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Corporations Keyed to Hamilton
Brown v. McLanahan
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- The Brief Prologue provides necessary case brief introductory information and includes:
- Topic: Identifies the topic of law and where this case fits within your course outline.
- Parties: Identifies the cast of characters involved in the case.
- Procedural Posture & History: Shares the case history with how lower courts have ruled on the matter.
- Case Key Terms, Acts, Doctrines, etc.: A case specific Legal Term Dictionary.
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- The Case Brief is the complete case summarized and authored in the traditional Law School I.R.A.C. format. The Pro case brief includes:
- Brief Facts: A Synopsis of the Facts of the case.
- Rule of Law: Identifies the Legal Principle the Court used in deciding the case.
- Facts: What are the factual circumstances that gave rise to the civil or criminal case? What is the relationship of the Parties that are involved in the case. Review the Facts of this case here:
Plaintiff is the holder of voting trust certificates representing 500 shares of the preferred stock of the Company. Plaintiff brings a class actions against the voting trustees, the directors of the company, the Company, the indenture trustee for the holder’s of the Company’s debentures, and the debenture holders as a class (Defendants), seeking to set aside an amendment to the Company’s charter as unlawful. The securities involved in this litigation were issued under a plan of reorganization of the United Railways and Electric Company of Baltimore and The Maryland Electric Railways Company and Subsidiary Companies. The securities issued were: debentures and preferred stock to holders of all first lien bonds; and new common stock, without par value, were issued to the old common stockholders and unsecured creditors. Voting rights were vested exclusively in the preferred and common stock holders. The common stock holder had the exclusive right to vote for one director, while the preferred stock holders had the exclusive right to vote for the remaining directors. Three shares of common stock entitled the holder to one vote. The plan also provided for the establishment of a voting trust of all preferred and common stock for a period of ten years. All the stock was issued to eight voting trustees, who were a majority of the Company’s directors, under a voting trust agreement, which was to terminate on July 1, 1945. The voting rights would revert to the certificate holders in proportion to the number of shares represented upon termination. On June 21, 1944, without notice to the certificate holders, the directors amended the Company Charter’s Voting Trust Agreement provision. The changes included the elimination of the arrearage clause which had provided for exclusive voting rights in the preferred stock, it granted voting rights to the holders of debentures, one vote for each $100 principal amount of debentures, which created 221,000 new votes, and the common stockholders no longer had the exclusive right to elect one director. Consequentially, these new amendments diluted the voting power of the stock; deprived the voting trust certificate holders their right to control the management of the Company and the election of its directors; while it gave the debenture holders, namely the voting trustees, the voting rights. Plaintiff contends the voting trustee’s action amounts to a breach of the fiduciary duty owed to the certificate holders and seeks to (1) declare the June 21, 1944 amendment null and void; (2) remove the voting trustees; (3) terminate the voting trust; or award damages in the alternative. Plaintiff contends the amendment by the trustee was invalid because: (1) it was beyond the powers vested in the trustees to diminish the certificate holder’s voting power and not return it in the same condition to the them at the termination of the trust; (2) it was an abuse of trust to use the voting power to the advantage of the debenture holders at the detriment of the preferred stockholders, both of whom were original beneficiaries of the trust; and (3) it was an abuse of trust to use the voting power for the voting trustees’ own benefit. The District Court held in favor of the voting trustees. Plaintiff appeals.
- Issue(s): Lists the Questions of Law that are raised by the Facts of the case.
- Holding: Shares the Court's answer to the legal questions raised in the issue.
- Concurring / Dissenting Opinions: Includes valuable concurring or dissenting opinions and their key points.
- Reasoning and Analysis: Identifies the chain of argument(s) which led the judges to rule as they did.
- The Brief Prologue closes the case brief with important forward-looking discussion and includes:
- Policy: Identifies the Policy if any that has been established by the case.
- Court Direction: Shares where the Court went from here for this case.