138 Mass. 122 | Mass. | 1884
The plaintiff contends, in the first place, that, though a lease is in terms authorized by St: 1880, c. 205, the execution of the proposed lease should be restrained, on the general ground that the virtual union of the two railroad companies in the manner contemplated is inconsistent with the mortgage, and with the St. of 1876, c. 236, by which the mortgage was authorized. The argument is, in substance, that under the mortgage and statute the net earnings of the Eastern Railroad Company
It is important, also, to consider the purposes for which the act was passed. The company being insolvent, the general object was to devise a scheme by which the creditors should be primarily secured, without cutting off the stockholders from the ultimate enjoyment of whatever value there might be in the property of the company, after satisfying the creditors; a scheme which would be accepted by both of these classes of persons interested in the property. To this end it was provided that the creditors should have the right to elect two thirds of the directors who were to manage the property and apply the net earnings to a sinking-fund for the extinguishment of the debt, until the whole debt should be reduced to an amount not exceeding ten millions of dollars, after which time the stockholders should be reinstated in their right to elect the whole board of directors, and, as a probable consequence, to receive dividends if the earnings should be sufficient, after paying the specified sum of $100,000 a year into the sinking-fund. The general and predominant purpose of the act was, not 'to define the particular manner in which a revenue should be raised from the operation of the road, but to define clearly the rights of creditors and stockholders as between themselves; and to require that, as between these two classes, all the available revenue of the road should be applied in the first place for the benefit of the creditors, by direct payment of interest, by improving the value of their security, and by setting apart a sinking-fund for the extinguishment of their debts, until the same
The language of a statute ought not to be so construed as to give it a meaning foreign to the intention of the Legislature, unless such construction is plainly required by the words used. Such is not the case here. The meaning of “net earnings ” is not limited to earnings in any one particular mode, but is broad enough to include the revenue to be derived from the property in any manner. The word “ earnings ” is not only properly applicable to the reward or compensation of personal services, or to the revenue derived from personal services in conjunction with the use of property, but it is also used in a commercial sense, to describe the income or revenue from property itself. Money is
Perhaps this view of the case will not be made more plain by illustrations; but if a mortgage were to be given by an individual,
Some confirmation of this view is to be derived from the recent English case of Doherty v. Allman, 3 App. Cas. 709, where two leases were granted of land with buildings on them for 999 and 988 years respectively, with covenants by the lessee to “preserve, uphold, support, maintain, and keep the demised premises, and all improvements made and to be made thereon, in good and sufficient order, repair, and condition; and at the end or sooner determination of the said demise, so to leave and yield up the same to ” the lessor, his heirs, etc. The premises had been used as corn stores for some years, and afterwards as artillery barracks, and dwellings for married soldiers. They had fallen into disrepair; it became necessary to repair them; the lessee thought it would be beneficial to convert the store buildings into dwelling-houses, which would much increase their value, and was proceeding to convert them accordingly, when the lessor filed a bill to restrain him; but it was held that an injunction was properly refused, and that, under all the circumstances of the case,, such a change was not a violation of the covenants of the lease.
We are thus brought to the consideration of the further question, whether there is anything in the details of the provisions
But the chief reliance of the plaintiff, in this part of the case, is put upon three propositions; namely, that the terms of the lease are inconsistent with the obligations imposed upon the corporation by the act and mortgage, because, — 1. The lease provides for the payment, out of net earnings, of interest on improvement bonds representing expenditures for construction on both roads, and of a sinking-fund to absorb these improvement bonds, which is also to be paid in annual instalments out of the net earnings of the lessee from the combined system; or, in other words, the net earnings which are pledged to the mortgage sinking-fund are to be partly applied to a new sinking-fund to protect junior securities. 2. The property which the Eastern Railroad Company had the power to sell, and the proceeds of which, if sold, were to go to the sinking-fund, passes wholly out of the control
The first two of these objections relate to the method of ascertaining the sum to be paid by the lessee for the use of the leased property. But, if the views heretofore expressed are correct, it is not easy to see how objections to the details of the provisions of the lease in this respect can be successfully urged, unless they go so far as to impugn the good faith of the transaction, or to show that on the whole the lease is an unfavorable one to the creditors. It might have been provided that a gross sum should be absolutely payable annually, without regard to the result of the operation of the road. If such a sum had been fixed, which would be sufficient to pay the interest, with something more for the sinking-fund, and if the lessee had also covenanted to keep the property in good condition, with necessary repairs and renewals, we do not see how the objection could be supported, that the method and scheme of the lease would be inconsistent with the obligations imposed upon the Eastern Railroad Company by the act and mortgage. The receipts under such a lease would still be net earnings, to be applied according to the requirements of the act. In other words, net earnings may be ascertained by contract, as well as by the actual and direct operation of the road by the company itself. Looking, however, at each of the two special objections to the mode of ascertaining the sum to be paid by the lessee by itself, in the light of the averments of the bill and the grounds upon which it rests, we do not see any such departure from the plan of expenditure contemplated by the mortgage as to call for the issue of an injunction against the execution of the lease.
