248 Mo. 617 | Mo. | 1913
This is a proceeding by the plaintiff and. appellee to subject the property of the F. H. Smith Lumber Company in the hands of Edward D’Arcy, the surviving trustee under a conveyance by the company for the benefit of its creditors, to the payment of certain notes. The conveyance under which appellant holds the property is called by both parties a common law assignment. As there is no question raised as to the liability of the assignee for the debts of the Lumber Company it is not necessary to inquire further what this may mean. The original assignees under this instrument were Charles E. Fritsche and Patrick B. Little. At the time of the institution of this suit in March, 1906, Charles E. Fritsche was made a party defendant as the sole surviving trustee under the assignment. D’Arcy succeeded him and was on December 4, 1906, the date of the trial, substituted in his stead. On December 11, 1906, the plaintiff by leave of .court filed the amended petition which is described in the record as the “fifth amendment,” and is the one on which the cause is proceeding. It is founded on three promissory notes executed October 16, 1903, to the Interstate Trust & Banking Company of New Orleans, Louisiana, signed by the Hardwood Export Company, as follows:
One for $5000, payable on or before November 15th after date, with interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum; one for $5000, payable on or before
“The undersigned have deposited with and pledged to the Interstate Trust and Banking Company and assigns (with the privilege of sub-pledging or re-pledging same) as collateral security for the payment of the above and foregoing note, as well as all other liabilities whether absolute, contingent or conditional, of the undersigned to said Trust Company, or its assigns, heretofore or hereafter contracted, the following property, viz.:
“$100,000 Mortgage Bonds — Harwood Export Co. for this note and other obligations.
“The estimated market value of which is now $ ... In ease said Trust Company or any of its officers, agents or assigns, shall at any time be of opinion that said property is of less value than above stated, or that the whole or any part of said property has declined or may decline, in value, or at any time and for any reason may desire additional or other collaterals or security, or in the event of default in the payment of said note or all or any liability aforesaid or the interest thereon, at maturity, then in all, any or either of such cases, said Trust Company, or its assigns, may, in its or their discretion, call for additional or other collaterals or security,satisfactory to*627 said Trust Company or to the holder of said note, and failure to furnish the same before twelve o’clock noon of the day next after the day of such call shall make said note and all other liabilities of the undersigned to said Trust Company, or its assigns, without further notice or demand, or putting in default, at once due and payable. Said call for additional security may be made by giving the undersigned, or any or either of them, oral or written notice thereof, or by leaving written notice thereof at any office, place of business, or usual abode of the undersigned, or any or either of them or by mailing same in sealed envelope, postage prepaid, addressed to the undersigned or any or either of them, at the last known postoffice address. The undersigned hereby gives said Trust Company or any of its officers, agents, or assigns full and irrevocable power, upon any such default, to furnish additional or other satisfactory security or collateral, as aforesaid, or upon failure to promptly pay at maturity said note or other liabilities aforesaid and the interest thereon, to sell such property or collaterals without further notice, demand for payment, or putting in default, and without the intervention of any court of justice, and without appraisement or advertisement or other notice, at public or private sale or sales, or at any brokers’ board or stock exchange. ■ If said sale or sales shall be public or at any brokers’ board or stock exchange, the undersigned agree that said Trust Company or its assigns may purchase said property or any part thereof, at such sale or sales, without any right of redemption on the part of the undersigned. The net proceeds of such sale or sales, after payment of all expenses and attorneys ’ fees growing out of or connected with said property and the sale and delivery thereof, may be applied upon all or any of the liabilities .(whether by the terms thereof due or not) of the undersigned to the holder of said note, and the surplus, if any, shall be paid to the undersigned. If the*628 net proceeds of such sale or sales shall not pay in full all the liabilities of the undersigned to said Trust Company or its assigns, then all such liabilities remaining unpaid shall become at once due and payable, and bear interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum from the time of such sale. In case of any exchange of, or substitution for, or addition to said property or any part thereof, the provisions of this agreement shall extend to such new, exchanged, substituted or additional'property. And the undersigned hereby authorize said Trust Company, at any time, at the discretion of any officer or agent thereof, to apply any money or moneys which said Trust Company may have or hold.on deposit or otherwise, for the undersigned, towards the payment of said note and other liabilities, whether due, or not. The word liabilities herein shall include all liabilities of undersigned, whether of same class as said note or otherwise, and whether of undersigned alone or jointly or in solido with others.”
