Summary
In Ashe v. Johnson's Administrator, 55 N. C. 149, 155, the court remarked: "Again it is said: Equity will not enforce the specific performance of an agreement to transfer or to accept stock.
Summary of this case from Safford v. BarberOpinion
(June Term, 1855.)
Where to a bill for a special injunction, the defendant, who is an administrator, in his answer makes a formal denial of the matters alleged "according to the best of his knowledge and belief," and also alleges new matter in reply to the plaintiff's equity, the Court will not dissolve an injunction previously ordered:
As, where a plaintiff alleges that the defendant was to take certain stock off his hands, whose administrator says he does not know as to the agreement, but suggests if it was so, plaintiff was to work in company with defendant's intestate, and was to be paid for such work not by intestate, but by the plaintiff's own labor.
Where one of two defendants has agreed to do a specific thing, for the benefit of the plaintiff, and the other defendant is the holder of a covenant under which it is to be done, also is the holder of the fund out of which compensation is to be made, and is about to part with the fund without making the compensation, the plaintiff has ground for going into a Court of Equity to restrain it from being put out of his hands.
Stocks in a recently chartered Rail Road Company, are to be viewed very differently from government stocks in England, which have a value in the markets of that country readily ascertainable.
APPEAL from the Court of Equity of Orange County from a decretal order dissolving an injunction.
Badger and Phillips for the plaintiff.
J. H. Bryan for the defendants.
For the purpose of inducing individuals to subscribe for the amount of stock necessary to secure the charter, the gentlemen who felt the deepest interest in the success of the enterprise, and to whose exertions the North Carolina rail-road owes its existence, in their speeches and in the conventions which they procured to meet, held out the assurance that the company, when organized, would take care to relieve the subscribers of their stock by requiring those who contracted to do work on the road, to take stock in payment of one half of the amount of the price of their work.
The company, at its first meeting, instructed the directors to carry into effect the assurances which had been held out to the (150) subscribers for stock, and in the language of the company in its answer, "the substance of these resolutions, passed at different times and conventions, was, that in letting out the contracts, the contractors were to be required to take stock as far as it was practicable to get them to do so."
In pursuance of these instructions, the president and directors, in the advertisements for letting out contracts, made this stipulation; the contractors "receiving in payment on their contracts, one-half in stock of the road, the other half in cash."
At the letting of contracts in Hillsborough, Johnson, the intestate of the defendant Jones, proposed to contract for the grading and culverts upon sections 17, 18, 19, 20, of the second division of the road, taking in payment 40 shares which he had subscribed for, and 40 shares which William A. Graham had subscribed for; but he was informed that 80 shares would not equal one-half of the amount, and that according to the terms of the letting, he could not get the contract, unless he took more stock. Accordingly he entered into a contract which contains, among others, this clause, to wit, "one-half to be paid in cash, etc., the other half to be applied in payment of 40 shares of stock subscribed for by said Johnson; 40 ditto subscribed for by William A. Graham; 10 ditto which Graham takes for Edmund Strudwick, and the balance to be applied to the payment of instalments due upon the stock of Richard Ashe, or so much as may be necessary to make, with the foregoing, one-half of the whole contract."
Johnson, with the assistance of Graham, who furnished a number of hands etc., completed his contract; and the amount to which he is entitled to be paid, according to the terms of his contract is $24,000 (in round numbers.)
The plaintiff insists that one-half of this sum ($24,000) was to be paid in stock; and admitting $9,000 to be first applied to pay for the stock of Johnson, Graham and Strudwick, there remains a balance of $3,000 to be applied to the payment of his stock. He alleges that he had taken stock to the amount of $8,000, and that Johnson, finding he could not get the contract for which he had made proposals, (151) without having more stock than he and Graham owned, agreed with him to take of his stock the amount that might be necessary to make up the deficiency, and that in pursuance of this agreement, the contract was entered into with the clause above set out. He says, after this agreement with Johnson, he rested easy, under the belief that he had been relieved from a part of his large subscription, and that Johnson was to be substituted in his place and was to take the stock and pay for it, under his contract. He was afterwards surprised to find that Johnson was not disposed to carry out this agreement in good faith, and that the company intended to pay over to Johnson the amount due under his contract without retaining for any part of the stock which the plaintiff had subscribed for, and which Johnson had agreed should be paid out of the funds in the hands of the company; or in other words, which Johnson had agreed to take off his hands. The prayer is, that stock standing in the name of the plaintiff, corresponding with one-half of the excess due on the contract, shall be paid for out of the funds in the hands of the company and be transferred from the plaintiff to the defendant Johnson; that an account be taken to ascertain the true amount; and in the mean time, that the company be enjoined from paying over, and Johnson from receiving, the funds still remaining in the hands of the company.
