Equity Rule No. 94, which is intended to secure the federal
courts from imposition upon their jurisdiction, recognizes the
right of the corporate directory to corporate control, and
expresses primarily the conditions which must precede the right of
the stockholders to protect the corporation in cases where the
directory is derelict; but the requirements of the rule may be
dispensed with where they do not apply by reason of antagonism
between the directory and the corporate interest.
Equity Rule No. 94 is intended to have a practical application,
and it does not apply where the corporate interests can only be
protected by a suit which, if successful, would be detrimental to
all the directors in other capacities.
Where, as in this case, stockholders of a lessor corporation
sued, for its benefit, the lessee corporation, the directors of the
two corporations being almost identical and the lessee corporation
also owning, or
Page 213 U. S. 436
holding the voting power, of sufficient stock of the lessee
corporation to control a stockholders' meeting, the fact that the
stockholder bringing the suit made no demand for relief upon the
board of director nor any effort to obtain relief at a
stockholders' meeting does not prevent them from maintaining the
bill.
Quaere, and not decided, whether stockholders have
power to compel directors to institute suits to which the latter
are opposed.
The facts, and the questions certified, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 213 U. S. 442
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
The certificate of the court is as follows:
"This cause comes here upon appeal from a final decree of the
Circuit Court, Southern District of New York, which directs that
the defendant, Delaware & Hudson Company (hereinafter called
the Delaware Company) pay to the defendant the Albany &
Susquehanna Railroad Company (hereinafter called the Susquehanna
Company) the amount of $1,107,923.24."
"The case was fully argued and submitted on briefs. It thereupon
developed that there was a question presented whether the bill
could be maintained under the ninety-fourth equity rule. That
question is a preliminary one; it has been held to be
jurisdictional in character (
City of Chicago v. Mills,
204 U. S.
321;
Doctor v. Harrington, 196 U. S.
579), and this court desires the instruction of the
Supreme Court for its proper decision."
"
Statement of Facts"
"The facts upon which the question arises are as follows:"
"The defendant corporations are both citizens of the State of
New York; the complainants are citizens of the States of
Connecticut and Rhode Island. The bill was brought to obtain an
accounting for various sums of money which it was alleged became
due at intervals during a series of years from the Delaware Company
to the Susquehanna Company as rental or in the nature of rental
under a lease made in 1870. For the convenience of all, a copy of
the pleadings is hereto annexed, marked Exhibit 'A,' which may be
referred to for a more detailed statement of the cause of action.
The bill does not 'set forth with particularity the efforts of the
plaintiffs to secure such action as they desire on the part of the
managing directors or trustees.' Nor did the proofs show any such
efforts. Nor does the bill set forth any efforts to secure 'such
action on the part of the shareholders.' Nor did the proofs show
any such efforts. Nor did the bill set forth, or the proof show,
'the
Page 213 U. S. 443
causes of their failure to obtain such action' otherwise than is
hereinafter disclosed."
"The complaint was filed on June 12, 1906. The Susquehanna
Company was organized under the Act of April 2, 1850, which
provides that 'there shall be a board of thirteen directors . . .
to manage its affairs,' and for many years before this suit was
brought, a majority of the board of directors of the Susquehanna
Company consisted of persons who were officers, directors, or
employees of the Delaware Company. At the time this suit was
instituted, the directors and officers of the Susquehanna Company
the dates of their election as such, and their relations to the
Delaware Company, with dates of election, were as shown on the
following statement:"
Names of directors of Susquehanna
Company and dates of election as Position in Delaware &
Hudson
directors and officers. Company and dates
Robert M. Olyphant, 1878 Director since 1872
President from 1884 to 1903
Chairman of the board since 1903
George I. Wilber, 1883 Director since 1901
David Wilcox, 1894 (vice pres- General Counsel, 1894 to 1903
ident, May 9, 1906) Director since 1899
President since 1903
R. Suydam Grant, 1901 Director since 1886
Charles A. Peabody, 1902 Director since 1902
William S. Opdyke, 1903 General Counsel since 1903
Director since 1905
Abel I. Culver, 1903 A Vice-President since 1903
Charles A. Walker, 1892 Treasurer, 1892
Robert Olyphant, 1887 (Presi- Son of Robert M. Olyphant
dent since 1889)
William L. M. Phelps, 1873
(Secretary since 1870) Secretary of the Albany &
Susquehanna Company,
elected by the board of
directors
Robert C. Pruyn, 1890 Nominees of the Delaware
Company, as stated in the
James M. Manning, 1890 Delaware Company's answer
Page 213 U. S. 444
"Of these, Robert M. Olyphant, R. Suydam Grant, Charles A.