There were originally, in this transaction, three $5000 notes, one of which was paid at maturity and $10,000 in par value of bonds withdrawn, leaving the three notes and $90,000 of bonds which constitute the bone of contention in this case.
The petition states that the defendant Lumber Company is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Missouri; that the Hardwood Export Company is a corporation organized under the laws of Illinois, and is a subsidiary company of the Lumber Company, which in fact owned and controlled it; that the Interstate Trust and Banking Company is a trust and banking company doing business in New Orleans, Louisiana, and acquired the notes for value in the due course of buisness; that default was made in the payment of the notes, and the trust company “realized” on the collateral bonds by sale thereof upon the New Orleans Stock Exchange on January 21, 1904, in ac
“They cannot be revoked, unless by mutual consent of the parties, or for causes acknowledged by law.
“They must be performed with good faith.” It also invokes the assistance of article 4, section 2, and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution, and section 30, article 2 of the Constitution of Missouri. It further states: ‘ ‘ That on the 23rd day of February, 1904, said plaintiff purchased said notes and said ninety bonds for value from said Interstate Trust & Banking Company and acquired its title, namely, that of an innocent holder for value before maturity of said three notes and thereby became vested with all rights of such a holder, and is now the holder of said notes and also acquired its title to said bonds. ’ ’
That on the 24th day of December, 1903, the Lumber Company in the city of St. Louis and the Hardwood Company in Illinois, each severally executed ‘ ‘ a common law deed of assignment” for the benefit of all its creditors, to Patrick B. Little and Charles E. Fritsche, and that the defendant D’Arcy has become the successor of the above said assignees with respect to the assignment of the Lumber Company, while J. C. McKinnon succeeded Little as one of the assignees of
That on March 26, 1906, the plaintiff sold said property to the Mount Vernon Lumber Company, afterward the Mount Vernon Hardwood Company, a Louisiana corporation, for $100,000, thereby receiving as the proceeds of said ninety bonds $70,866.14, for which, after deducting any balance owing on the three notes, plaintiff should be required to account to defendant. It asked judgment that the sale on January 21,1904, on the New Orleans Stock Exchange was void
The plaintiff filed a reply in which he admitted the most of the things charged in the counterclaim, including the acquisition and ownership by the Lumber Company of the stock and property of the Hardwood Export Company, the assignment of the latter company, the sale on the New Orleans Stock Exchange, the foreclosure, at his request, of the mortgage securing the bonds of the Hardwood Export Company and transfer of the property purchased by the plaintiff at the sale to the Mount Vernon Lumber Company, but denied all manner of fraud and illegality in any of the proceedings. He states that he' paid for the bonds, the value of which was purely speculative, and the notes sued on, the full amount due on the notes, together with the expense to which the Interstate Trust & Banking Company had been put in connection with the transaction, amounting to about $47,000, and thereby became the absolute and legal owner of both the promissory notes and bonds for himself and in trust for persons associated with him in such purchase, and that at the time of acquiring them he was familiar with the title of the Trust & Banking Company and with the circumstances under which its title had been acquired, which he alleges to have been an absolute title as owner. That the action of the Trust & Banking Company in relation thereto was in good faith and in strict accordance with the terms of the contract under which the bonds had been pledged to it, and with the laws of the State of Louisiana. That while neither of