The answer of the company admits the general facts alleged in the bill, but denies any knowledge of the terms of the private agreement, between the plaintiff and Johnson, and avers that upon being notified of the misunderstanding between them as to the terms of their agreement, the company made known to them an intention to pay over the fund to Johnson, and let them "fight it out."
The company was induced to take this course because it was known to the president and the chief engineer, who made the contract with Johnson, that he was at the time, excited by ardent spirits, and although sober enough to enter into the general contract with the company, yet it is probable he and the plaintiff did not understand each other in regard to the precise terms of their private agreement;(152) and because the plaintiff himself afterwards became a contractor to an amount sufficient to absorb all of the $8,000 for which he had subscribed, and in settlement of the contract, the whole amount of his subscription was included, although he protested and required them to exonerate him from an amount of his stock sufficient to fill up the contract of Johnson.
The defendant, Jones, as administrator of Johnson, also admits the general facts alleged in the bill. He denies any personal knowledge of the terms of the agreement, between the plaintiff and his intestate, if in fact there was any agreement, as to which he holds the plaintiff to strict proof. He insists, "that it could not have been the intention of his intestate to take the stock of the plaintiff off his hands at par; because as he alleges, the stock was then greatly under par, and his intestate "not being a professional contractor, did not desire any greater contract than one estimated at double the value of his own stock and that of Mr. Graham, (who had agreed to do one-half of the work, in order to pay for his stock,) it being a prevalent opinion at the time, that a contractor, with a contract yielding double the amount of his subscription, might pay the expenses of the work from the money, and the stock was then not worth par, and no prudent man would have purchased it at that price; the rate of depression may be judged of from the fact, that the sub-contractors, under Johnson, allowed a discount of 25 per cent, to obtain cash for their work." So the defendant denies according to the "best of his knowledge and belief," that his testator ever agreed to purchase the stock of the plaintiff, or any part thereof, as is charged in the bill. He believes the amount of the agreement was, either, that Johnson was to become paymaster to the company, for a part of plaintiff's stock, "leaving the plaintiff liable to him for the amount thus paid to his use," or that the plaintiff was to contribute hands, etc., and aid in doing the work, and thus pay for his stock, as Mr. Graham did. In support of this last suggestion, he avers that his intestate offered to allow plaintiff to do work on a part of his contract and the plaintiff declined doing so. Defendant also (153) alleges, that the whole of the plaintiff's stock was worked off by himself, in a contract amounting to some $28,000, which he had obtained upon the ground of this very stock; so, as he insists, the plaintiff has the benefit of working off the whole of his stock, and can claim nothing by reason of any agreement he had made with Johnson, in regard to a part of it.
The equity of the plaintiff is an emanation or deduction from an obligation, which was assumed by the gentlemen who were most active in procuring individual subscriptions for stock, and which was afterwards carried into effect by the president and directors acting under the instructions of the individual stockholders, and was by them, according to their advertisement for contracts, made one of the terms of the letting; that is to say, contractors were required to receive payment one-half in cash, the other half in the stock of individual subscribers.
It is apparent that such an obligation or undertaking on the part of the individual stockholders, was in direct contravention of the rights of the State; inasmuch, as the State was to furnish two-thirds of the funds for the construction of the road, and, although, not then represented was to contribute two-thirds of the company's capital. It was accordingly made a subject of anxious consideration by us, whether such an undertaking on the part of the individual stockholders, was not exposed to the objection of being against public policy, as tending to induce the officers of the company to allow more to contractors than their work was worth in cash, in order to induce them to take individual stock in part payment, the result of which would necessarily prejudice the rights of the largest stockholder. The disclosure in the answer of the defendant, proves that it was the pervalent [prevalent] opinion at the time, "that a contractor, with a contract yielding double the amount of his subscription, might pay the expense of the work, from the money;" in other words, might make his stock clear; that is, things were in such condition, that the State as was supposed, would (154) pay all of the money required for the construction of the road, and yet individuals would own one-third of the stock! This disclosure together with the further fact, that contractors who took one-half in stock were allowed such prices, as to enable them to let out sub-contracts to be paid in cash at a discount of 25 per cent is really startling.
