Rogers v. Garland
Rogers v. Garland
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of tbe Court:
Voluminous testimony was taken in this case. Tbe length of the bill which contains fifty-six paragraphs, taken together with the mass of evidence, would make a discus
It appears that in the year 1883, the complainant was the owner of certain patents relating to telegraphy, telephony and electric lighting, and some other applications of electricity to the useful arts, and that he had pending some •applications for other patents. He was desirous, as he says, •of having associated with him persons of position and influence who would promote the success of his enterprise •and the introduction of his inventions into general use. He therefore cast about to find persons answering this ■description and he became acquainted with one and then •another of the defendants in this case, and such acquaintanceship culminated in an agreement which was signed on March 13, 1883, by the complainant, General Joseph E. ■Johnston, A. H. Garland, John D. O. Atkins, Isham G. Harris and Casey Young, and which is set out in Exhibit B, filed with the bill. The substance of that agreement was, that the parties should constitute themselves an association or joint stock pompany, for the purpose of developing the various inventions in which the complainant was interested, and it further sets forth that it was mutually agreed that the value of the several improvements, as betwen the parties, should be estimated at $1,000,000, and that that amount should be divided into ten equal parts or shares ; four of which were to be held by the complainant, •J. H. Rogers, and one by each of the other parties, and the remaining part should be held jointly by the company “to be disposed of in such manner-as the members thereof may see fit.”
It was further agreed, that the parties will “as soon as the same can be done, procure a charter of incorporation, constituting themselves a corporate body, under the name and style of ‘ Pan-Electric 'Company/ embracing under such charter of incorporation such objects and powers as
The parties stipulated to pay, in the manner and to the amounted specified, the expenses necessarily incurred in perfecting the inventions, discoveries, and improvements. Rogers agreed that any improvements of his inventions that he might make thereafter should be the joint property of the company, and the executive committee were to have the power to sell to other parties such interest in the properties of the company as they might see proper. The place of the business of the company was fixed at Washington. It was further agreed that the articles of agreement might be altered, or amended at anytime at the option of turn-thirds of the parties in interest.
I suspend for a moment the history of this dealing between these parties at this point, to say that, on the 19th day of June, 1886, the complainant filed his bill in the present suit, in which he sets forth two special grievances. The first is, that under the contract between him and the defendants, it became their obligation to procure what he calls a comprehensive charter; that is, a charter embracing every class of business which they desired to prosecute, under which the whole of his patents could be made available, and that they failed to do this. In the next place, that they were under obligation, when this incorporation should take place, to issue stock and put it on the market to enable him to sell the stock and realize upon it, and he charges that, if that had been done, he would have been enabled to realize a very large fortune, and that he was defeated in that object by the refusal of these parties to issue the stock, and he claims that by reason of this allleged breach of the contract, they have forfeited all title to the
The first question, therefore, is what is the obligation of the parties in reference to the charter they obtained. We-will first have to consult the agreement which was signed and sealed by the parties, the second clause of which reads, as follows :
“ It is further mutually agreed by the parties to this agreement that they -will, as soon as the same can be done, procure a charter of incorporation, constituting themselves a corporate body under the name and style of the ‘ Pan-Electric Company/ embracing under such charter of incorporation such objects ami powers as they may deem proper and as are allowed to incorporated bodies under the laws of the State of New York or of any other State in which said charter of incorporation may be obtainedThe letter of this agreement leaves it to the discretion of the parties thereto what kind of a charter shall be obtained and what the objects and purposes embraced in such charter of incorporation shali be. There was a verbal departure from the stipulation in one respect, as it evidently contemplated one charter of incorporation by these parties for the purpose of conducting all their business together, but that departure was made with the concurrence of the complainant himself. They found their original design impracticable, and they secured two charters, incorporated two companies, each having a capital of $5,000,000. That departure, I say, was with the concurrence of all the parties, including the complainant himself, so that there can be no grounds for complaint there; that the letter of this contract was violated in respect to what he calls the comprehensive charter. But his contention is that that instrument does not embody the whole contract; that there was another document which should be incorporated with it. Before the agreement was signed,, as he says,he caused to be prepared and printed a very highly*30 colored prospectus, a copy of which is shown in Exhibit A, filed with this bill, headed, “Pan-Electric Company.” “This company,” he goes on to say in this paper, “has been temporarily organized with the view of introducing into general use the several inventions described belonging exclusively to the Pan-Electric Company, but more especially to •develop others as yet but partially advanced, as set forth herein, and to control by capital and foresight ‘the future possibilities of electricity. ’ ”
He then proceeds to set out the various inventions and the probable value of some of"them:
Pie then proceeds to say, “We therefore propose to public consideration a powerful corporation to possess, a little in the future, vast laboratories, learned electricians, and skilled mechanics, standing ready to seize upon and develop whatever may be presented in the light of its influence, capital, and genius. Nor would it seem extravagant to say that such a corporation, with its now methods, might convert great coal fields into torrents of electricity; that it might, in time, harness the' very waves, clouds, waterfalls, and winds, to generate this mysterious agent of nature, and that busy marts and thoroughfares, with their bankers, tradesmen, and pompous fashions may soon be seen thousands of miles distant through the telemorphe, riding in carriages without horses, cars without steam, all lighted up by electric suns, in a new and enchanting civilization.