At the trial a stipulation which reiterates the absolute ownership by the F. H. Smith Lumber Company of all the stock, property and property rights of the Hardwood Export Company, that the former company continued to own the same up to the time of the assignment, by which it passed to Little and Fritsche, the assignees of the Lumber Company, and that on the 16th day of October, 1903, the Hardwood Export Company with the consent of the Lumber Company executed the notes sued on and secured the payment thereof by a pledge of the ninety first mortgage five per cent gold bonds involved in this proceeding, being a part of an issue of one hundred and fifty such bonds dated March 17, 1902, and secured by the mortgage described and admitted in the pleadings. Portions of the record in the foreclosure were also introduced from which it appears that a reference was ordered by the court to ascertain who were the holders of the bonds secured by the mortgage, upon which it was reported that' ninety of the bonds had been presented by the plaintiff, thirty-seven by Charles E. Fritsche, fifteen by the Jefferson Bank of St. Louis, Missouri, and five by the Southern Commercial Savings Bank of St. Louis, Missouri, the bonds so presented being 147 of the 150 constituting the entire issue. The register found that each of the parties above named was the “true and lawful owner” of the bonds so presented by them respectively. The testimony of J. A. Lewis, stating that Fritsche, trustee for F. H. Smith Lumber Company, was the owner of the thirty-seven bonds, was returned with the report. The complainants in the foreclosure proceeding were the Northern Trust Company and Arthur Hartley, the trustees in the mortgage, while the defendants were the Hardwood Export Company, John Dibert, the Cen
“This contract and agreement, made and entered into on this 5th day of December, A. D. 1904, by and between Mr. John Deibert, trustee, by his duly authorized attorney in fact, Sam Henderson, Jr., and Mr. John A. Lewis, trustee.
“Witnesseth: That said parties have entered into, with each other, the following agreements, to-wit:
“First: That John Deibert shall bid, at the sale under a decree of foreclosure in the case of Northern Trust Company et al. v. Hardwood Export Company et ah, for the property to be sold by the register under said decree of foreclosure, at St. Stephens, Washington county, Alabama, such sum as may be necessary to buy said property, not to exceed the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars.
“Second: If said John Deibert shall buy said property, it shall be held and owned by him for the use and benefit of the parties hereto in the proportions of ninety one hundred-twenty-sevenths (90-127) for said John Deibert, trustee, and thirty-seven one hundred-twenty-sevenths (37-127) for John A. Lewis, trustee.
“Third: It is understood that said John Deibert shall have the right to bid more for said property*637 than the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars, hut, in the event that he shall purchase said property for a price to exceed the sum of seventy-five thousand dolías, then it shafi be for his own- account and not for the joint account of the parties hereto as above provided.
“Fourth: It is agreed that John Deibert, as trustee, owns ninety (90) bonds of the Hardwood Export Company, secured by its deed of trust, dated March 17, 1902, and foreclosed by the judgment of the chancery court of Washington county, Alabama, by its decree entered on the 19th day of November, A. D. 1904, in the case of Northern Trust Company et al. v. Hardwood Export Company et al.
“Fifth: It is agreed that Charles E. Fritsche, as surviving trustee of the F. H. Smith Lumber Company, is. the owner of thirty-seven (37) bonds of the Hardwood Export Company, secured by its deed of trust, dated the 17th day of March, A. D., 1902, and foreclosed by the chancery court of Washington county, Alabama, by its decree entered in the case of Northern Trust Company et al. v. Hardwood Export Company et al., on the 19th day of November, A. D. 1904.
‘ ‘ Sixth: It is hereby agreed that neither ■ of the parties hereto shall make any objection to any claim of ownership of the bonds of the Hardwood Export Company hereby agreed to be owned by them respectively, which may be filed with the register of chancery in pursuance to the decree of the chancery court of Washington county, Alabama, entered on the 19th day of November, A. D. 1904, in the case of Northern Trust Co. et al. v. Hardwood Export Company et al.”
