93 N.Y.S. 799 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The record in this case is quite voluminous, and I will not attempt .to do more than state the general nature of the action and the conclusion at which we have arrived.
Ho action, however, had then been commenced to foreclose this mortgage, and the bonds issued under it had apparently been acquired by the trustees of a subsequent mortgage, and were held by the trustees as security for the bonds issued under that subsequent mortgage.
This being the situation, an agreement for the reorganization of the Houston Company Ho. 1 was submitted to the bondholders by the Central Trust Company, of which the defendant Olcott was president, and who became a trustee for the bondholders under that agreement. Thereafter a large percentage of the bonds secured by the various mortgages of the Houston Company Ho.- 1 was deposited with the trustee. This agreement for the reorganization of the road contemplated -a foreclosure of the various mortgages, the purchase of the mortgaged premises at a sale under a decree of foreclosure by the purchasing trustee, the Central Trust Company, and the organization of a new company to which the property was to be transferred, the issue by the new company of bonds in place of the bonds secured by the various mortgages which had been given by the Houston Company Ho. 1, and the reorganization agreement provided that the capital stock of the new company was.to be of the par value of $10,000,000, and that the holders of the stock of the Houston Company Ho. 1 were to have the right to a proportionate amount of that stock by contributing a proportionate amount of the floating debt o,f the old company and the expenses of foreclosure and reorganization. In the event that the stockholders refused to provide their fro rata share, the said stock was to be transferred to the Southern Pacific Company, or its appointee, upon that company providing the amount necessary for the cash payments to be made for interest and bonds to the bondholders of the first mortgage bonds and coupons, and for the necessary charges, liabilities and expenses incurred by the trust company in carrying out the provisions of this agreement, the Southern Pacific Company to guarantee the payment of principal and interest
There is no attack made in this action upon the decree of the
It is quite clear that to this cause of action the decree of the United States Circuit Court under which the property was sold was not a bar. The complaint recognizes the full force and effect of that decree, and that by it Olcott acquired a good title to all the property purchased; but what is claimed is, that he acquired that title charged with a trust in favor of the stockholders of Company Ho. 1 upon the principle that when a trustee purchases property of his cestui que trust the benefit of the purchase inures to the beneficiary, and the legal title, while held by the trustee, is subject to the right of the beneficiary to compel the trustee to account for it or its value. Courts of equity have always prevented a trustee from- obtaining a benefit ■ by dealing in the property of a beneficiary, and charged property that has been purchased by a trustee with a trust in favor of the beneficiary, no matter in what form or under what circumstances the trustee acquired title to the trust property. In this case, the plaintiffs’ claim is based upon allegations that a majority of the stockholders occupying a relation
It appears that under one of these mortgages of the Houston Company Ho. 1, there existed a right in the mortgagees to sell the property upon default in the payment of interest upon the bonds secured by .that mortgage. Assuming that this decree could not have been obtained in the action to foreclose the first and general mortgages, when the trustees in the mortgage which contained the power of sale on default in the payment of interest filed their cross-bill to foreclose and the company was proved and conceded to be totally insolvent, the trustees of that mortgage had a right to have a decree directing a sale of the mortgaged premises, and it is quite apparent that no defense that the company could have interposed to this cross-bill could have been successful, and under the admission in the pleadings and. upon the undisputed facts the bondholders were entitled to have the property sold. It is clear that this decree was obtained without the consent of the• Houston Company Ho. 1. It apparently was a decree by default, but it does not appear that the Houston Company had any defense.' This being the case, the sale was ordered and the property Was purchased by Olcott and Downs. How, upon no • principle can Olcott and Downs be held to be trustees for Company Ho. 1 or its stockholders. They represented the creditors of the corporation; and the fact that the South-, • ern Pacific Company was a party to the reorganization agreement does not make Olcott representing the creditors a trustee for the Houston Company Ho. 1,. or its stockholders. The Southern Pacific Company was a large creditor of the corporation, and as such became a party to this reorganization scheme. The fact that this creditor was also a stockholder of the company, and controlled a majority of the stock, is no reason why it should not protect itself as a creditor of the insolvent corporation ; and all. of its acts, so far as is disclosed by this record, were entirely justified by its relation as creditor of the corporation. Assuming that Olcott was charged with the knowledge of the fact that the Southern Pacific Company
I have thus indicated the views that I take upon the legal questions presented upon this appeal, and, if I am correct, it follows that the plaintiffs had no cause of action, and for that reason the judgment should be affirmed, with, costs.
O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ,, concurred; Yan Bbunt, P. J., , and Hatch, J., concurred in result.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.