arrangements have been upheld, and we do not think that it needs argument to prove that they are lawful." If stockholders want to make their power felt, they must unite. There is no reason why a majority should not agree to keep together.”
In support the learned judge cites Brown v. Steamship Co., 5 Blatchford; Greene v. Nash, 85 Me., 148; Williams v. Montgomery, 148 N. Y., 519; Faulds v. Yates, 57 Ill., 416; Smith v. Ry., 115 Cal., 584; Fisher v. Bush, 86 N, Y., 618.
In conclusion he says: “We have considered such decisions elsewhere as have been called to our attention or found by us. Few of them are by courts of final resort.” In Purdy’s Beach on Private Corporations, sec. 704 A, it is said: “Stockholders of a majority of the stock may lawfully combine to hold control of the corporation, and for a definite time may lawfully agree among themselves to vote as a "unit.” “Such agreements are not contrary to public policy.” Mr. Macham says that there are no possible objections to such voting contracts intended to secure control for the general benefit. Macham Law of Corporations, secs. 1268-1269.
In Gray v. Bloomington and N. R. R. Co., 120 Ill. App., 159, it was held, “That an agreement among the promoters of a railroad corporation by which the stock of the individual parties was to be placed in trust in the hands of one of them for a period of ten year's, and voted as a unit at all stockholders’ meetings as four-fifths of the parties thereto should direct, in writing, is not contrary to public policy and void; the purpose being to vest and retain for a fixed period the management and control of the enterprise in the persons originally promoting the same.” To same effect is Griffith v. Jewett, 9 Ohio Dec. Rep., 627, and Greene v. Nash, supra; Schwartz v. R. R. Co., 6 Ohio C. C., 415; Moses v. Scott, 84 Ala., 608.
In Cone v. Russell, 48 N. J. Eq., 208, the agreement was held void as against public policy because it provided that the shares should be so voted as to continually employ an interested person as manager of the corporation.
*308Commenting upon Foil’s Appeal (cited in the majority opinion), the New Jersey Court says: “Following the reasoning of these cases (Foll’s Appeal, 91 Pa. St., 434, et al.), I conclude that the contract complained of in this suit is void as against public policy. The conclusion does not reach so far as to necessarily forbid all pooling or combining of stock, when the object is to carry out a particular policy with the aim to promote the best interest of all- the stockholders. The propriety of the object validates the means, and must affirmatively appear.” See, also, Woodruff v. Dubuque and S. C. R. Co., 30 Fed., 91, last page; Hey v. Dolphin, 92 Hun., 230; Mobile and Ohio R. R. Co. v. Nicholson, 98 Ala., 92.
And so the validity of agreements, unaccompanied by proxy or trust, having for their object the control of the voting power of stock, have, by parity of reasoning, been upheld in numerous cases. San Francisco v. U. P. R. R. Co., 115 Cal., 584, L. R. A. (35), 509; Faulds v. Yates, 57 Ill., 416, 11 Am. Rep., 24; Havemeyer v. Havemeyer, 11 Jour. and S., 506.
Were it not for unduly lengthening this opinion, I could cite many other cases sustaining the view that the legality of voting agreements, especially, as in this case, accompanied by assignment of stock certificates to trustees, should be judged according to the purpose to be accomplished. There are but few that can be cited in support of the’contrary view.
The cases cited in the opinion of the Court, except our own decisions, either fail to support or are easily to be distinguished from this.
Foil’s Appeal, cited by the Court, is in line with what I contend for. The .Pennsylvania Court declined to decree specific performance of a contract for sale of bank stock purchased in order to give one man absolute control. The Court says: “We have no intimation that the bank, as at present organized, is not prudently managed. The stock, as now held, is scattered among a variety of people. It is difficult to see how the small stockholders, who have their modest earnings invested in it, the depositors who use it for safe-keeping their moneys, or the business public who look to it for accommodation in the way of loans, are to be. benefited by the concentration of its stock in the hands of one man. * * * The temptation to use it for personal ends is very strong.” And the Court calls attention, as I have already done, to the fact that the financial wrecks of banking institutions, with which the pathway of the last few years is .so thickly strewn, is largely the result of one-man control. The reasoning of the opinion is a powerful argument *309against tbe destruction of this agreement, designed by stockholders solely to prevent the control of their institution by a single individual.
The authority most relied upon in the opinion of the Court as supporting our decisions is Vice Chancellor Pitney’s opinion in Warren v. Pim, 66 N. J. Eq., 353. The Court was divided, and five opinions were delivered. Only five judges concurred with the Vice Chancellor, The voting trust was set aside by a vote of seven to six upon grounds different from those urged in the case at bar. Mr. Cook says, referring to this case, “However, the decision was upon another phase of the case than that now under consideration. For the decision of the lower court is that ‘voting trusts are not declared to be necessarily unlawful. They may or may not be lawful, according to the circumstances of the case. The general rule is that, prima facie, they are unlawful, but may be rendered lawful by the circumstances,’ was practically affirmed.” 2 Cook (6 Ed.), p. 1124.
As to Morel v. Hoge, cited by the Court, a cursory reading of the conclusion of the opinion of Chief Justice Fish indicates plainly that the voting agreement was set 'aside for reasons not at all applicable here. The commentator says, in L. R. A., p. 1137, the case “did not involve a voting trust by which the right to vote the stock was severed from the beneficial ownership.”
