118 F. 543 | 4th Cir. | 1902
The Roanoke Street Railway Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Virginia, had the following capitalization: Common stock, $300,000; preferred stock, $150,000; and first mortgage 6 per cent, bonds, $350,000. Of the first mortgage bonds, $192,300 had been sold and issued by the company, and the residue, $157,700, had been issued as collateral security for certain debts of the railway company, as well as for the debts of another corporation, called the Roanoke Electric Light & Power Compan}’. The two corporations mentioned were closely allied with each other, and, when overtaken by financial disaster, were reorganized together; the properties of both being purchased by a reorganization committee, and conveyed to a new company. On May 1, 1897, the railway company made default in the payment of all of its interest coupons then maturing. A number of the bondholders and stockholders of the railway company, together with those interested in the power company, made an effort to reorganize the railway company without resorting to a foreclosure suit. A plan of reorganization, dated October xi, 1897, was formulated, and an effort was made to obtain the assent thereto of all the bondholders and stockholders of the two companies mentioned. By the terms of this plan, all of the bonds and stock of the subscribers thereto were to be deposited with the Mercantile Trust & Deposit Company of Baltimore, and a new corporation was then to be organized, in which the properties of the two companies were to be vested. The plan of reorganization* proposed the following capitalization for the new company: First mortgage 5 per cent, bonds, not exceeding $180,-000; second mortgage 4 per cent, income bonds, not exceeding $192,-000; and stock, $180,000. The bonds and stock were to have been issued in the following manner: The first mortgage bonds were to be sold, and the proceeds used only for the purpose of paying off the indebtedness secured by the pledge of the bonds that had been issued
The trustee named in the mortgage caused suit to be duly instituted to foreclose the same in the circuit court of the United States for the Western district of Virginia, and a decree was passed May 1, 1899, appointing commissioners, and directing them to sell the mortgaged property. The commissioners were directed to apply the proceeds of sale to the payment of the costs and certain preferred claims, then to pay the coupons past due (the mortgage having specially provided that, in case of sale thereunder, the coupons should be preferred to the principal of the bonds), and then to apply the residue of the proceeds of sale to the bonds ratably. As provided for by the decree, the sale was duly made, and the defendants, as such committee, purchased the property of the railway company for $150,000, and of the power company for $31,000; using in their settlement with the commissioners of sale the bonds deposited with the trust company, as well as the coupons deposited therewith, in-
The appellees duly answered the bill, denying the appellant’s right to demand the delivery of said bonds to him, and charging that he
The appellant claims a contractual right to the benefits of the reorganization agreement, and his suit is for the express purpose of obtaining specific performance of its provisions. It is clear that his bonds were deposited under that agreement, and the question before this court simply is, did the court below err in its construction of that contract ? That court clearly stated the controversy in this way:
“Tlie question involved is whether or not the complainant can be required by the defendants, as a condition of his obtaining from them $21,000 of income bonds of the new company, to produce and surrender certain defaulted coupons which had been detached from the old bonds before they were deposited, or be required to pay the money collected by the complainant for the coupons out of the proceeds of the foreclosure sale, or whether the complainant is entitled to keep the money, and to demand and receive the new bonds unconditionally.”
The bill of complaint is drawn upon the theory that the appellees, under the terms of the contract, have agreed to deliver to the appellant, unconditionally, the income bonds which are the subject of this controversy. The appellees insist that such delivery was only to be made after the appellant had performed the duties imposed upon him, the object of which was to equalize the condition of the bondholders participating in the benefits of the reorganization. All of the other bondholders have deposited all of the coupons relating to their bonds,
The bill in this case does not complain of the plan of reorganization; does not question the power of the committee, nor allege any dereliction of duty on its part, other than the withholding from appellant of the said income bonds; but it relies upon both the plan, and what the committee has done in executing it, and prays the aid of equity in enforcing the terms of that plan along the lines as it is construed by appellant. To grant the prayer of the bill would be to
This, in effect, disposes of all the assignments of error except those alleging that the court below erred in decreeing that the appellant should pay to appellees the sum of money which the circuit court for the Western district of Virginia had decreed should be paid to him. The circuit court for the Western district of Virginia, on the complaint of the Fidelity Insurance, Trust & Deposit Company, the trustee under the deed of trust securing the bonds, decreed a sale of the property under the terms of the mortgage, and, as incidental to the distribution of the proceeds of sale, determined what bonds and coupons were outstanding and entitled to participate therein. It did not at any time assume jurisdiction over the committee having charge of the reorganization of the companies, nor did it pass upon the equities of Ijhe parties to the agreement among themselves. The parties to the present litigation were not all before that court; the committee, as such, was not impleaded; nor were the questions now under consideration ever raised, submitted to, or decided by that court; and therefore the decree referred to is in no manner an estoppel between the parties to this suit. Evidently the appellant’s contention in this particular is founded upon an erroneous apprehension of what the true issues before that court were, as well as of the matters really disposed of by it. None of the questions relating to the rights of the parties to the reorganization agreement, as between themselves, as well as their mutual equities, were before that court, and could not, under the circumstances, have been within the scope of the foreclosure proceedings. The real questions now at issue were in fact raised after the circuit court for the Western district of Virginia had disposed of the case before it, and after the appellees, as the organization committee, had refused to comply with the request of. the appellant relating to the delivery of the income bonds-claimed by him.
We do not deem it necessary to consider other questions assigned as error and discussed by counsel, relating to the pleadings and bearing upon matters of practice, as the points suggested are without merit, and, under the circumstances and equities of this cause, entirely immaterial.
There is no error in the decree complained of, and the same is affirmed.