■ It was in pursuance of this contract that plaintiff bid $25,000 at the foreclosure sale and the interest of the parties in the property purchased was fixed according to its terms.
Mr. Wallace B. Rogers was president of the Interstate Trust & Banking- Company from the time of
“Q. Now, please state what led you to take the steps which you did, to have this pledge of those .bonds foreclosed? A. Simply to clean the matter up; the party who made it was not in good standing financially and it was simply — we simply referred the matter to our attorney to take possession of the collateral.
*639 “Q. What do you mean by taking possession? A. Buying them in so we could get it putright as property rather than hold it as collateral of a corporation that was no longer good. And the matter was turned over to Mr. Spencer, the attorney of the bank, to take possession of the property in legal form.”
Mr. Rogers also said: “Q. You didn’t tell him what to pay for the bonds? A. No, sir, I told him to take possession for the bank, and that was all there was to it; it was up to him to handle the legal part; I don’t know anything about the legal phase of it.”
Mr. Spencer, the lawyer of the bank, to whom Mr. Rogers referred, testified: “As these were not listed securities, I thought it advisable, as it might be necessary for the bank to protect itself by buying these securities in, to have them sold on the New Orleans Stock Exchange. I employed Mr. Horatio Lange, who was a broker on the New Orleans Stock Exchange, to offer these bonds for sale, and in order to protect the bank in case there were no bids for them, I instructed him to procure some other broker who should, in the event that no offer be made for the bonds, to offer some fixed sum, I do not remember the exact figures that I told him, if no bid was receiyed to bid them in at. My recollection of the instructions to Mr. Lange is, that he should offer these bonds at a price which we had determined would be sufficient to pay the debt with interest, that if he should get no bids for his bonds then, that he was to accept the bid which we had agreed upon that was to be made by the other broker; in other words he was to offer them for the amount of the debt if he could get it, if not, then he was to sell them at the .price fixed upon.” Mr. Spencer remembered “the price fixed upon” as being twenty or thirty dollars per bond. It is not disputed that it was twenty dollars, and $1800, their proceeds at that price, is the amount credited on the notes.
Mr. Lange, the broker who was instructed by Mr.
Sometime in the latter part of the winter of 1904 a syndicate was organized consisting of the plaintiff, Mr. W. B. Rogers, John S. Rainey and Fenner, Henderson & Fenner, a firm of lawyers, who purchased the bank’s interest in the notes and bonds at a price equal to the amount of the notes with interest and expenses incurred in the tranaction less the $1800 credited on account of the stock exchange sale. Mr. Dibert had at the time no interest in the bank except as a small stockholder. Mr. Rainey had no interest in or connection with it whatever'. Mr. Rogers as already stated was its president and Mr. Henderson, one of the law firm, was a director. Each of these parties, considering the law firm as a single member, held a one-fourth interest in the syndicate, and each put up his share of the money to the credit of Mr. Dibert, who paid the bank with his check on this fund.
Mr. John A. Lewis was cashier of the National Bank of Commerce of St. Louis, which held thirty-seven of the bonds of the Hardwood Export Company, when the syndicate, through Mr. Dibert, entered into the agreement with them hereinbefore set out. Dur
Mr. Dibert testified as to his own connection with the syndicate: “I took an interest in buying the bonds simply from the representations that I had of the timber that backed these bonds. I thought they were worth buying. ’ ’
The judgment of the trial court was for $42,030. 71, which practically represents, and was intended to represent, the amount of the notes and interest less the credit arising from the foreclosure sale, to be allowed and paid as other unsecured claims out of the assigned estate of the F. H. Smith Lumber Company. The counterclaim was dismissed.
