285 Mass. 419 | Mass. | 1934
The second two actions are at law; they are in tort, in the nature of deceit. The plaintiffs seek to recover from the defendant damages alleged to have been suffered by them by reason of false representations alleged to have been made by the defendant, as trustee, by its certificate on certain bonds of The Martin Trailer Co. The first suit is in equity, and is brought against the defendant, as trustee under an indenture, to secure these bonds, for an accounting and for damages for breach of its fiduciary duties. The bonds involved are the same as those which were before this court in Continental Corp. v. Gowdy, 283 Mass. 204. The cases were tried together. In the law actions each declaration consisted of four counts, which, in substance, alleged that each plaintiff purchased twenty-eight bonds of The Martin Trailer Co. upon which the defendant had indorsed a “Trustee’s Certificate”; that the representations made by the defendant by this certificate were false; that the defendant knew or upon reasonable inquiry might have known that said representations were false; that the plaintiffs relied upon these representations in purchasing the bonds; that The Martin Trailer Co. became bankrupt September 26, 1930, and that the bonds were worthless. The first count in each action alleged that by custom and usage the trustee’s certificate was a representation that each bond was one of the bonds described in the indenture; that there was existing a mortgage or deed of trust to the certifying bank securing the bonds and dated April 17, 1929; that the bonds were duly executed and were the legal and authorized obligations of The Martin Trailer Co.; that the mortgage or deed of trust was duly recorded and duly executed in accordance with the company’s authorization; and that the bond was secured by a first mortgage on real estate sufficient in value “to cover the indebtedness of the entire issue.” In the second count it is alleged that the defendant
The law actions were referred to an auditor under a stipulation that his findings of fact should be final, except such as are inferences drawn by him from facts found. He filed separate reports. Upon motions for judgment by both parties on the reports, the judge ordered judgment to be entered for the defendant in each case. The actions come before this court on the plaintiffs’ exceptions to the allowance of the defendant’s motions for judgment and disallowance of the plaintiffs’ motion for judgment.
In the equity suit the plaintiffs’ claim for relief was based on allegations in the bill of complaint to the effect that the defendant, as trustee, failed to use reasonable care to see that the bonds and trust instrument were duly executed and were the legal and authorized obligations of the mortgagor, with the result that the right of the bondholders to have applied for their benefit the property described in the deed of trust was disputed; -that this made it necessary for the trustees to employ counsel to protect the interests of the bondholders, which would have been wholly unnecessary if due care had been used in connection with the original execution of said trust; that the defendant conspired with a firm of brokers to issue the bonds on insufficient security, in order to obtain payment of debts owed by The Martin
The facts relating to. the issue of these bonds as they appear in the auditor’s and master’s reports are these: The Martin Trailer Co., a Massachusetts corporation, was incorporated April 27, 1928, to manufacture trailers and similar auxiliary conveyances. In the spring of 1929, it needed cash for payroll, rent and additional capital for expanding business. In March, 1929, one Kenneth L. Mytinger of the stock brokerage firm of Walsh, Stockhausen and Mytinger, of Troy, New York, became interested in the affairs of The Martin Trailer Co. and his firm, without solicitation by or communication with the defendant, submitted a proposal looking to the financing of the corporation. This plan was approved by the directors on March 28, 1929, and submitted to the stockholders on April 9, 1929, who voted “That The Martin Trailer Company hereby authorizes the issue of $100,000 First Lien,
The Martin Trailer Co. owned no real estate until May 20, 1929, when it purchased a plant it had been renting
There was no mortgage or deed of trust dated April 17, 1929, executed by The Martin Trailer Co. to the First National Bank of Westfield, although the bond twice referred to an indenture of such date in the body thereof
The indenture dated May 1, 1929, purports, by recital in the testimonium clause thereof, to be executed by virtue of a vote of the stockholders of The Martin Trailer Co. at a meeting on May 1, 1929. The records of the corporation do not indicate that any meeting of the stockholders was held on that date; nor do the records of the corporation indicate that the indenture of May 1, 1929, was at any time submitted to the stockholders of the corporation and its execution authorized by them; nor do the records of The Martin Trailer Co. indicate that its directors or stockholders ever passed any vote purporting to authorize the transfer of any property, real or personal, to the defendant or any other person or corporation as trustee, to secure the $100,000 bond issue dated as of May 1, 1929.
