Meldrim v. Trustees of Trinity Church
Meldrim v. Trustees of Trinity Church
Opinion of the Court
In June, 1869, The Central Railroad & Banking Company of Georgia leased the property of The Southwestern Railroad Company for and during the entire corporate existence of -the latter company under its charter. The lease-was to go into effect on the 1st day of December, 1869, and thereafter The Central R. R. & B. Co. was to exercise all rights, privileges and control which The Southwestern R. R. Co. previously had, and also to receive and dispose of all the earnings of The Southwestern R. R. Co., and to merge 'the same with the earnings of The Central R. R. & Bkg. Co., and to decide what dividends should he declared therefrom. “And the said The Central Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia hereby conveníante and agrees to and with the said The Southwestern Railroad Company, that during-the months of June and December in every year during the continuance of the term hereby granted, it will declare and pay to the stockholders of the said The Southwestern Railroad Company dividends which shall bear to the dividends declared and paid to its oiwn stockholders the ratio of eight-to ten. That is to- say, eight dollars to each share of Southwestern Railroad stock for every ten dollars declared and paid to each share of its own stock; and that no semi-annual dividend so- declared and paid to the stockholders of the Southwestern Railroad Company shall be less than at the rate of seven per -centum per annum, -on -the par value of their Stock; -and that whenever any stock dividend <or division of assets or accumulations shall be declared, paid or made to 'the stockholders of the said The Central Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia, a similar dividend or distribution shall be paid and made to the stockholders of the Southwestern-Railroad in the same proportion of eight to ten; and that all such dividends and distributions of every sort shall be paid to the stockholders of The Southwestern Railroad Company at M-acon and Savannah, as the company has heretofore paid its dividends, and free of all taxes to the stockholders.” In
The record discloses that on the 1st of December, 1869,. The Central Railroad and Banking Company took possession of all the property and assets of The Southwestern Railroad Company, and that from that time until June, 1892, it paid to the stockholders of the Southwestern Railroad semiannual dividends of seven per cent, per annum on the par value of their stock, the dividends being paid directly to the stockholders. In 1892 The Central Railroad & Banking Co., becoming financially embarrassed, wtas placed in the hands of a receiver by order of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Georgia, and so remained until it was sold by decree of the same court on October 7, 1895. Up to the day of sale of the Central, the receiver operated the Southwestern Railroad under .the lease. The purchasers «at the sale obtained a new charter under the name of the Central of Georgia Railway Company, and on October 17, 1895, another lease contract was made between the new company and The Southwestern Railroad Company, upon certain terms and conditions therein specified but unnecessary here to mention. In making the new lease there seems to have been a compromise m'ade between the new
1. It was contended by counsel for plaintiffs in error here, that the money paid to The Southwestern Railroad Company by the purchasers of The Central Railroad & Banking Company was not paid as dividends but as rent for the use and occupation of the Southwestern Railroad: that,
The view we take of the case renders it unnecessary for us •to determine whether either proposition is trae under the facts of this case. I am inclined to -think that rent is ap■portionable between the -estate of the life-tenant -and -the remainderman; and it is undoubtedly true that the owner of •.stock in a corporation is entitled to the dividends declared while he is owner. In this case neither proposition applies. In 1869 the lessor corporation leased all of its property to the lessee corporation, and the latter in that contract of lease .■stipulated and agreed to pay to the stockholders of the lessor at least seven per cent, per annum on the par value of their ■stock. They did not contract to p'ay it to the lessor company but to its stockholders directly. The lessor, The Southwest■ern Railroad Go., in this contract of lease waived its right to declare or to collect dividends, and contracted with the lessee to pay them directly to the stockholders of the lessor. 'The lessee agreed with the lessor that when it paid its own stockholders ten per cent, on their stock it would pay the ¡stockholders of the lessor eight per cent., and that whether it paid its own stockholders anything or not it would in any event pay the stockholders of the lessor at least seven per •cent, per annum on the par value of their shares. Here then was a contract, made not so much fox the benefit of the lessor «corporation as for the benefit of its stockholders, in which it
The fact that the directors of The Southwestern R. R. Company compromised-the claims of these stockholders, received the money and declared the dividend, does not contravene this right of the executors to the portion of the dividends payable before the death of Mclntire. The directors acted in the matter simply as the agents or trustees of the various stockholders. Under the contract of lease there was
2. The trial judge provided for the costs and expenses by -•■decreeing that the executors of Mclntire pay the court costs ■and that the trustees of the churches pay the counsel filing 'the bill of interpleader, out of the fund, fees for their ser■vices. The executors excepted to the decree requiring them to pay the costs of the litigation, and the trustees by cross-bill excepted to the decree requiring them to pay out of the fund fees of counsel filing the bill of interpleader. As we have decided that the decree awarding the fund to the trustees of the churches was erroneous, it follows as a matter of • course that the decree requiring them to pay fees out of this fund is likewise error. Whether counsel who file a bill of interpleader are entitled to fees out of the fund in the hands -of the person who files the bill or whether that person must pay his own counsel we do not now decide, hut leave this
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MELDRIM, executors v. TRUSTEES OF TRINITY CHURCH, and vice versa
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published