It is admitted that selling was not the object of the proceeding. The president of the bank who directed the transaction tells us that he simply referred the matter to its attorney “to take possession of the collateral;” and he explains that by taking possession of the collateral he means to get it outright as property rather than hold it as collateral of a corporation that was no longer good. This frank and full statement has two aspects. (1) A dishonest one implying that this trustee whose duty it was in his fiduciary capacity to so use the collateral as to get the very most out of it for the benefit of the pledgor as well as his bank, deliberately violated that trust and attempted to convert the trust fund to his own use or the use of his bank as the case may be without compensation or benefit to the ultimate owner; or (2) an honest one .implying that mindful of his obligation he believed that he could pay more of the debt of his beneficiary and perhaps save something to it in addition, by the innocent and harmless fiction that the bank and whomsoever it might find necessary to constitute its successor or successors in the .trust was the absolute owner of the security and all that it represented, and might deal with it, as the conditions should develop, without embarrassment by those legal forms and inquiries and details which were henceforth to control the affairs of the insolvent and helpless debtor. We prefer, as perhaps it is our duty to do, even in case of the most sacred trust, the innocent aspect. We cannot, therefore, treat the transactions as a .mere inadvertence by which an intended sale for the benefit of the security failed of accomplishment, leaving the parties in the same condition that it found them, but must consider it as the deliberate act of the bank, without a sale, to place itself in a position from which it could handle the bonds to its own g’reater satisfaction.
The rule is that in dealing with the interest of his debtor in such securities the creditor is charged with the duties and subjected to the liabilities of agents in the transaction of the business of their principals. If their duties are defined by express contract, the terms of the contract answer all inquiry as to the nature and extent of the trust; but limitations in the contract upon the liability which the law itself would imply must be plainly expressed; and fraud cannot be authorized by contract, because the State will not lend its aid to the enforcement of any agreement in derogation of public morals or of the general policy of its laws. There is another rule of which we must not lose sight. It is stated by the respondent in his argument as follows: “The acts of the trustee must, however, be judged in each case by the facts and circumstances of that case.” This is, perhaps, a better form to express the idea that before a rule of law can be applied there must be something to which to apply it; and that something constitutes the foundation of all judicial investigation. Having always in mind then the circumstances of this transaction, we are led to the consideration of the equities between the parties to this case.
When Mr. Rogers, the president of the bank, “took possession of the collateral” by putting it through the form of a sale on the'floor of the New Orleans Stock Exchange for the avowed purpose of giving the bank a more perfect control, he was the trustee and agent for the pledgor. In that capacity he assumed a new standpoint of his own choosing from which to carry out the provisions of the trust. The conditions were further modified by the total insolvency of both the makers of the notes. Mr. Smith, the president of both corporations, indicates the character of the disaster in his statement that his entire personal estate, including the earnings of a lifetime,
“If in a case where the plaintiff is unable to redeem, he can have no standing in a court of equity, then, in such case, the trustee may boldly violate his duty, perpetrate a fraud and when called to account take cover under the maxim, 'He who seeks equity must do equity.’ That maxim was never intended to furnish protection to wrong and fraud. The petition in this case shows that the property is encumbered with a second deed of trust, an attachment, and judgments aggregating an amount greatly beyond its value and that the plaintiffs are insolvent and therefore unable to redeem. But those facts do not absolve the trustee from his duty, nor destroy the plaintiff’s rights to have the property sold to the.best advantage according to the terms of the deed of trust, to the end*650 that it will go as far as may be towards the payment of their debts. That is a right they have for their own interest and a duty they owe to their creditors.”
Another circumstance to be considered is the nature of the property involved in the mortgage. Of the twenty-eight thousand acres of timber, all except about five thousand acres in which the mortgagor owned the fee, consisted of timber growing upon lands of others with the right to remove it at various times extending from 1908 to 1915, which was necessarily becoming less valuable on. account of these limitations. The mill properties and their equipment were peculiarly subject to deterioration in that climate when not in use. It is also a matter of common knowledge that the care and preservation of the timber from trespass and theft is a matter of expense, and through it all the item of interest is continually accumulating, so that the situation calls for prompt as well as skillful handling.