Peabody, William S. Opdyke, Abel I. Culver, and Robert C. Pruyn at
the time this suit was begun, did not own or hold, in their own
right, any shares of stock in the Susquehanna Company, but shares
of stock of that company owned by the Delaware Company were
transferred to each of them on the books of the Susquehanna Company
by the Delaware Company for the purpose of qualifying them as such
directors. Charles A. Walker owned five shares of Susquehanna stock
from 1901 to 1906; it does not appear that he owned any stock in
the Susquehanna Company during the year 1906."
"So far as appears from anything shown in this record, none of
the directors or officers of the Delaware Company ever, before or
after the bringing of this suit, treated the claim therein set
forth otherwise than as one of doubtful validity, the payment of
which was to be resisted."
"On June 12, 1906, and for thirty years prior thereto, the
capital stock of the Susquehanna Company had been fixed at and
limited to 35,000 shares. Of this capital stock on June 12, 1906,
the Delaware Company owned 4,500 shares and its directors or
officers owned or controlled 4,340 shares; the complainants owned
1,312 shares, and a so-called 'protective committee' who, from and
after December, 1905, had been opposing the administration of the
Delaware Company upon the questions involved in this bill,
controlled 6,688 shares. The entire 35,000 shares were held by 546
different persons, of whom 423 owned 50 shares or less, and of whom
383 resided in the State of New York."
"An annual meeting of the Susquehanna Company was held
subsequent to the beginning of this suit, on October 16, 1906. At
that meeting, the nominees of the protective committee were
elected, receiving 15,501 ballots, the nominees of the former
management receiving 15,441 ballots. About two weeks before such
annual meeting, the Susquehanna Company, being then controlled by
the directorate above named, filed a demurrer to the bill, which is
hereto annexed as Exhibit 'B.' Copies of
Page 213 U. S. 445
such demurrer were sent by stockholders opposed to the existing
control to all stockholders, and thereafter and before the meeting,
proxies for several thousand shares were received by the persons
who voted for the nominees then elected."
"
Questions certified"
"Upon the facts above set forth, the questions of law concerning
which this Court desires the instruction of the Supreme Court
are:"
"First. 'Does the fact that, before institution of this suit,
complainants made no demand for relief upon the board of directors
of the Susquehanna Company, prevent them from maintaining this
ball?'"
"Second. 'Does the fact that, before institution of this suit,
complainants made no effort to obtain relief at a stockholders'
meeting, prevent them from maintaining this bill?'"
The questions in connection with the ninety-fourth equity rule
present the issue in the case. The rule is as follows:
"94. Every bill brought by one or more stockholders in a
corporation against the corporation and other parties, formed upon
rights which may properly be asserted by the corporation, must be
verified by oath, and must contain an allegation that the plaintiff
was a shareholder at the time of the transaction of which he
complains, or that his share had devolved on him since by operation
of law, and that the suit is not a collusive one to confer on a
court of the United States jurisdiction of a case of which it would
not otherwise have cognizance.
It must also set forth with
particularity the efforts of the plaintiff to secure such action as
he desires on the part of the managing directors or trustees, and,
if necessary, of the shareholders, and the causes of his failure to
obtain such action."
Do the facts show a compliance with the rule, or rather that
part of it which we have expressed in italics? The other parts of
it are not involved.
