12 Neb. 567 | Neb. | 1882
■ J. C. Crawford, agent of the West Point Manufacturing Company, with full power and authority from said company in its behalf, applied to the West Point Butter and Cheese Association, at its principal office at Middletown, New York, for a loan of $35,000, to be evidenced by the interest bearing coupon bonds of the first named company. The declared object of such loan was to enable the said first named company to pay off its indebtedness, estimated at $30,000, but which it ivas believed could be bought in at from $15,000 to $25,000, and to give it a working capital for the purpose of operating its mills. After attending tw'o meetings of the Butter and Cheese Association, Mr. Crawford was met by the following counter proposition : “ If the West Point Manufacturing Company, or John D. Neligh, will donate toCjhe undersigned West Point Butter and Cheese Association a controlling interest in its stock, it — the West Point Butter and Cheese Association — in consideration thereof, agrees within ninety days from the date of the delivery of a majority of 'said stock, to negotiate a loan for said company of $35,000, bearing ten per cent. Principal payable in two to five years. Loan to be secured by a first mortgage bond on the real estate of said company, and to be negotiated at par. All real property remaining after paying off loan
This proposition Mr. Crawford received from the said West Point Butter and Cheese Association, and with it returned to West Point. A meeting of the boar'-1 oi directors of the said West Point Manufacturing Company was immediately called; the said counter proposition of the West Point Butter and Cheese Association laid before the said board of directors; and resolutions adopted in due form accepting the same, and ordering the officers of said company to make the necessary arrangements to carry the same into effect without delay. At the same meeting a resolution was also duly passed in the following words: “ Resolved, that the president and secretary of the West Point Manufacturing Company be and are hereby authorized and directed to issue 35,000 dollars of coupon bonds of said West Point Manufacturing Company, bearing ten per cent interest, payable five years from date thereof. That said company sell said bonds at their par value and apply the proceeds thereof toward the paying of the debts of said company, and the liens against its said property, and the repairing and operating its mills, etc. That the president and secretary are further authorized to execute- and deliver a trust deed to secure the payment of said bonds, on the real estate of said company.”
The above meeting was held on the 27th day of August, 1878. On the 2nd day of September, following, the president and secretary of the West Point Manufacturing Company executed and delivered the deed of trust of the said company to Benjamin D. Brown, trustee, who was'also the president of the West Point Butter and Cheese
It appears from the testimony, that between the last above date and the 21st of October following, the said Benjamin D. Brown was back and forth between West Point, Nebraska, and Middletown, New York, two or three times, remaining about an equal portion of his time at either place. While at West Point he was busy examining the mills, water power, and other property of the West Point Manufacturing company, and looking into its business and affairs. He never called on the president or secretary of the West Point Manufacturing Company for the certificate of stock in said company, or any other evidence of tlie ownership -by the West Point Butter and Cheese Association of a majority of the stock, or any stock of the West Point Manufacturing Company. But the certificate or certificates for said stock were made out to the said West Point Butter and Cheese Association, signed by the president and secretary, and verified by the seal of said West Point Manufacturing Company. There is evidence, which however is contradicted, that said certificates of stock were tendered to said Benjamin D. Browm for and on behalf of the said West Point Butter and Cheese Association by the secretary of the said West Point Manufacturing Company, some time between said 27th day of August and the 21st day of October. But there is no dispute that, on or before the last mentioned date, the said certificates of stock were
On the same day, the 21st or 22nd of October, B. D. Brown, for the first time, informed John D. Nelighor any one else, except J. C. Crawford — and he, at this time at least, must be looked upon rather as his legal adviser than as the agent or attorney of the West Point Manufacturing Company — of his intention not to go on and" complete the transaction according to the agreement. And it was at this time, if at all, that the agreement was novated or modified so as to take it out of the terms of the counter proposition of the West Point Butter and Cheese Association, as accepted and acted upon by the West Point Manufacturing Company, so as to allow the West Point Butter and Cheese Association, or B. D. Brown, its president, or any other of its officers or members, to go on for an indefinite length of time and buy up the claims and lien& against the West Point Manufacturing Company and its real estate, upon the terms and conditions that, if the said West Point Butter and Cheese Association, B. D. Brown, its president, or its other officers or members, or all together, could and would buy up all of said debts, judgments, and liens for an aggregate sum within the said sum of $35,000, then that all of said debts, judgments, and liens should be assigned to the said West Point Manufacturing Company; but if not, then that the said West Point Butter and Cheese Association B. D. Brown, its president, or any other officer or member, buying up- any of such debts, judgments, or liens, might hold them against the said West Point Manufacturing Company the same as any other lien holder might; and that in the mean time, the said contract for the loaning of the
The weight of evidence is to the effect that at this time such a modification of the terms of the contract was made, in so far as the same could be done by the said Neligh, Brown & Crawford, acting in their several individual capacities only. But we are of the opinion that the contract could not be so modified or changed by them .at that time and acting in their individual capacities, or under any delegated power which they, or any of them, are shown to have possessed, so as to affect the interests of the creditors and lien holders of the said West Point Manufacturing Company; and any combined attempt to affect their interests injuriously on the part of persons standing in the relation to them borne by the said Neligh, Brown & Crawford, the law, without regard to motives, would designate a confederation and conspiracy to defraud.
