117 Ky. 325 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion op the court by
Reversing.
The Georgetown Water Company was incorporated June 21, 1889. Tbe incorporators were R. A. Mitchell, John Nichols, and E. H. Patterson. The stock of the company was fixed at $100,000, and was issued to the incorporators; they
•They ran the electric plant in the summer, and the gas plant in the winter; and it would seem from the evidence that the profit from the operation of the plants, including the waterworks, was small. On February 2, 1891, the Central Thomson-Houston Company filed an ordinary action in the Montgomery common pleas court against the Georgetown Water Company to recover the balance of its debt. The case was tried at the September term, 1891, of the court, and the plaintiff recovered judgment for the amount sued for. On November 6, 1891 the Georgetown Water Company borrowed from the Fidelity Trust & Safety Vault Company $10,000, executing therefor its note, due in six months with Nichols, Mitchell, and Patterson as sureties and also securing the note by pledging with the company fifty-four of the mortgage bonds referred to. This $10,000 was used to pay the debt to the Pineville bank, above referred to. They had still in their hands six of th'e seventy mortgage bonds having delivered ten to the Central Thomson-Houston Company, and fifty four to the Fidelity Trust & Safety Vault Company. Of these six bonds-, Mitchell took two, and Nichols four. Nichols turned over the four he had to John L. Cassell, who was his security, and to whom he assigned all his interest in the company. On March 8, 1892, the Central Thomson-Houston Company, having had execution issued on its judgment, and returned “No- property found,” filed an equity action in the Montgomery common pleas court, seeking to subject the property of the water company to fts
On the original hearing of the equity case the judgment of sale and the confirmation of the sale were both reversed ; but on petition for rehearing, the court’s attention being called to the condition of the. pleadings, the opinion was modified, and it was held that the sale must stand, except as to the trust company, and that, as to it, it should be permitted 'to stand unless the trust company showed that its security had been endangered. The court said: “Evidently the plant brought what it was worth. The purchasers are not .complaining, the water company can not do so, and, in our opinion, the trust company has not shown that its interests are at all prejudiced by the order confirming the
No steps appear to have been taken by the trust company in the circuit court to- show that its security was endangered, but at the next term of this court a motion- was made that the court withdraw the modified opinion. ■ The motion was overruled. Georgetown Water Co. v. Central Thomson-Houston Co., 18 R., 711, 38 S. W., 137. A year or more ■after this, on January 19, 1898, the Fidelity Trust & Safety Yault Company, as trustee for the bondholders, instituted an equity action in the Scott circuit court, making all parties in interest defendants; and seeking the foreclosure of the mortgage. Montgomery and his associates, who had organized themselves into the Georgetown Water Supply Company, were in possession of the property, and had been since they were put in possession of it under their purchase. The town of Georgetown had nearly doubled in size since
After this suit was brought, the court allowed them to remove all. the machinery from the lot where it stood' to the ■lot of the street railway company, upon their giving bond that they would return it to the original lot when required by the court. After they removed the machinery to the premises of the street railway company, they added other machinery, costing them $4,300.- When the court required ■the machinery which had been removed to be returned to the lot of the Georgetown Water Company, he allowed them to retain the additions which they had purchased and had on the lot of the street railway company, amounting to $4,300, but refused to allow them to remove the arc light system or the other additions which they had made to the plant before its removal from the original lot, and ordered the whole property sold; giving them no compensation for their betterments, which had cost them something over $12,000. He also held that they were responsible to the bondholders for
After the note for $10,000 to the Fidelity Trust & Safety Vault Company fell due, Mitchell, as surety, was forced to ■pay it. The notes and bonds pledged to secure it were then turned over to him. He turned over the bonds to> E. S. Jameson, his brother-in-law, who was his surety, who held them for a while, and finally sent them to Mitchell, who pledged them to various parties to secure loans made in the main to his mother, Ann E. Mitchell. R. A. Mitchell sent one of the bonds to E. H. Patterson, in Philadelphia, to exhibit it to some persons there to whom they were trying to make a sale of the property. Patterson kept this bond, and hypothecated it to D. B. Logan to secure a debt of his own. The money which Patterson put into the concern belonged to his wife, and he transferred to her his interest in the corporation. The court, on final hearing, held that the mortgage included property acquired after it was executed, and ■not owned by the Georgetown Water Company when the •mo|tgage was given; that H. P. Montgomery and his associates, having purchased subject to the mortgage, simplv stood in the shoes of the Georgetown Water Company, and could not question the lien of the mortgaged on the after-acquired property; that $27,000 had been put into the plant, made up of $12,000 contributed by Nichols, Patterson and Mitchell, $10,000 borrowed from the trust company, and $5,000 of the account of the Central Thomson-Houston Company for the machinery furnished, which had been paid in the ten bonds, of $500 each, accepted by that company at par; that Nichols transferred to Cassell and that Pat
