177 F. 306 | E.D. Pa. | 1910
This is a bill in equity instituted by the Washington, Alexandria & Mt. Vernon Railway Company to compel the defendant to deliver up to it for cancellation $48,000 par value of one lot of its bonds out of an issue of $200,000, secured by a mortgage d%ted July 1, 1892, which was satisfied of record by the trustees thereof on or about September 16, 1895, which bonds had been paid off by the complainant and never thereafter reissued by it, and also $50,000 par value of another lot of $750,000 of its bonds, secured by a mortgage dated August 1, 1895. Of this latter amount, the $50,000 in question had never been issued by the complainant company. The mortgage securing these bonds was duly satisfied of
The bill, as amended, is an elaborate statement of the facts, nearly all of which are either established by the proofs or admitted by defendant. The latter states, in its brief, that “there is substantially no disputed questions of fact in the cause. The divergence of position and opinion arises from the inferences and conclusions of fact and law, to be drawn from such facts as the plaintiff has submitted, or which its witnesses have admitted.” This is one of the questions, the solution of which is difficult, because the individual who committed the fraud was the implicitly trusted agent of both the complainant and the defendant. He fraudulently used the property of the complainant without its knowledge, but which was in his possession, because of the trust and confidence it placed in him, as collateral, to cover up an embezzlement' of defendant’s funds committed by him in (he capacity of the latter’s trusted agent, and, in the transaction, which was a fraud upon both, he was the sole actor. Which must suffer the loss, under the circumstances, is the question to be determined. From the bill as amended, and the answer, together with the testimony and the statements and admissions in the briefs, the following facts are clearly established:
The Real Estate Trust Company is a corporation of the state of Pennsylvania, doing business as a trust company in Philadelphia. ■The Washington, Alexandria & Mt. Vernon Railway Company is a. Virginia corporation, organized for the purpose of conducting a railway to be constructed between Washington and Mt. Vernon, with lateral branches. A separate corporation was organized, known as the Mt. Vernon Construction Company, for the purpose of constructing the complainant’s railway. The stockholders and officers of both the railway and the construction company were practically the same, and the four controlling men in both were James S. Swartz, Frank K. Hippie, David C. Eeech, and G. E. Abbott. Hippie was, during all this time, president of .the trust company, with practically absolute control of the same both in its management and the leaning of its funds, and was, at the same time, a director of the construction company from 1892 to 1906, and secretary of the railway company from 1903 down to August 24, 1906, the date of his death (with the exception of the year 1905). James S. Swartz was a director of the construction company and its secretary from 1893 to 1903, inclusive, with the exception of the year 1894, its treasurer from 1895 to 1903, and its president from 1903 to date. 'He was also a director of the rail
Under date of August 1, 1895, the railway company executed and delivered to the defendant, to be certified when called for by the complainant’s directors, 750 bonds of the par value of $1,000, each numbered from 1 to 750, both inclusive, aggregating $750,000 at par, and payable on the 1st day of October, 1925, with interest at .5%, payable semiannually, at the office of the defendant. To secure payment of these bonds a mortgage or deed of trust was executed and delivered to the defendant as trustee. The mortgage of 1895 recited that the bonds thereby secured were executed and delivered, inter alia, in order to make provision for the retirement of the $200,000 of bonds issued in 1892: and the mortgage further provided that the said bonds should not be binding upon the complainant until certified by the defendant as trustee, and that the complainant should deliver all of said bonds to defendant, and the defendant should certify and countersign said bonds and deliver them to the complainant when and as directed so to- do by the latter’s board of directors. The board of directors of the railway company directed the defendant as trustee to certify and countersign $700,000 of the said -bonds, and to deliver them to the railway company. This direction was complied with by the trust company as trustee in the mortgage, but it was never directed by the railway company to certify the remaining $50,000 of the 1895 bonds remaining in its possession. Hippie, however, as president of
■ It -is conceded that, as at present viewed in the business world there