Long before the time of which we are now speaking, Benjamin L. Brown had accepted the trust as trustee under the deed of trust, and on the part of said West Point Butter and Cheese Association had accepted the said deed of trust and the said bonds of thirty-five thousand dollars, and had the said bonds and deed of trust either in the possession of the said West Point Butter and Cheese Association or that of the bank at Middletown, New York, It is claimed on the one part, that about this time it was discovered by the said Benjamin D. Brown that he had been deceived by the representations of the officers and agents of the West Point Manufacturing Company as to the amount of the debts and liens then outstanding against the said West Point Manufacturing Company and its property, and for that reason he rescinded the said contract. Without stopping to inquire whether he had good or sufficient cause for a rescission of. the said contract or not, it is very clear from the evidence that he did none of
Whatever acts were done and performed by Benjamin D. Brown, after the acceptance of the trust as expressed in and by the trust deed, in and about the buying of judgments, liens, or other evidences of indebtedness against said West Point Manufacturing Company, or any of its property, buying tax certificates, or paying taxes on any of its property, the purchasing in of any of its property at sheriff’s, marshal’s or commissioner’s sale, or otherwise, either by himself, his agents, attorneys, or any officer, agent, or member of the said West Point Butter and Cheese Association — must, so far as the rights and interests of the plaintiffs and cross petitioning defendants are concerned, be held to have been done in pursuance of the said trust, and for the benefit and protection of the said West Point Manufacturing Company, and its rights and property.
It is a well known principle of equity jurisprudence that that which ought to have been done by a person acting in a fiduciary or trust capacity, will, for the purposes of justice and equity,"be deemed to have been done. Therefore, as it was' the duty of the said B. D. Brown and the said West Point Butter and Cheese Association, its officers and members, to accept, negotiate, and pay for the said $35,000 of coupon bonds, they will, so far as
From the testimony of Mr. Brown, president of the West Point Butter and Cheese Association, it appears that it was never the intention of the said association, or the understanding between it and the West Point Manufacturing Company, that the coupon bonds issued by the latter company and delivered to the said Brown should in any event be sold to outside purchasers, but were to be held by him — as we understand the legal effect of his testimony — partly in his capacity as president of the one company, and partly as trustee of the other, until the deed of trust given to secure them should become the first lien bn the property of the West Point Manufacturing Company, when the several members of the West Point Butter and Cheese Association were to take them “ according to the ability of the members,” and that he, the said president, and trustees, had been ever since the receipt of said bonds and trust deed engaged in buying up the liens against the property of the manufacturing company with the funds of the Butter and Cheese Association, not for the purpose of making the said deed of trust the first lien upon the property described therein, and so perfect the arrangement as originally contemplated, but, as the witness naively puts it, “as an investment the same as any business man might.”
During this time, and as a part of the same general plan, the Butter and Cheese Association, or its president, by means of a lease, entered into the possession of the
The several findings and the decree of the district court are therefore reversed, the petition of the plaintiffs, together with the cross petition of the several cross pleading defendants, are restored and reinstated, and the cause remanded to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.
Judgment Accordingly.