The Shepaug Trust Cases, 60 Conn., 553, the only remaining precedent cited by the Court, are among the earliest eases on the subject. They applied to the doings of a syndicate formed to get control of a railroad company, a g'wasi-public corporation affected with a public use. I confine myself for authority to cases which consider the validity of the agreement from the standpoint of stockholders in strictly private corporation in which the public have no interest, except incidentally as in good management. Therefore such cases as the above, as well as the Northern Securities Co. case, 193 U. S., 197, have no application.
2..It must be admitted that the purpose of this trust is one highly and equally beneficial to all the stockholders, depositors and other patrons of the bank, unless the control off one untried owner is to be preferred to that of three trustees of proved capacity.
The public policy which will set aside a contract is not founded upon judicial caprice, but in the common law, which will not permit a thing to be done or omitted if it is clearly injurious to the public welfare. But the power to declare a contract void as opposed to public policy is not to be lightly *310exercised by tbe courts. For, as Clark on Contracts, at pages 414, 415, says, “It is clearly to tbe interest of tbe public that persons shall not be unnecessarily restricted in tbeir freedom to make tbeir own contracts. 'It must not be forgotten/ was said by an English judge, 'that you are not to extend arbitrarily those rules which say that a given contract is void as being against public policy, because if there is one thing which more than another public policy requires, it is that men of full age and competent understanding shall have the utmost liberty of contracting, and that their contracts, when entered into freely and voluntarily, shall be held sacred and shall be enforced by courts of justice. Therefore, you have this paramount public policy to consider, that you are not lightly to interfere with the freedom of contract.’ ” (See Printing and Numerical Register Co. v. Sampson, L. R. 19 Eq., 462.)
The individual’s right of private contract must yield to the superior right of society, that no valid and enforcible agreement shall be entered into which will work or which is of a nature calculated to wqjrk a public injury. Further than this, the common law does not seek to restrain the liberty of contract. It is trifling with the subject to offer an argument to sustain the proposition that an agreement calculated and intended to maintain this bank in the highest credit and efficiency is injurious to the public interests.
The public expressed its own opinion by withdrawing half the deposits as soon as it was rumored that one man had acquired control of the bank, and it was to prevent further injury to its waning credit that this contract, or voting trust, was at once entered into.
3. The agreement violates no statute of this State. It is not a proxy good for three years only under Revisal, see. 1184, but an assignment of the stock certificates to trustees impressed with a trust to carry out a lawful purpose, beneficial alike to all shareholders. Mechem, sec. 1268.
There is no more objection to assigning certificates of stock in a private corporation in trust for a lawful purpose than any other property. Nor does this agreement violate the banking laws of the United States. The only pertinent section of Rev. Statutes U. S. is 5114, and is as follows: “In all elections of directors, and in deciding all questions at meetings of shareholders, each shareholder shall be entitled to one vote on each share of stock held by him. Shareholders may vote by proxies duly authorized in writing, but no officer, clerk, teller or bookkeeper of such association shall act as proxy; and no shareholder whose liability is past due and unpaid shall be allowed to vote.”
*311The defendants do not rest their right to control this stock upon the idea that the agreement is nothing more nor less than a proxy. They hold the legal title as trustees to carry out the trusts imposed. In 2 Cook on Corporations, p. 1664, it is said: “It is a general rule that a person holding stock as trustee is entitled to vote upon the stock, not only when he is duly registered as the holder of the stock in trust, but also when he is registered absolutely as a stockholder upon the books of the corporation.” Also, see Brightman v. Bates, supra.
It is true that directors’ shares must not be pledged or hy-pothecated, but that doubtless means for debt. But if it does not, there is nothing in the record to show that any of the shares assigned in this trust are owned by directors, or that the directors own no others.
4. Thére is one feature of this case entirely overlooked in the opinion of the Court, and that is the contract for the sale of the stock contained in section 2 of the agreement, set out in full in the statement of facts preceding the- opinion. This section gives to the defendants the right to purchase the shares of stock, or to sell same to purchasers of their selection at not less than its book value. Although the voting trust may be annulled, this part of the contract ought not to be, as its validity is universally sustained, and it is separate and distinct from the other parts of the instrument.
2 Cook on Corporations, at pages 1708-1711, says: “A stockholder has a right to sell his stock at any time and to whomsoever he pleases, without regard to other stockholders. * * * Hence contracts are often entered into between a portion or all of the stockholders of a corporation, that they will hold and sell their stock together. Such a contract is legal.” And .again: “Another form of contract is to the-effect that before any of , the stockholders sell their stock they shall offer it to the other stockholders. This kind of contract is also legal, and will be enforced by the courts. A contract whereby a stockholder desiring to sell must first offer his stock to other Stockholders is not contrary to public policy.” Scruggs v. Catterhill, 67 N. Y. App. Div., 583; Havemeyer v. Same, 86 N. Y., 618; Fitzsimons v. Lindsay, 205 Pa. St., 79 ; In re Lindsay Est., 110 Pa. St., 224.
I think the option feature of this instrument is separate and distinct from other parts of the contract and may be enforced, and thus interposes an effectual bar to the granting of the relief sought, which seeks to annul the whole contract and to enjoin the defendants from taking advantage of any part of it.
5. I do not think that the plaintiff, who is a stranger to the agreement, and does not claim by assignment any of the shares of stock described in it, can maintain this action. Zimmerman v. Jewett, 19 Abbott’s New Cases, 459.