In the first place, § 13 of the statute defines the operating expenses to include “ necessary expenditures for construction, insurance, taxes, renewals and repairs needful to maintain its road and equipment in good condition,” as well as certain
The next specific objection, namely, that the property which the Eastern Railroad Company had power to sell will under the'
The final objection, founded on the provision for the payment of dividends upon preferred stock, in case such should be issued, rests upon a different ground, and raises the question whether this provision looks to a substantial misapplication of the net earnings, when ascertained, or other substantial injury to the creditors. Article 5 of the lease provides that “the lessee shall pay upon the preferred stock of the lessor, when issued under c. 127 of the acts of the Legislature of Massachusetts, for the year 1882, semiannually, at the same times as the interest on the debt - extinguished by said preferred stock would have been payable, in lieu of said interest and as a fixed charge entitled to the like priority under this lease, an amount by way of dividend equal to the semiannual interest upon the debt so extinguished.”
It is certainly open to question whether, by the true construction of this, provision, the payment of the sum thus stipulated for is to be made directly to the preferred stockholders, or to the lessor, to be by the lessor disposed of according to law. But we think that in either view this provision of the lease ought not to be allowed to stand.
If the payment is to be made directly to the preferred stockholders, it is to go pari passu with the payment of the interest on the debt, and if there is not enough to pay both in full, both must abate in like proportion. To the lessee it is not very material to whom the money is to be paid, so long as the amount to be paid remains the same. No more is to be paid by way of dividend than would be required for the interest if no certificates of indebtedness were exchanged for preferred stock. But creditors have a different interest, and certain provisions in the St. of 1876, already referred to, looking to the ultimate security of the holders of the certificates of indebtedness must be more
By the St. of 1882, o. 177, the Eastern Railroad Company is authorized to increase its capital stock, by issuing preferred stock to an amount of not more than $5,000,000; and is required to issue such preferred stock, in exchange for certificates of indebtedness, to any amount not exceeding that sum, upon the tender thereof. Such certificates when received are to be cancelled. The holders of such preferred stock are to receive dividends, out of the net earnings, not exceeding six dollars per share, to be paid in semiannual instalments, in such sums as the directors may determine. But nothing contained in this act is to prevent the full operation of all the provisions of the St. of 1876, a. 236, or defeat or in any wise affect any of the terms or conditions of the certificates of indebtedness and mortgage, made under and in pursuance of said chapter, or to authorize any payments from the earnings of said corporation, except subject to all claims and charges upon said earnings created by said chapter, and by said certificates and mortgage. It was thus intended to preserve all rights of creditors, according to the true construction of the St. of 1876. If preferred stock should be issued in exchange for certificates of indebtedness, the holders of such preferred stock would hold it merely as stockholders, and in subordination to the claims of the residue of the holders
If, on the other hand, the payment of the sum stipulated for in article 5 of the lease is to be made to the lessor’, it may be and probably is true that it would be within the jurisdiction of a court of equity to compel the lessor to dispose of the money according to law, upon proper proceedings hereafter to be instituted for that purpose, and thus to prevent any misappropriation
In either view of article 5 of the lease, and because of that article only, the entry must be Demurrer overruled.