Their sale standing, and they being required to pay the purchase money, they held the property as purchasers, and are not liable to the Georgetown Water Company, or the bondholders, or the trustee for them, for the rents on the prope rty. The mortgagee is only entitled to the rents from the time that he has a receiver appointed to save them for him. When the motion was made for a receiver, and was ■overruled, the remedy of the mortgagee was to appeal. He could not acquiesce in the decision of the court refusing to ■appoint a receiver, and then hold the defendant accountable for the rents. If the Georgetown Water Company had remained in possession, it would have been entitled to the rents up to the confirmation of the sale; and Montgomery and his associates, succeeding to all the rights of the water company, are entitled to the rents of the property while in their possession. This is what they obtained by their purchase. The court had no authority to order them to operate the plant as receiver without compensation. The court might have appointed a receiver for the property if he had seen fit to do so, but he could not require thei defendant
The Georgetown Water Company was incorporated by articles filed in the county court under the General Statutes. It had no power by law to issue coupon bonds which should pass by delivery. The paper issued by it was not placed on the footing of a bill of exchange, as provided by the statute. Although the bonds had coupons attached to them, and were payable to bearer, they were, in legal effect, only promissory notes, and each assignee took them subject to prior equitites. Richie v. Cralle, 108 Ky., 483, 20 R., 160, 56 S. W., 963; Fidelity Trust & Safety Vault Co. v Carr (23 R., 2409) 66 S. W., 990, and cases cited. None of the bondholders, therefore, are protected by the fact that they took the bonds in the due course of business, and without notice. We find no evidence in the record that the corporation ever disposed of the four bonds which Nichols took possession of and delivered to Cassell, or the two which Mitchell took possession of and disposed of as his own.
These bonds were the property of the corporation, and, not having been disposed of by it, remain its- property, and can not be enforced in this action as a lien on its plant. The ten bonds delivered to the Thomson-Houston Company, and the fifty-four bonds delivered to the trust company as collateral to the note of $10,000, are the only bonds which constitute a lien on the property. After the prior claims as adjudged by the circuit court are paid, ten-sixlty-fourths of the fund remaining should be applied to pay the ten bonds sold to the Central Thomson-Houston Company, and fifty-four-sixty-fourths of it to pay the fifty-four bonds pledged to the trust company to secure ^ its note. The trust company had the right to look to the entire proceeds of these bonds
When all the bonds are thus paid off, so far as they are a valid lien on the property, the remainder of the fund, if nothing else appeared, would be the property of the water •company; and the question arises whether this fund thus remaining should all be adjudged to the water company, or ■whether Montgomery and' his associates should be adjudged
In Clore v. Lambert, 78 Ky., 224, a steam engine and planing mill, attached to a building by bolts and screws by the vendee, were allowed to be removed after a suit was brought to enforce the vendor’s lien. Under the rule thus declared, the/ arc light system and other machinery bought by Montgomery and his, associates, which might -be removed from the building without injury to it, might, as between vendor and vendee, have been detached and taken away. But it is insisted that the mortgage in this case provides that it should cover after-acquired property placed on the land by the water company, and that, as Montgomery and his associates bought subject to', the mortgage, they stand in the shoes of the water company, and can not be heard to say that after-acquired property which they bought and placed on the land is not covered by the mortgage. ¡Where negotiable bonds have been issued, secured by a mortgage of a railway company on property then on hand or thereafter
We therefore conclude that, out of the surplus left after the payment of the bonds 'which would .otherwise be adjudged to the water company, compensation should be made to Montgomery and his associates to the extent that the price which the property brought at the sale was enhanced by the betterments placed thereon by Montgomery and his as sociates, which were removable by them under the rule laid down in Clore v. Lambert. This will include not only the machinery in the power house, but the additional water mains put in by them and the additional electric lines put up by them, for these could be disconnected from the old mains and lines without any impairment of their value.
Judgment reversed, cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.