It is the contention of appellant that the averments in the
bill, as exhibited in the certificate, do not satisfy either
the
Page 213 U. S. 446
language of the rule or its substance. The argument is that (1)
a shareholder, as a condition of his suit, must show that he has
exhausted all the means within his reach to obtain within the
corporation itself the redress of his grievances; that his efforts
must be earnest, not simulated, and this must be made apparent to
the court; (2) his failure to apply to the managing body of the
corporation will not, in the absence of fraud, be excused by the
fact that such managing body are also officers, directors, or
employees of the corporation against which the suit is brought; (3)
if the facts of this case excused from a preliminary demand upon
the directors, the complainants were required to show "that they
could not have secured appropriate action by an appeal to the
stockholders of the Susquehanna Company." The appellees counter
these contentions by asserting that (1) the case is not within the
requirements of Rule 94. "The bill shows, under oath," it is said,
"that the directors were hostile, and that demands upon them would
be
idle and nugatory.' . . ." (2) Complainants (appellees here)
were not required to appeal to the stockholders of the Susquehanna
Company because (a) the stockholders, under the charter of the
company, could not grant relief; (b) even if such power existed,
the stockholders "could not oust directors from office before
expiration of their terms." And it is further contended that, at
the time the suit was instituted, "the Delaware Company controlled
the stock vote of the Susquehanna Company."
These opposing contentions present a not unusual case where the
rule or principle of law is clear enough, but its application to a
particular case is not so clear, and there is a contest of
plausible constructions between which it is not always easy to
decide. The purpose of rule No. 94 hardly needs explanation. It is
intended to secure the federal courts from imposition upon their
jurisdiction, and recognizes the right of the corporate directory
to corporate control; in other words, to make the corporation
paramount, even when its rights are to be protected or sought
through litigation. cases in this Court have
Page 213 U. S. 447
indicated such right. But the directory may be derelict and the
interests of stockholders put in peril, and a case hence arises in
which the right of protecting the corporation accrues to them. Rule
94 expresses presses primarily the conditions which must precede
the exercise of such right, but emergencies may arise in which the
antagonism between the directory and the corporate interest may be
unmistakable, and the requirements of the rule may be dispensed
with, or, it is more accurate to say, do not apply. There are cases
which illustrate these contingencies. As a typical case of the
first kind -- that is, which enforces the doctrine that the rights
of the corporation must be asserted through the corporation.
Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U. S. 450, is
cited. In that case,
Dodge v.
Woolsey, 18 How. 331, was declared to be the
leading case on the subject in this country, and, examining the
latter case, it was said that it did not establish, nor was it
intended to establish, a doctrine different in any material respect
from that found in the other American cases and the English cases.
And the doctrine was said to be that, to enable a stockholder in a
corporation to sustain in a court of equity, a suit founded on a
right of action existing in the corporation itself, and in which
the corporation itself is the appropriate plaintiff, there must
exist as a foundation for the suit some action or threatened action
of the managing board of directors which is beyond their authority
-- a fraudulent transaction, completed or contemplated, which will
result in serious injury to the corporation or stockholders; where
the board of directors, or a majority of them, are acting for their
own interest in a manner destructive of the corporation itself or
of the rights of other stockholders; or where a majority of the
stockholders themselves are oppressively and illegally pursuing a
course inimical to the corporation or to the rights of the other
stockholders. The Court expressed the possibility that other cases
might arise, but said "the foregoing may be regarded as an outline
of the principles which govern this class of cases."
Determined by the principles enumerated, the Court affirmed a
decree sustaining a demurrer to a bill by a stockholder of the
Page 213 U. S. 448
Contra Costa Waterworks Company, filed in behalf of himself and
other stockholders against the company, its directors and the City
of Oakland, to enjoin the city from taking, and the directors from
permitting it to take, water from the works of the company without
compensation. The bill alleged a request of the directors to take
proceedings, and that they declined to do so. The bill also alleged
injury to the corporation, diminution of dividends of the
complainant and other stockholders, and a decrease of the value of
their stock. Appellant adduces, as repeating and illustrating the
doctrine of
Hawes v. Oakland, the following cases:
Dimpfell v. Ohio & Mississippi Ry. Co., 110 U.
S. 209;
Quincy v. Steel, 120 U.
S. 241;
Taylor v. Holmes, 127 U.