If the original undertaking was against public policy, of course this Court could not, in any way, aid in carrying into effect an agreement growing out of this undertaking, or based upon it.
After much reflection, we have come to the conclusion that this objection to our entertaining the cause, has been removed, by the concurring acts of the executive and legislative departments of the government. They have, from high considerations of public good, concurred in, approved of, and ratified the action of the individual members of the company in regard to the undertaking, with full notice; and it is proper to say, that the matter was at all times openly avowed and justified upon the ground of public good. The executive officers have caused the subscription on the part of the State to be paid; and the Legislature, at its last session, appropriated one other million of dollars, to aid in the completion of a work which they deemed so important to the interests of the State.
His Honor in the Court below, a motion coming on to be heard upon bill and answer, dissolved the injunction. In this there is error. The distinction between injunctions to stop an execution at law, where the defendant has by a judgment, established his legal right, and injunctions, in cases where there has been no adjudication of the rights of the parties at law, and consequently where both parties stand in this Court, upon an equal footing, oath against oath, and the Court is to dispose of the motion upon the whole matter taken together, is explained and settled, Purnell v. Daniel, 43 N.C. 9; Caphart v. Mhoon, 45 N.C. 30; Lloyd v. Heath, ib. 39 McNeely v. Steel, ibid 240.
In our case, there has been no adjudication of the rights of the parties. The plaintiff alleges the agreement was, that Johnson would take off his hands an amount of stock sufficient to fill (155) his contract, and that Johnson's motive for doing so, was because he could not otherwise get the large contract for which he had made proposals. The contract of Johnson, prima facie, supports this view of the transaction. The defendant, as administrator of Johnson, makes a formal denial of the agreement alleged by the plaintiff, and suggests that according to his information and belief, the agreement was, that the plaintiff should aid in the work so as to do a part, corresponding with his stock; or else, that the plaintiff was to pay his intestate; in cash, the amount of stock that his intestate should work out under his contract. This latter suggestion is not very probable, because there was no sufficient motive for the plaintiff to agree to pay cash for his stock, or a part thereof, whereby he would forego the benefit of getting it off his hands upon much better terms, according to the understanding, which, it is admitted, the president and directors of the company were carrying into effect in letting out contracts.
So the question is, did Johnson agree to take off the plaintiff's hands so much of his stock as was necessary to fill his (Johnson's) contract? Or was it a part of the agreement that the plaintiff should furnish hands, etc., and do a corresponding portion of the work? No decision can be made in regard to it, at this stage of the proceeding, and the injunction ought to have been continued until the hearing.
It is said the bill shows no ground for coming into Equity, and the plaintiff had a remedy at Law for a breach of the agreement. The reply is, here is a specific thing, which one of the defendants has agreed to do, and here is a specific fund in the hands of the other defendant, who holds a covenant on the part of his co-defendant, taken in behalf of the plaintiff according to a prior understanding, and the possession of the fund puts it in the power, and makes it the duty of one of the defendants, to see that the agreement is carried into effect by the other. Again, it is said, Equity will not enforce the specific performance of an agreement to transfer or to accept stock. The reply is, that (156) may be so in reference to government stock in England, which, like corn or flour, may be bought for the money in market at any time; but the doctrine has no application to rail-road stock.
We incline to the opinion that neither of those objections is tenable, but do not now dispose of them definitely.
In regard to the allegation that the plaintiff, after the alleged agreement with Johnson, took a large contract, and in that way absorbed the whole of the stock which he had subscribed for, according to the understanding and terms of letting, by reason whereof he impliedly waived any right to have a part of his stock worked off by Johnson, it is sufficient to say, that is new matter, and rests upon a mere allegation of the defendants, to which the plaintiff has had no opportunity of replying. So it cannot be taken into consideration at this stage of the cause. Decretal order reversed; the injunction must stand over until the final hearing.
Per curiam.
Decree accordingly.