“ J. Plarris Rogers, late electrician United States Capitol, will be chief electrician of the ‘Pan-Electric Company.’ His ‘Secret Telephone’ stocked in New York at $5,000,000 and his ‘Electro-Has Telephone’ stocked at $1,000,000 have already enriched, himself and others, which past successes promise more to the ‘Pan-Electric Company,’ embracing so vast a field of invention and discovery. Several other prominent electricians, distinguished capitalists, and far-seeing, solid business men have already acquired various interests in the enterprise, and there being, as the company believe,
“One-tenth interest will be sold only to moiled men applying for it, at a merely nominal price to construct machinery, and other interests will be.sold at auction on the New York Stock Exchange for what it may bring; but it is confidently predicted that the stock will ultimately go greatly above par. It may require years to effect this result for we depend in no way upon stock jobbing operations but upon a manly and scientific development of real values which stand on their intrinsic merits.
“Parties investigating must examine through their own electricians,” etc.
Now, he states that this paper, prepared by him at the first meeting of these parties in New York, was exhibited to them and read by them, and that he gave it to the defendants, Atkins, Harris, and Young, at the complainant’s house, with the view of their joining him in promoting his plans according to the general tenor of said Exhibit A, and that all the parties agreed to cany out the general plans as sot forth in said exhibit, and he is informed that one or more of the parties, Harris, Young, and Atkins, explained the agreement to Johnston and Garland, and gave to each one the pamphlet, and all agreed with complainant, during the month of February, 1883, to assist him in carrying out the general object and purpose of Exhibit A, and that the 'parties joined the association for that 'purpose.
This paper in Exhibit A sets forth the design of the parties and the manner of proceeding, and evidently looks to the sale of stock, immediately, upon the public market in New York. The defendants all deny that they gave any recognition to this paper. Some say that they never saw it, and others, if they did see it, looked upon it as a mere rhapsody and gave it no attention, and they repudiate it as an expression of their intentions. Thej’- say that the
It is claimed, however, by the complainant, that the paper in Exhibit A was afterwards recognized by the defendants. He says, in the first place, that the defendants adopted it because the treasurer paid the expenses of printing it. With the bill in the case there is an Exhibit G showing an account furnished by the complainant to the treasurer, Casey Young, amounting to $919.36, containing thirty items, and one of these items is “1,000 pamphlets, $25.” The account does not indicate at all what these pamphlets were, and Mr. Young testifies that he'was in the habit of paying the accounts furnished without scrutinizing the items, and it is quite possible that he paid this; 'he denies that.he had any idea that he was paying for pamphlets like Exhibit A, and there is no reason to doubt his word on that point; and even an implied admission of that sort, by him, -would not bind the other parties. It would amount to nothing.
The complainant relies also upon a letter of General Johnston’s, w'ho was the president, dated April 7,1883. It appears that complainant published the paper shown in Exhibit A in two forms; one without the names of the officers, and fixing the office of the company at Washington, and another containing at the top the names of the officers and fixing the office both in New York and Washington. This last, he says, was sent to General Johnston and he received a letter of April 7,1883, in reply, in which General Johnston says, “ I have received your letter via Danville, also the printed pamphlet intended, as you say, for a substitute for that printed by our association itself.” He then says, “ No one member of that committee can act for the whole,” and then he goes on to say, “the pamphlet, for which you propose a substitute, was the contract upon which our association was founded.. No one person, therefore, can put it aside. The association established its office in
The complainant says that when General Johnston refers to the pamphlet, “ upon which our association was founded,” he means the first form of this paper, prepared by the complainant, in which, as he says, the office was located in Washington, and not both in New York and Washington. We have examined those two and we find that the first of these pamphlets does not locate the office anywhere, and the only thing that does fix the office is the sealed agreement which fixes the office at Washington. Again the complainant says that when General Johnston refers to tha pamphlet as “ the contract upon which our association was founded,” it must have been this pamphlet published and printed by him, because the contract between the parties was not printed and therefore was not a pamphlet. About that, however, he seems to be mistaken, because in his testimony before the Congressional Committee he testified that the agreement between the parties, of March 13, 1883, was in print, and a copy of it was forwarded to General Johnston.