David C. Little, who succeeded Joseph A. Kenyon as trust officer of the defendant bank, at the suggestion of Avery, examined the bonds during the early part of July, 1929, and the indenture of May 1, 1929, for the purpose of familiarizing himself with the provisions thereof. As a result of his investigation, he learned of the nonrecording of the indenture of May 1, 1929, and further learned that by reason of the lapse of time it could not then be recorded. He thereupon caused a chattel mortgage in the ordinary short form dated August 22, 1929, to be executed by The Martin Trailer Co. to the defendant as trustee “under the
The deed of trust or indenture dated May 1, 1929, and the supplemental chattel mortgage dated August 22, 1929, were the only indentures, mortgages or deeds of trust executed by The Martin Trailer Co. to secure the bond issue here involved or any other bond issue. The action of Little in having the supplemental chattel mortgage executed and recorded was merely to correct the defect arising from the nonrecording of the indenture of May 1, 1929. It follows by inference that the only indenture existing at the time the bonds were certified by the defendant was the indenture of May 1, 1929, and that that was the only indenture which could have been intended to be described in the bonds and by the certificate of the trustee on the bonds.
The vote passed by the stockholders of The Martin Trailer Co. on April 9, 1929, purporting to authorize the bond issue here involved, and the terms of the indenture, and of the bonds were not in accord, but contained discrepancies, the more material of which were as follows: (a)
It appears in the findings that twenty-eight of the bonds originally issued to Walsh, Stockhausen and Mytinger were acquired by the plaintiffs Bauer et al. on October 8, 1929, as additional security on a previously made loan. Twenty more of these bonds were acquired by the plaintiff The Continental Bank and Trust Company of New York as part of the collateral for a loan made to Walsh, Stockhausen and Mytinger on September 23, 1929, and eight more bonds as additional collateral for this loan on October
In July, 1930, The Martin Trailer Co. was put in receivership and subsequently on September 26, 1930, it was adjudged a bankrupt. The property included in the mortgage to the defendant as trustee was sold with other assets of the company by the trustee in bankruptcy, the sum allocated to this property being $5,000. After payment of counsel fees and expenses the bank held, and still holds, $3,395.32 for distribution ratably among the bondholders and advised them that they were entitled to receive as their pro rata share of said balance approximately four and seventeen hundredths per cent of the face amount of the bonds held.
The plaintiff The Continental Bank and Trust Company of New York sold its bonds here in question on November 26, 1930, at public auction to The Continental Corporation, a subsidiary of the plaintiff, realizing a net amount of $199. The net proceeds were applied to the loan of Walsh, Stockhausen and Mytinger and left a deficit of $13,801. The plaintiffs Bauer et al., being insolvent, executed assignments in July, 1931, for a nominal consideration of all their assets including the bonds here in issue to Creditors’ Composition Corporation organized to take over these assets. Other collateral on the loan to Walsh, Stockhausen and Mytinger had been sold leaving a deficit on the loan in excess of $28,000. The Continental Corporation and the Creditors’ Composition Corporation as intervener are the plaintiffs in the equity suit.
In the law actions the plaintiffs make the basic contention: (1) “A bank purporting to certify an issue of bonds as trustee for bondholders thereby represents to prospective bondholders that the statements in its certificate are made of its own knowledge and are known to be true; and that further it has no actual knowledge or notice that any statement appearing on the face of the bonds or indenture is false; and is liable to prospective bondholders in the event that the certificate contains misstatements of fact or in.the event that the trustee has certified the
It is plain that the basic question is whether the defendant’s certificate amounted to a misrepresentation as to the truth or falsity of any material fact recited on the face of the bond. The phraseology of this certificate alone manifestly does not constitute an unequivocal representation of any other fact than that each bond so certified is “one of the bonds described in á mortgage or deed of trust to the subscriber as trustee, and dated April 17, A. D. 1929.” These certificates make no reference to the recitals in the bonds, and no representation whatever in regard to them is made. The statements on the face and reverse of the
The question for decision then is, in the absence of such custom and usage, whether the certificate of trust in the manner and form here adopted is as matter of law a representation in any of the foregoing respects. There is a considerable body of authority in other jurisdictions to support the proposition that the mere certificate of a trustee, couched in terms similar to those now before the court, amounts to no guaranty whatever regarding the security so certified and that its effect is at most to identify the bonds as the bonds mentioned in the mortgage or deed of trust. Ainsa v. Mercantile Trust Co. 174 Cal. 504. Knickerbocker v. Fort Dearborn Trust & Savings Bank, 219 Ill. App. 409. Bauernschmidt v. Maryland Trust Co. 89 Md. 507. McCauley v. Ridgewood Trust Co. 52 Vroom, 86. Tschetinian v. City Trust Co. 186 N. Y. 432. Reynolds v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co. 240 N. Y. 257. Bell v. Title Trust & Guarantee Co. 292 Penn. St. 228. Thayer v. South Side Foundry & Machine Works, 112 W. Va. 134. See Mullen v. Eastern Trust & Banking Co. 108 Maine, 498.
