Judges: Beady, Daniels, Davis
Filed Date: 1/15/1882
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
Tbe injunction restrained tbe defendant from voting upon 11,477 shares of tbe capital stock of the Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway Company, registered in the books of tbe corporation in tbe name of tbe defendant as trustee. These shares were pledged by the plaintiff, their owner, in October, 1874, to tbe Erie Railway Company to secure a loan of money, and by means of certain foreclosure proceeding against that company they were transferred, subject to the plaintiff’s right of redemption, to the New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad Company. The sale under this foreclosure was made in 1878, and since that time the defendant has held the shares nominally as trustee for the last named company. By what authority they were registered in his name as trustee has not been made to appear. Certainly that is not shown to have been done under the authority of the plaintiff in the action. Eor that reason the defendant must be regarded as holding the shares solely under the authority created by the pledge; and having
It was not indispensable that it should be made to appear that the plaintiff’s rights would be injuriously affected by the votes which the defendant might give upon the shares.
It was sufficient, for the purpose of entitling him to an injunction, that he was the party who was entitled to determine and control the votes which should be given upon the shares, if they were to be voted on at all. That is plainly the theory of one of the provisions made by the Code of Civil Procedure, defining a class of cases in which an injunction may be granted. (Id., § 604.) ■
To entitle the plaintiff under that provision to an injunction, it has only been required that he shall make it appear by affidavit that the defendant during the pendency of the action is threatening,- or about to do an act in violation of the plaintiff’s rights respecting the subject of the action, and tending to render the judgment which may be recovered ineffectual, and all that was made to appear upon the hearing of this application at the Special Term.
It is true that the statements made designate no time when any future elections of the company would be held. Put from the known usages and corporate obligations of railway companies it may consistently be presumed that an election in the company whose shares were held in this manner would take place as often as once every year. As much as that certainly may also be inferred from the affidavit of McDonough, for he states the fact to be that the defendant has voted upon the shares by proxy or otherwise at the several annual elections of the company since and including the year 1876. Even if the plaintiff’s papers were defective in this respect the defect was well supplied by this affidavit. A case was made out in his behalf which entitled him to the injunction and the order should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs besides disbursements.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.