Therefore, it appears that General Johnston was strictly accurate when he said, in his testimony, that what he referred to was the agreement recognized by the parties and signed by them. What would seem pretty conclusive, also, upon this’question is the second agreement signed by the complainant on Maj^ 19, 1884. This recites the original agreement as the contract between the parties and nothing else. It says, “ Whereas on the 13th day of March, 1883,” these parties entered into a contract by which they formed themselves into an association, &c. Therefore nothing in any act of these defendants, either at the time of the acceptance' of this original agreement, or since, commits them to a recognition of this extravagant manifesto -which was put forth by the complainant. We can hardly realize that any of these gentlemen would have been willing to sign the paper or give it their sanction.
But complainant further alleges that the parties in procuring these two limited charters — each charter providing for 'a capital of $5,000,000, and under each charter the complainant being entitled to stock to the amount of $2,170,000 — intended them simply as temporary expedients, or for certain very limited periods, and that the parties were- still to go to work to procure, this comprehensive charter, so called, embracing all of his inventions. Now,
“ Office of the Pan-Electric Telephone Company. This is to certify that-is entitled to-shares of the capital stock of the Pan-Electric Telephone Company, tohenevcr ■it is the policy of the Board of Directors to issue the same, and to be charged to the account of J. Harris Rogers on the books of the company.”
Later on they issued another certificate wherein they stated that—
“This certificate entitles-to-shares of the capital stock of the Pan-Electric Telephone Company, of the par value of $100 each, so soon as the validity of the patents is judicially determined in any litigation instituted for that purpose. But this certificate is not transferable except with the consent of the president and secretary of the company indorsed hereon.”
Now, the complainant immediately after the organization, as I have said, insisted upon having these certificates of stock issued to him and on the very day after the organi
Now, the next ground of complaint is that the defendants refused to allow stock to be issued by which he could realize money. He says that the original association — the Pan-Electric Company — was to issue stock, and that he sent on the book of certificates of the stock to General Johnston, which was paid for, and therefore his action in the premises was legalized and ratified, and he says he was authorized to do it by all of the parties, and produces one of the certificates of stock. But upon examination, we see that it is evidently intended for an incorporated company; it reads : “Organized under the laws of the State of New York, fully paid and not assessable,” and it is prepared to be signed-by a president and secretary, which shows that it was in anticipation of the formation of the corporation.
We are again to refer to the contract to see what the parties were bound to do with reference to the issue of stock,, and that simply says that “ the capital stock of the said
The complainant, in his bill, says that he tried to secure additional associates who could influence some legislative'body to grant the comprehensive charter, &c., and who could by their illustrious names guarantee sales of the stock. He further says that he was not dependent upon the defendants for money, for he had more ready cash than all of them together; he was dependent on them for their names and influence to secure the comprehensive charter and to give value to the stock when issued. I do not think that these declarations commend
The next question is, is he entitled to an accounting. He asks for an account only upon one or two grounds in his prayer for relief. He first asks that the defendants be required to repay to him all the moneys or certificates of interest they may have received from the corporations. It should be stated that certain sums of money were received from the sale of State rights, which went into the treasury of the Pan-Electric Telephone Company, and that there were two dividends made out of these receipts, one in June and one in July, 1884, and the plaintiff received his share. The first dividend was made upon the motion of the complainant himself, and the 'other upon the motion of Mr. Looney, who was his agent. I believe the complainant was present at those meetings and assented to everything. At these meetings, accounts were stated, a balance struck, dividends made, an account stated, it may be said, and settlement was made between the parties, and it would be impossible for complainant to call upon a court of equity to re-open that settlement without showing some evidence to justify it. This money was paid over to these defendants in the complainant’s presence, or with his concurrence, and with full knowledge of the facts on his part, and it is well settled that a payment made under those circumstances
He furthermore asks that the partnership shall be dissolved, which he claims to have been created by this agreement, but as we think that there has been no partnership shown to exist, there is no ground for an account upon the theory of that prayer for relief. There are, however, one. or two matters in the body of the bill which might be ground for an accounting against somebody.