In their brief the plaintiffs concede that ordinarily the trustee is not held to guarantee the extent or adequacy of
In the final analysis the legal question for decision is: If the defendant makes no representation as to the statements in the bonds, does it certify them at its peril to ascertain the truth of the facts accessible to it? The position of the plaintiffs in this respect can be sustained only if the court goes contrary to the well reasoned opinions of the cases above collected, and to the almost unanimous holding that such a certificate as the defendant’s in this case does not constitute any representation as to the validity or sufficiency of the security behind the bonds. We find no sound reason in the argument of the plaintiffs why the court should decide on the facts of the case against the trend of judicial decisions and the almost unanimous views of legal writers, and we refuse so to do. It is further plain that the certifier of such bonds is not a trustee for prospective purchasers, and, therefore, cannot be held to have violated any trust duty to such prospective purchaser by certifying the bonds with or without knowledge as to the adequacy of the security or as to the truth of the recitals in the bonds. See Doyle v. Chatham & Phenix National Bank, 253 N. Y. 369, 376. Furthermore, on the face of these bonds there was an express reference made to the
The plaintiffs further contend that the defendant is liable for having falsely certified that there was an indenture dated April 17, 1929, describing and securing the bonds in question, when in fact there was no such indenture securing the bonds, and that the act of the trustee in certifying the bonds was in the circumstances without authority either under the terms of the indenture or under the terms of the vote of the stockholders of The Martin Trailer Co. This contention rests on the theory that the trustee’s certificate represents not only the truth of the recitals in the certificate itself but also the truth' of the recitals in the bond to the extent that it has examined the bond and indenture, as well as the papers constituting the necessary evidence of the authority of the corporation to issue the bonds and indenture, and that this issuance was validly authorized, with the additional representation that the indenture was duly recorded, citing Miles v. Roberts, 76 Fed. Rep. 919, Miles v. Vivian, 79 Fed. Rep. 848, and Green v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co. 223 App. Div. (N. Y.) 12, affirmed 248 N. Y. 627.
The auditor states that “The trustee’s certificate standing alone is false in so far as it recites in respect to each bond that such bond is one of the bonds described in a mortgage or deed of trust dated April 17, 1929, because there was no mortgage or deed of trust bearing that date. If, under the findings hereinbefore made, the trustee’s certificate be deemed to refer to the indenture of May 1, 1929, then I find that said indenture did not definitely describe the bonds certified, but referred generally to bonds without any definitely identifying description or reference. Í
The plaintiffs’ contention that they relied on the defendant’s representation involved in the certificates and in the bonds, at least the contention of The Continental Bank and Trust Company of New York, is sustained on the evidence that they believed it represented, in the light of the statements made to them by Mytinger, who tendered them the bonds as collateral, that these were first mortgage bonds as that was understood by custom and usage among bankers and brokers. But whatever else such certificates
In the equity suit, the plaintiffs state in their brief that “The only point to be argued . . . relates to the contention by the plaintiff that the defendant should ... be charged with certain payments for counsel fees made by it out of the trust property.” It appears that for the purpose of representing the defendant both individually and as trustee in connection with the default, threatened litigation by the plaintiffs’ predecessors, and subsequent bankruptcy of The Martin Trailer Co., the defendant employed counsel and that counsel deducted from the proceeds turned over by the trustee in bankruptcy the sum of $1,500 for legal services rendered. Counsel apportioned these charges as between services rendered the bank individually and services rendered the bank in its trust capacity for the benefit of all the bondholders, in the amounts respectively of $250 and $1,250. The final decree entered ordered the defendant to pay to itself as trustee for the bondholders the sum of $250. The plaintiffs complain of this settlement and contend that the defendant should have been ordered to pay over a greater sum — $400. They rely on the following findings of the master: “I find as a fact that the discrepancies and inaccuracies . . . referred to in paragraph 30 and- elsewhere in this report, and the non-recording of the indenture of May 1, and the recording of the supplemental chattel mortgage, complicated the work of the attorneys and involved research and investigation that would otherwise have been unnecessary. . . . [that it3
The plaintiffs contend, however, that even though the defendant be not chargeable for the additional expense rendered necessary by the discrepancies, inaccuracies and the nonrecording of the indenture, it should be charged with
In the actions at law the exceptions are overruled.
Ordered accordingly.