As to the $48,000, the evidence shows that these bonds had been paid off and never reissued by the railway company. They were left in the possession of Hippie who had been the trustee in the mortgage and was at the time the secretary of the complainant company, but he was without any authority to reissue them. The bonds were regular upon their face and had not yet matured. If, under the circumstances, the}' had been passed to an innocent third party without notice and for value, it is conceded the complainant would be liable, but if transferred to a party with notice of the fact that they were no longer subsisting obligations of the complainant company, the holder would be estopped from, insisting upon their payment. It is true they would pass from hand to hand like a bank note, but they are more like a note drawn to bearer and paid before maturity. Being negotiable, if it should by any neglect of the maker be permitted to pass into the hands of an innocent third party without notice and for value before maturity, there would he a liability on the part of the maker, but in that case, upon proof of the fraudulent use of the note, the burden of proof would be shifted to the holder to establish good faith in the purchase of the same, which involves the proof of a lack of notice and the payment of a valuable consideration. The same would be true in regard to these bonds, being no longer a subsisting obligation. Having clearly established that the transfer to the defendant company was a fraud upon the complainant, the burden is shifted to the defendant to establish that it took these bonds without notice and for a valuable consideration, and, as we have already stated, it has failed to establish either.
There is no evidence whatever to show that the complainant company had knowledge or ought to have had knowledge of Hippie’s
The principal found in many of the text-books and in some decisions that notice to the agent is not notice to the principal, where the agent is acting in fraud of the principal, must be held to apply to certain wanton torts or wrongs committed by the agent, in which case the principal is relieved. Or, where the mutual agent in the particular case is acting on the one side with other officers of one of his principals and succeeds in deceiving them, in such case his knowledge could not*be held to be the knowledge of the principal deceived; but where, as in this case, the defendant company came into possession of the bonds through Hippie’s fraudulent use of the power vested in him, the latter cannot claim to hold the bonds without ratifying the acts and authority of Hippie who transferred them to it. There may be .exceptions to the general rule, but each case of this sort depends on its own peculiar facts, as was said in Lyndon Mills Co. v. Lyndon Institution, 63 Vt. 581, 22 Atl. 575, 25 Am. St. Rep. 783.
In the case at bar there is nothing in the conduct of the officers of the trust company as compared with those of the complainant com.pany to entitle the defendant-to be exempt from the general rule of
As to the $50,000 of bonds, we find as a fact that they were placed in the possession of the defendant company to be certified when called for, and although they were left in the possession of the defendant company after the mortgage had been satisfied, they were not a perfected obligation of the complainant company which could have been sold without the defendant’s certificate. This certificate was executed on the part of the defendant fraudulently, of course, by its own president, and as a result of this fraudulent execution of the certificates, the bonds became, upon their face, a valid, subsisting, negotiable obligation, and, in the hands of third, parties, would have been valid against the complainant company, but, even in that case, the complainant company would have had a right of action against the defendant for a fraudulent and illegal certification of these bonds, and the latter could not have pleaded the fraudulent act of its president. It would have been bound to answer in damages.
The defendant’s right to retain this $50,000 of bonds has much less merit in it than in its claim to the $18,000, because these bonds were rsot a subsisting, negotiable obligation left in the hands of Hippie, they were bonds not legally completed as an obligation of the complainant company and left in the possession of the defendant. The defendant, through its negligence, permitted its president to certify and to perfect these obligations as an unmatured, subsisting, negotiable obligation of the complainant, and then, through the same negligence, permitted him (its president) to assign them to it as collateral security to cover a former embezzlement. It was fraudulently made to perfect' these obligations through its agent acting for it, and by his further fraud it came into their possession. Under the authorities above stated, it is bound by his knowledge of their fraudulent certification and their fraudulent use.
The prayer of the complainant in its bill for a decree requiring the defendant company to deliver up these obligations for cancellation should be granted. Counsel is requested to draw a decree in accordance with this opinion and submit to the court.