S. 489;
Corbus v. Alaska Treadwell Gold Mining
Co., 187 U. S. 455. The
latter case is quoted by appellant as putting unmistakable emphasis
on Rule 94, and that the facts of the case at bar do not satisfy
its requirements. The object of the suit was to enjoin the board of
directors of the corporation from paying a license tax levied upon
the corporation under the provisions of an act of Congress. Corbus,
the complainant in the suit, was a stockholder of the corporation,
and alleged, as the reason of the suit by him, that he was unable
to request the directors of the company to refuse to pay the tax or
apply for the license required by reason of their great distance
from him; but that he had made such request of the officers of the
company residing in Alaska, and that they had refused to comply
with the request. Of this allegation the Court said that it showed
no compliance with Rule 94, and that complainant simply relied on
the distance of the directors from where he resided as an excuse
for not applying to them. "We are of opinion," it was said,
"that the excuse is not sufficient. He should at least have
shown some effort. If he had made an effort and obtained no
satisfactory result, either by reason of the distance of the
directors or by their dilatoriness or unwillingness to act, a
different case would have been presented; but to do nothing is not
sufficient."
A case sustaining the second proposition which we have
Page 213 U. S. 449
mentioned, to-wit, where the circumstances take the cases out of
the rule, is
Doctor v. Harrington, 196 U.
S. 579. The suit was brought by Doctor and others as
stockholders of a corporation called the Sal Sayles Company to set
aside a judgment obtained by the Harringtons against that company.
The bill alleged that the suit was not collusive; that complainants
were unable to obtain redress from the company or "at the hands" of
its stockholders. It further alleged that the board of directors of
the corporation was
"under the absolute control and domination of the defendant,
John J. Harrington, and that said Harrington, by reason of having
the possession of a majority of the capital stock of said
corporation,"
likewise controlled "the action of the stockholders." It was
further alleged that he refused to give any information with regard
thereto, and declined to redress the wrongs of which complaint was
made, or give complainants any opportunity to lay before the board
of directors or the stockholders of the company the facts set
forth.
It will be observed, therefore, that there was no compliance
with the requirements of Rule 94, as expressed in its letter. The
efforts that were made to secure the action of the managing
directors or trustees were not "set forth with particularity."
Nothing was alleged but the domination of John J. Harrington and
his control of the directors. What he did, in what way he exerted
control, was not alleged. In other words, the bill seemed to show a
case not of compliance with the requirements of Rule 94, but
circumstances which excused from such compliance.
Coming to consider the effect of those allegations, we said that
Rule 94 contemplates that there may be, and provides for, a suit by
the stockholder in a corporation founded on rights which may be
properly asserted by the corporation. And we further said that
"the ultimate interest of the corporation made defendant may be
the same as that of the stockholder made plaintiff, but the
corporation may be under a control antagonistic to him, and made to
act in any way detrimental to his interest. In other words, his
interests and the interests of the
Page 213 U. S. 450
corporation may be subservient to some illegal purpose."
And we decided that these principles were satisfied by the
allegations of the bill, and that such antagonism existed between
the complainants in the suit and the directors of the corporation
that they would "suffer irremediable loss if not permitted to sue."
In other words, the complainants were in such a situation by reason
of the power which Harrington possessed over those who managed the
corporation -- directors and stockholders -- that appeals to them
for action would have been futile. Prior cases were considered,
including
Dodge v. Woolsey and
Hawes v. Oakland,
and the conclusion reached was pronounced to be in accordance with
their doctrine.
Do the facts in the case at bar present the same situation that
was passed on in
Doctor v. Harrington? The certificate
shows the following facts: the complaint was filed June 12, 1906.
The suit was brought to obtain an accounting for various sums of
money, which it was alleged became due at intervals during a series
of years from the Delaware Company to the Susquehanna Company as
rental, or in the nature of rental, under a lease made in 1870. The
Susquehanna Company was organized in 1850, and, under the law, its
board of directors consisted of thirteen members, a majority of
whom for many years before this suit was brought were also
"officers, directors, or employees of the Delaware Company."