In section 29 he says that large amounts of money were paid by purchasers of interests to the partnership concern aforesaid and that defendants got nearly all this money, and left the complainant, whose patent interests they sold, with a very small proportion of the same. He also says that they sold large interests to certain fictitious persons, etc. In paragraph 33, he says that if the defendants had then, at the time of organizing the two corporations, forfeited all right to complainant’s patents, by having determined among themselves without his knowledge or consent, never to fulfill their obligations set forth in Exhibit B, or if they subsequently forfeited said right, that then, and in that case, all the stock of said corporation which said defendants have acquired belong equitably to the complainant, and that defendants should be required to pay to complainant all the money, stocks or certificates of stock they had drawn from said corporation and pay him besides not less than $100,000. He further says .that the moneys were all paid over to the treasurer of the Telephone Company, agent of the joint stock company, and that said agent paid the
Now, if that were true, he, perhaps, would have a right to an accounting; if there is anything to show that more was paid to these defendants than they were entitled to. But suppose that to be so, what would be' the remedy? If he had any remedy against them, it would bq an action for money had and received, to recover the excess of the money paid to them. It does not appear that more than they were entitled to was paid to them, but if it were so, we think the proper remedy would be to file a bill against the Telephone Company — to require a new statement of the account. That company is responsible, if anybody, for the alleged unequal distribution, and it and the other stockholders should be sued together. That company is not a party to this suit, and we think it could not be made a party for that purpose, because it is a corporation created in another .jurisdiction and not accountable to us here in the regulation of its domestic affairs, and therefore there is no remedy against the defendants in this court, even if there were ground for an accounting in respect to this subject.
There is one thing, perhaps, in respect to which the complainant might be entitled to an account. I should further-say, about these dividends, that the money did not come in gross into the hands of the defendants as the original members of the association at all, but it was paid directly from the treasury of the Telephone Company, to each individual as stockholder in that company, so that the defendants, as a part of the original association, never became responsible at all, if there was any unequal distribution, but only the Telephone Company.
When these State rights were sold, the price paid was partly in.cash and partly in local stocks of the companies incorporated in the different States. Now, it does not appear what became of those local stocks that went into the treasury of the Telephone Company and complainant.
In his bill he prays that the partnership may be dissolved. Notv, is there anything to be dissolved ? It is very plain that the corporation could not be dissolved;' in fact, the complainant himself repudiates that idea. It seems to be equally plain that the stocks owned by these parties were not the subject of partnership ownership. It was stipulated in the original agreement that they should be joint owners, but even that joint ownership has been destroyed by the act of the complainant himself, by having the' stock listed off to himself, and the whole matter shows that there is no joint ownership, no interest in the stock that the complainant has, on the part of the defendants, and the complainant has no interest in the stock that the •defendants have — there is no partnership there. Whether there is any partnership in the patents that were not assigned by the corporations might be perhaps a question, but 1 think that becomes unnecessary to decide, for reasons which I will now mention. Our impression is that the complainant is entitled to have re-assigned to him some of these patents. Under the orignal agreement the patents were to be worked by a corporate body. The companies did work some of the patents, but others were abandoned, as not valuable, and we think they ought to be restored to the complainant, not on the ground of any forfeiture or breach of the contract, but on the ground that the parties having elected to incorporate themselves to prosecute these other patents, the’contract has simply fallen through and been abandoned, as to those not assigned to the corporations and upon this ground the patents should be re-assigned to the complainant.
The complainant has failed to establish the body of liis •complaint, and, of course, we hold that he is not entitled to any costs against the defendants. We have looked into the matter of costs, and we find that the taxable costs of the
AVe have one word to say in conclusion, and that is, that the bill contains very serious charges against the-defendants of conspiracy to defraud him, &c., and we deem it proper to say that, in our judgment, not a particle of proof has been adduced to sustain the charges, and we think that there is nothing in the conduct of the defendants that is inconsistent with entire integrity and good faith.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- J. HARRIS ROGERS v. A. H. GARLAND
- Status
- Published