258 Pa. 447 | Pa. | 1917
Opinion by
In 1901 the Columbia and Montour Electric Railway Company, a duly chartered street railway company, built and equipped a line of electric street railway in Columbia County, extending from Berwick Borough through Bloomsburg to Catawissa, and being about seventeen miles in length. The same year it issued bonds to the amount of three hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars; and as security therefor gave to the Commonwealth Trust Company, appellant, as trustee, a first mortgage upon its property, franchises, etc.
In 1907 another company,.the Danville and Blooms-burg Street Railway Company, herein called the Dan-ville Company, completed and began the operation of an electric street railway extending from Danville tó Bloomsburg, and being about eight miles in length. .Prior to its completion, the company gave a first mortgage to the Easton Trust Company, in the sum of two hundred and fifty , thousand dollars, in trust to'secure an issue of bonds of like amount, of which two hundred twenty-five thousand dollars were issued. In each case the purchasers of the bonds received a stock bonus equal to fifty per cent, of the par value of the bonds.
The track of the latter company terminated outside of the town of Bloomsburg, and by agreement its cars entered the town on the track of the other company.
A Delaware corporation was chartered in November, 1908, under the name of the Columbia Power, Light and Railways Company. The principal purpose of its incorporators was to create a holding company, which should purchase and hold the stock of said street railway companies, and also the stock and bonds of a number pf elee
Prior to the consolidation the Danville Company had proved unprofitable, and, as a condition precedent to such exchange of stock and merger, the bondholders of the Columbia and Montour Electric Railway Company insisted that the outstanding bonded indebtedness of the Danville Company should be reduced to $157,500, and that the interest thereon be reduced from five to four per cent, per annum, both of which conditions were agreed to by all the bondholders of the Danville Company, whose bonds were accordingly reduced pro rata. The final agreement of merger to which the bondholders consented was consummated February 7,1911, and it has since been managed and operated as one railway. So far as appears whatever stock was held by the bondholders was voted in favor of the merger; and the Commonwealth Trust Company had full knowledge of the facts in connection therewith.
The court below finds, inter alia: “By virtue of this merger, the physical property of the two corporations has become intermingled and united; many material changes and alterations have been made; the power plant of the Danville and Bloom sburg Street Railway Company has been dismantled; its boilers, engines, switchboards, dynamos and electric generators have been removed; and the repair and machine shops formerly of this company
On Sept. 27, 1915, the Court of Common Pleas of Columbia County, sitting in equity, appointed A. W. Duy, Esq., of Bloomsburg, receiver of the North Branch Transit Company, because of its financial embarrassment. In the decree making such appointment it is ordered, inter alia, as follows, viz: “And the defendant
On November 1, 1915, the Commonwealth Trust Company, as such trustee, presented its petition to the court below setting out, inter alia, that default had been made since January 1, 1914, in payment of interest on the mortgage bonds after demand; also the request of bondholders that it proceed to foreclose the mortgage, which by its terms had become due and payable; and further praying that the order appointing the receiver be so modified as to permit such foreclosure. The receiver and later the bondholders of the Danville Company filed answers, to which petitioner demurred.
The court below found the facts from the pleadings, and we have done the same so far as seem here important. The court dismissed the petition, mainly on the ground that such bondholders by reason of the facts above stated were estopped from proceeding to foreclose the mortgage upon the rights and property of the original Columbia and Montour Electric Railway Company, and that to do so would be inequitable. From which decree petitioner took this appeal.
In our opinion the facts do not justify the conclusion of the court below. The merger was the act of the directors ratified by the stockholders of the constituent companies, over which the bondholders as such had no control; and it.was effected by statutory authority, which expressly preserves liens against the constituent corporations ; for in Section 3 of the Act of May 3,1909, P. L. 408,.it is provided, “That all rights of creditors and all liens upon the property of each of said corporations shall
No estoppel can be claimed unless the party claiming it acted in ignorance of the true state of facts: Hill v. Epley, 31 Pa. 331; Woods v. Wilson, 37 Pa. 379; Wright’s Appeal, 99 Pa. 425.
Except as to the question of estoppel, of which there is no sufficient evidence, this case is ruled by that of Philadelphia Trust Company, Trustee, v. The Northumberland County Traction Company et al.; Pennsylvania Steel Company v. Sunbury & Susquehanna Ry. Co., 258 Pa. 152, decided at the present term, in which the opinion of this court by Mr. Justice Mestrezat holds, inter alia, that the receiver of a consolidated street railway company cannot sell the same divested of the lien of an underlying mortgage upon a constituent branch thereof; that the terms of such mortgage, including the means therein provided for its collection, constitute a contract, the obligation of which is protected by federal and State constitutions, which, cannot be impaired by legislative enactment or by judicial decision; and that the clear legal right to foreclose such mortgage cannot be denied because of loss which might thereby result to the bondholders of other constituent branches of such merged railway, or to the general creditors, or because of inconvenience to the public. The principles there stated are fully supported by the reasons given and authorities cited, and we find no . controlling difference between that
The above statement quoted from the opinion of the court below, that the bonds of the Columbia and Mon-tour Company have been greatly enhanced in value by the improvement of their branch of the line, can only be accepted upon the assumption that their lien and the right to enforce it still exist. As such lien cannot be divested by the receiver’s sale, unless the mortgage can be foreclosed it is difficult to see how the bonds can ever be collected. There seems to be no authority in the receiver to sell such merged road divested of the first mortgage liens upon the constituent parts, and, if it might be done, by. agreement of all the parties in interest, there is no assurance that such agreement could ever be obtained. Of course success was anticipated at the time of the merger and the failure seems to bear hard upon the Danville branch and those interested therein; but, inasmuch as they seem to have acquiesced in all of which they now complain, they cannot prevent petitioner from foreclosing the mortgage upon the other branch, as it has the plain legal right to do. New running arrangements may be secured so that the result may not be as disastrous as anticipated. We cannot here determine the rights of the respective parties as to intermingled property.
The decree is reversed, the petition reinstated and record remitted that appellant may be granted the relief prayed for/ The cost of the appeal to be paid by the receiver out of the estate.