Indeed, they served as its president, vice-president, treasurer,
secretary, directors, and general counsel -- officers of dominating
influence, it must be said. It appears that certain of the persons
occupying those offices did not, at the time the suit was brought,
own or hold in their own right any shares of stock in the
Susquehanna Company, but shares of stock in that company owned by
the Delaware Company were transferred to each of them on the books
of the former company by the latter company for the purpose of
qualifying them as directors. The number of shares of the capital
stock of the Susquehanna Company, and how held or owned, and the
attitude of the owners thereof to the Delaware Company, appear in
the certificate, and need not be repeated.
Page 213 U. S. 451
The certificate recites the following:
"So far as appears from anything shown in the record, none of
the directors or officers of the Delaware Company ever, before or
after the bringing of this suit, treated the claim therein set
forth otherwise than as one of doubtful validity, the payment of
which was to be resisted."
The situation was unique. The company whose interest it was to
assert the right to payment and to demand it was under the control
or could be influenced by the company whose interest it was to deny
indebtedness and resist payment. And though there are allegations
in the bill of contrary import, the good faith of the directors
need not be questioned. They might, notwithstanding, be firm in
their views -- firm to resist appeals against them. Their views
seemed to persist through many years. At any rate, a situation was
presented fully as formidable to the interest of stockholders in
the Susquehanna Company as that presented in the
Harrington case. And it may be well doubted whether the
directors of the Susquehanna Company, so being directors of the
Delaware Company, and who, either from an apathy that endured
through many years could discern no right in that company to assert
or, through conviction of the absence of right, were the best
agents to begin or conduct a litigation of such right. It was
certainly natural enough that a stockholder should seek more
earnest representatives, and consider that the directors
"occupied," to use the language of
Dodge v. Woolsey,
"antagonistic grounds in respect to the controversy" as to him. The
attitude of the directors need not be sinister. It may be sincere.
It was so in
Chicago v. Mills, 204 U.
S. 321, and
Ex Parte Young, 209 U.
S. 123, and other cases. In this case, it was certainly
determined. It continued until after this suit was brought. Both
the Delaware Company and the Susquehanna Company, then under "the
administration of the Delaware Company," to quote from the circuit
court of appeals, demurred to the bill.
But it is contended that efforts should have been made and
alleged to move the corporation to action through a
stockholders'
Page 213 U. S. 452
meeting. In this contention there is again similarity to the
Harrington case. It was there alleged that Harrington
controlled the action of the stockholders "by reason of having
possession of a majority" of the capital stock of the corporation.
The control in the case at bar therefore may not have been as
direct as in
Doctor v. Harrington, but it was practically
efficient. The stock of the Susquehanna Company consisted of 35,000
shares, of which the Delaware Company and its directors and
officers held 8,840. The complainants and a so-called protective
committee, a committee which, the certificate states, "from and
after December, 1905, had been opposing the administration of the
Delaware Company upon the questions involved in this bill,"
controlled 8,000 shares. The certificate also states that the
"entire 35,000 shares were held by 546 different persons, of whom
423 owned 50 shares or less, and of whom 383 resided in New York."
The proposition then is that notwithstanding the power of 8,840
shares, held by the managers of both corporations, against 8,000
held by complainants and the protective committee, complainants
were required by Rule 94 to engage and organize all other
stockholders, or enough of them to direct or change the corporate
management -- in other words, struggle for the control of the
corporation with an adverse board of directors. And such struggle,
appellant contends, "could not be regarded as presumptively
futile," as there would be an appeal to "the self-interest of the
remaining stockholders," and it is pointed out that the certificate
recites that control through the stockholders was subsequently
obtained. But it was obtained after the suit was begun and the
antagonism of the directors was more clearly exhibited. The
circumstances of this case preclude, therefore, an acceptance of
appellant's proposition. Rule 94 is intended to have practical
operation, and to have that, it must, as to its requirements, be
given such play as to fit the conditions of different cases.
Therefore, considering that this case, by reason of its facts,
falls within the principle of
Doctor v. Harrington, we do
not review the cases cited by appellees wherein, it is contended,
suits were
Page 213 U. S. 453
justified by demand on the directors alone, nor consider whether
stockholders have the power to compel directors to institute suits
to which the directors are opposed.
We answer both questions certified in the negative.