36 N.Y.S. 500 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The plaintiffs, who, together with Frank 0. Hollins, were constituted members of a committee of the first mortgage consolidated bondholders of the St. Louis & Chicago Railway Company, by virtue of an agreement executed by the bondholders, in
In the meantime a corporation had been organized, called the St. Louis & .Illinois Central Railroad Company, to take the property purchased. Articles were filed in October and November, 1889, but nothing further was done to complete this organization, as some difficulty had in the meantime arisen between Hollins and his associates on the committee, due in part, possibly, to the fact that the articles last filed contained the names of directors suggested by Mr. Hollins, and whom it was presumed he could control. However that may be, it appears that, at the meeting of the committee held on the 21st of November, Hollins declined to state, when requested by the chairman, how he was getting on with his financial plan, and refused to deposit with the committee his correspondence with Mr. Selligman relating to his alleged agreement to take $50,000 of the bonds. A little later, Hollins' stated that he was prepared to take only $100,000 of the new bonds, instead of $200,000, and for these he proposed to give old first mortgage bonds. The efforts of the committee to induce the Holland Trust Company to advance the amount which Hollins reported that the company would advance proved ineffectual. While affairs were in this condition, and on the 6th of December, a meeting of the bondholders was held, at which it was made to appear to the bondholders that it would be impossible for the plaintiff and the defendant Hollins to act together any further; and it resulted in a proposition by a special committee of the bondholders, which was thereafter acted upon. And it was to this effect: That, while the defendant Hollins should not resign from the reorganization committee, he should not attend any further meetings, and should abide by whatever the counsel for the committee should approve.
The time for the payment of the balance of the purchase price under the foreclosure of the first mortgage had in the meantime been
The charge preferred against these plaintiffs of acting in bad faith seems to have very trifling support. It consists mainly in the fact that there were dissensions between the plaintiffs and Hollins, but for which it is suggested that the plan of financiering which had already been adopted would have proved successful. For these dissensions the defendants, among whom are Frank C. Hollins, would hold the plaintiffs responsible. It is assumed that the proper inference of fact to be drawn from the whole transaction is that the plaintiffs refused to act further with Hollins, because Hollins had so planned it that the articles of incorporation should contain only the names of directors friendly to him, and presumably under his control. If such an inference of fact should be drawn, it would not, when considered in connection with the other facts, support a finding of bad faith. It is quite evident that the plaintiffs were justified in asking to be relieved from the trust if Hollins was longer to continue actively with them. Down to that time, he had accomplished but little in the direction of substantial benefit to the committee; but he had accomplished, much towards the scheme which he apparently had in mind, of controlling the management of the corporation after the committee had done its work. At the very outset, he seemed to have cultivated the appearance of being the active and forceful member of the committee, so far as financiering the reorganization was concerned. And this cultivation of appearances was, in a measure, temporarily successful, because it enabled him to have named in the articles of association the persons whom he desired as directors. But it was only a partial success, for this act indicated to his associates on the committee that he had schemes in view other than those embraced within the agreement; that while working with his associates, nominally,o he was attempting to secure some permanent or
We come now to the other questions presented by the appellants. The first is that the action was prematurely brought; the ground being that, as the delivery of the new securities to the old bondholders has not yet taken place, the trust is not terminated. If this position be a sound one, then the present indications are that such an action can never be brought. The securities cannot be delivered to the old bondholders until the committee shall have been paid for the property which they transferred to the new corporation, and upon the faith of which its securities were issued. And the action of the
Appellants next say that the plaintiffs should not be repaid the money advanced by them to buy the property for the new corporation out of the securities in their hands or under their control, because, in nearly every one of the steps taken to bring about that result, two of the members acted without notice to the third. That they did act without the third is unquestioned, but these defendants are not in a position to make the objection that the office and duties of a trustee cannot be delegated by one trustee to another, for the bondholders knew, in advance of any action being taken by two members of the committee in the absence of the third, that there was no other way by which the agreement could be carried out. And for that reason the bondholders, at a meeting on the 6th day of December, 1889, at which the defendant Hollins had avowed his inability to provide the means necessary to complete the purchase of the mortgaged premises, appointed a special committee for the purpose of arranging a basis on which these plaintiffs might proceed alone, without the intervention of Hollins. The plan approved was that while Hollins should not participate personally in the action of the committee, he should abide by the action of Mr. A. H. Joline, who had been selected by him as the counsel for the committee. This proposition was accepted by the plaintiffs, and thereafter their action was taken accordingly; and certainly these defendants are not in a position to complain because the plaintiffs subsequently carried out such ai’rangement.
- The objection taken to the substitution of the Central Trust Company for the Holland Trust Company is without force. There is nothing in the agreement expressly or impliedly forbidding it. The only provision relating to it is contained in the second clause, and provides that the bondholders shall “deposit the bonds and coupons held by us, respectively, with the Holland Trust Company, at its office, No. 7 Wall St., New York City, "to be delivered to the-committee upon request, taking therefor its negotiable receipts; and at the same time we deposit, to the order of the committee, five dollars for each bond so deposited.” While the Holland Trust Company was made the depository of the bonds, and the five dollars required to be deposited with each bond, it was required to make delivery thereof to the committee, on request. The plan upon which the committee were to proceed was marked out in the agreement, but in no wise were they restricted as to the source from which to obtain such moneys as they should be called upon to borrow or raise in order to carry out the plan. No opportunity exists to charge that the
There are several other technical objections, but they seem to us not to merit discussion. As we view the situation presented by this record, the plaintiffs, in good faith, did everything within their power to effectuate the plan of the committee. They did far more than they were called upon to do by the agreement, to protect the bondholders, by advancing their own moneys and pledging their personal credit to secure moneys for the purposes of the agreement, which they could not procure upon the faith of the securities which the bondholders intrusted to them. And the judgment awards to them no greater protection than is their due.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.