45 Mich. 103 | Mich. | 1881
The mortgage which this suit is brought to foreclose was given by the Marquette & Pacific Polling Mill Co. to secure the payment of thirty bonds of five thousand dollars, dated July 1, 1871, payable to Sidney D. Miller, trustee, ten years after date, with eight per centum interest, payable semi-annually. The mortgage contained a provision that in ease the interest should at any time be overdue for sixty days, the principal should, at the election of the trustee, become immediately due and payable. Complainant files the bill as holder of a part of the bonds, the trustee having declined to do so.
The Marquette & Pacific Rolling Mill Co., the mortgagor, makes no defense, and the sole contestant of complainant’s rights is William H. Parks, who is grantee of the parties who purchased the equity of redemption at execution sale. He claims — -first, that the mortgage never had any validity; and second, that if it had validity in the hands of the trustee, complainant has never acquired any rights under it, for the reason that his demand was not such an one as the mortgage was intended to secure, and he is not in position to claim as a bona fide purchaser or holder of negotiable paper. Peter White, who is made defendant, claims rights under the mortgage which do not antagonize those asserted by the complainant.
I. The mortgage is said to be invalid because never authorized by the corporation giving it. The Polling Mill Company was organized under the statutes for the incorporation of mining and manufacturing companies, which are collected in chapter 95 of the Compiled Laws of 1871. By one of the sections of this collection it is provided that “ No alienation, diversion, sale or mortgage of any or any part of the mine works, real estate or franchise of any corporation men
The evidence of the giving of notice of the meeting seems to us ample. It comes from "William Burt, who testifies with much confidence to having caused notice to be published in a newspaper of the county, and produces a copy of the one published. He also testifies that as agent for the company he paid for the publication, and served notice by mail on the several stockholders. He gives reasons for his belief that all this was done in compliance with the statute, and the reasons are satisfactory. We discover no defect here.
The fact that the action taken did not correspond with the notice is more important. The notice is given in the margin,
The meeting was duly convened and no question is made that the stock was sufficiently represented. After electing directors, the record states that “ The meeting then proceeded to consider the issue of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars of first mortgage bonds upon the property of the company, and upon a vote, unanimously authorized and instructed the treasurer to make such issue.”
The object of the meeting, as testified, is thus seen to have been to authorize bonds and a mortgage to the extent of one hundred, thousand dollars, and the authority actually given was to issue bonds and give mortgage for one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. The explanation of this action, which is given on the part of complainant, is that the corporation was already indebted to the amount of fifty thousand dollars secured by mortgage of part of their property, and the new bonds and mortgage were intended in part to provide for that, so that the' debt would be increased one hundred thousand dollars only, and the notice be complied with in spirit though not in letter. But in behalf of defendant Parks it is insisted that the motive, not disclosed by the record, is immaterial ; the fact being that one thing was proposed and another thing done ; and this, according to the express provisions of the statute, cannot be “ legal or valid,” or “ of any force or effect.”
These are strong and seem very imperative words, and if full effect is given to them it may be difficult to support this mortgage. But we are not hastily to conclude that words
The statute now under consideration was passed to protect the interests of stockholders in mining companies. It intends that their mining property shall not be conveyed away or mortgaged except by their deliberate action after they have been notified of a proposal to do so, and have had time to deliberate upon and fully consider it. But the matter does not concern the public at large ; no principle of public policy is at stake; no wrong, direct or indirect, is done to any human being if conveyance is made or mortgage given without the exact notice required, unless it be a wrong to the stockholders themselves. And as others are not concerned, why should the statute give them the right to raise questions of regularity which the stockholders elect to waive? We are satisfied such was not its purpose.
In this casedhe stockholders acted deliberately in sanctioning the giving of the mortgage, and they now make no complaint. The bonds and mortgage were given, and have been acted upon. Complainant has loaned money in reliance upon them. Interest has fallen due and he has filed his bill to foreclose, and neither the corporation nor any of its stockholders has seen fit to make defence. The corporators may possibly have had a right to take advantage of the exact words of the statute, repudiate their action, and treat the mortgage as of no force or effect, but they had an equal right to treat it as effective and valid. They have chosen the latter course, and this is conclusive upon the corporation and upon any one claiming under it. What would have been the result had no corporate meeting ever been held we do not consider.
II. The corporation became debtor to Beecher in five notes of ten thousand dollars each, each of which was secured
III. It is also urged that Beecher has been in possession of the mortgaged property as mortgagee, and has received in person or through his agent a large amount of money and other personal property which he must account for on the mortgage, and which, if accounted for, will more than extinguish the three notes which he now holds.
The facts which are supposed to give ground for this position are that in December, 1872, Beecher gave a guaranty to the Western Transportation & Goal Go. of the performance of a contract made by the Marquette & Pacific Polling Mill Co. to deliver ten thousand tons of iron ore, and the latter company, in a contract reciting that fact, and also the indebtedness of the company to Beecher and the delivery to him of collateral bonds, stipulated with him that he should cany on the business of the company; that the proceeds to accrue from said sale of ore should be applied by Beecher or his agent
This disposes of the defences which are set up to the complainant’s demand. The claim of White remains for examination.
IY. The claim of White arises upon the following facts : Hiram A. Burt as well as complainant was guarantor of the performance of the contract made with the Western Transportation & Coal Company as above stated. He was also indorser for the Marquette & Pacific Bolling Mill Co. on paper held by a bank of which White was president, in the amount of thirty thousand dollars. In the agreement of December, 1872, between Beecher and the Bolling Mill Co., it was agreed that the bonds for one hundred and fifty thousand dollars and the mortgage collateral' thereto, should be held by the trustee for the payment of fifty thousand dollars prior mortgage and interest, and the thirty thousand dollars and interest which then remained unpaid to Beecher of his fifty thousand dollars loan to the Bolling Mill Co., and also for the full liquidation and discharge of any liabilities of any kind to which Beecher might be subjected by reason of his guaranty of the contract with the Transportation and Coal Co. By another contract between Beecher and Burt, bearing the same date with the contract above mentioned, Burt was made agent for Beecher at the mine, and Beecher agreed that whatever was received by him under his contract with the Bolling Mill Co. should be held and controlled by him
It is contended on the part of both complainant and defendant Parks that the contracts and -the action of the directors upon them do not secure Burt for pre-existing liabilities and consequently that White can claim nothing under them. We have examined the contracts with care and must admit that the construction is not free from all difficulty; but we are satisfied the intention was to give Burt full protection. There was no just' reason for restricting his protection to his guaranty on the contract with the Transportation and Coal Co. and to accruing indebtedness, and it is not likely he would have been content to take security thus restricted. In the light of all the facts it seems to us apparent that the intention was Burt as well as Beecher should be protected to the full extent that whatever was pledged to Beecher could give protection.
Y. Complainant, by reason of the failure to pay interest, elects to treat the principal sum represented by the bonds as now due. The mortgage gives this election to the trustee, and though he declines to foreclose, it is insisted no one else can elect for him. The point has not been discussed, and we do not pass upon it, as we conceive it to be unnecessary. The principal sum will be due before foreclosure can be completed, and an election will be of no moment.
Decree will be entered in accordance with these views.
Office of the Marquette & Pacific Rolling Mill Company, ) Marquette, Dec. 15th, 1870. • )
At a meeting of the directors of the Marquette and Pacific Rolling Mill Company, this 15th day of December, A. D. 1870, it was ordered that a meeting of the stockholders of this company he called and hold on Monday, the 16th day of January, A. D. 1871, at 10 o’clock A. m., at the
John Burt, President.