In the meantime whatever thought there may have been in the mind of Mr. Rogers and his associates in the bank at the time of the stock exchange sale of using the advantage they acquired by that transaction for the benefit of the security for the payment of the notes, seems to have been swallowed up by the speculative spirit. A syndicate was formed, the personnel of which is of interest, to purchase the collateral, together with the notes in this suit, and to use the bonds .in the acquisition of the mortgaged property. The sale of the collateral at the Stock Exchange took place January 21, 1904; on February 23, 1904, the syndicate paid the amount of the notes and interest to the bank, which indorsed them without recourse and assigned the bonds to the plaintiff Dibert as trustee for its members. At this time and at all times thereafter, up to the final argument in this case, the syndicate, represented by Dibert, has claimed that the absolute title tp the bonds, discharged of any interest of the pledgor,
The assignment of the notes and bonds to the syndicate placed it squarely in the shoes of the bank with respect to the entire transaction. It not only became the owner of the debt, but the trustee and agent of the pledgor with respect to the collaterals. What
For the purpose of acquiring an available title to the lands which were the real subject of the pledge, it was necessary that the mortgage be foreclosed and its
The bank had neglected to provide in its usual form of collateral note any way by which it was relieved from the responsibility imposed by law with reference to this proceeding. There was no authority given it by the contract to purchase at a foreclosure sale. Dibert as trustee had taken its place and assumed the performance of all its duties and liabilities which will have to be judged by the standards of the unwritten law in force in this State, for no other rule of the loci contractus has been pleaded or proven. It is suggested in the respondent’s brief that the ordinary rules which apply between pledgor and pledgee are not applicable in this case because the collateral in question here is not the note of a third party, but the obligation of the debtor itself; so that the same
In converting the property into money he was the agent of the owners, and precluded from speculating for his own profit and that of his associates. He could not at will cast off the burden of his trust and place it upon the shoulders of his insolvent beneficiary whose hands he had tied by creating a situation in which he could claim with all the color of truth that the beneficiary had no interest in the matter which its friends could serve it by protecting. He must stand to the duty he had voluntarily assumed in furtherance of his own interest, by treating the interest of his pledgor as a prudent man would treat his own, so as to make it bring the best price obtainable. He held the measure of his duty in his hand at the time. As a presumably prudent man he was dealing with his own interest in the same transaction. Their interest in making the property bring enough to pay the debt and costs and expenses coincided with his own, yet to protect himself he was willing to' pay seventy-five thousand dollars, while he now contends that one-third that amount was ample for the protection of his principal. We do not see anything in the nature of this transaction to relieve him from his duty as agent to account for its profits to his principal. We are warranted in taking, and equity requires that we should take, the amount which the plaintiff had agreed tg bid if necessary,, as the fair value of the property at the time he acquired it at that sale. If he desired to and
It will be seen from the foregoing statement that the plaintiff, during the sixteen months which intervened between the foreclosure sale and the time he put it out of his power to recover the property by transferring it to the new corporation, had steadily held-it at a price which would extinguish the entire debt for which it had been pledged. He used the position in which he had been intrenched by his fiduciary relation as holder of the collaterals, as an instrument of pressure' upon the insolvent debtor to pay the entire debt with its costs and expenses which he knew it could not do, or to forego any further participation in their proceeds. This, we have already said, he cannot do.
The plaintiff has earnestly directed our attention
The issue of stock to the owners made no change in their relative interests, and as a declaration of value was not of such character that justice would be promoted by compelling plaintiff to respond in money when he received no money or other consideration independent of the property itself.
For the reasons given the judgment of the St. Louis Circuit Court is in all things reversed and the cause remanded to that court with directions to dis
PER CURIAM. — The foregoing opinion of Brown, 0., is adopted as the opinion of the court.