Coal Co. v. Land Co.
Coal Co. v. Land Co.
Opinion of the Court
The original bill in this cause was filed and sustained as a general creditors’ bill
The facts necessary to be stated, as found by the Court of Chancery Appeals, are substantially as follows:
April 1, 1893, the defendant company executed a mortgage or deed of trust to George W. Welsh, of Boyle County, Ky., to secure the payment of its bonds of the denomination of $50 . each, amounting in the aggregate to $25,000, ■ which its board of directors authorized to be issued and sold for the purpose of paying its indebtedness contracted in the purchase of lands and for other purposes. The bonds thus secured were dated April 1, 1893, and bore interest at six per cent., payable semiannually at the Farmers’ National Bant, of Danville, Kentucky. The principle of said bonds was also made payable at said bank, and matured April 1, 1898. The mortgage or deed of trust to Welsh, embodying a form of the bonds issued, contained this recital:
“This bond is one of a series of 500, aggregating $25,000, issued in pursuance of an order of the board of directors of said London & New York Land Co., passed February 15, 1893.”
When these bonds were issued the complainant,
“These bonds ■ of the defendant company — that is, $11,250 — were issued for the purposes stated in the mortgage, and as disclosed by the proof, in order to raise money with which to p>ay the debts of the company. Its indebtedness at the time was about $25,000, and the authorized issue of bonds at par would have liquidated this indebtedness. It was the idea and purpose at the time it was determined to issue the bonds for the stockholders of the company to take 25 per cent, of their respective holdings in stock in the bonds, and thus the whole authorized issue would be taken. A number of the stockholders, however, either from inability or because they were becoming apprehensive as to the financial success of the company, refused to carry out the arrangement and take the bonds. Certain stockholders did take bonds under this arrangement amounting, as stated, to $11,250. The other $13,150 of the authorized
“After the failure of the company to dispose of the remainder of its unauthorized issue of bonds, it made no further efforts to secure or pay the debt of complainant.”
The outstanding indebtedness of the company at the time this, case was tried, exclusive of the •bonds issued and sold, amounted to $15,000 or $18,000. Its properties, under the evidence, will not pay the $11,250 of bonds.
Now, it is insisted by complainant that its judgment against defendant company is of equal dignity with the claims of .the bondholders and
It is conceded by learned counsel in his able argument that the rule would be different if the issue of bonds was not definitely known and determined. It is also conceded that if there was nothing in the trust deed or in the bond itself to put the holder upon notice just what his proportionate interest in the assets was, then he might subject the entire assets included in the trust deed to the satisfaction of his bond. Counsel cites in support of his position Thompson’s Commentaries on the Law of Corporations, viz.:
“Such a mortgage is a security for the whole number and for each and every bond recited in it; by the terms of the instrument the bonds stand in equal protection — each bond carries only a fractional interest of the property mortgaged.” Sec. 6229.
The contract with the individual bondholder is no more than that he shall have his due propor
We have examined tbe cases cited by Mr. Thompson in support of tbe text, and find they have no bearing on tbe question presented in this case. In Barry v. Railroad, 34 Fed. Rep., 829, Judge Wallace states tbe rule thus: “Where a mortgage is a security for tbe whole number of a series of bonds, in a distribution of tbe proceeds of tbe sale of tbe mortgaged property, each bond carries only a fractional interest in tbe proceeds of tbe property, to be ascertained by tbe proportion which its amount bears to the whole amount secured.”
This, we take it, is a statement of tbe general rule that where the mortgage security is insufficient to pay tbe entire amount of bonds secured, each bondholder will share in tbe distribution of tbe proceeds of tbe security in tbe proportion which bis holdings bear to tbe whole amount secured. But Mr. Thompson has introduced into his text a feature not found in tbe ease — namely, that this rule applies whether tbe entire series of bonds be issued or not, or whether they are intended to be issued or not. In Barry v. Railroad, supra, tbe whole amount of bonds bad' been actually is
In Chaflin v. Railroad, 8 Fed. Rep., it appeared that certain mortgage bonds had been acquired by the railroad in its refunding operations and the question was whether the company, after having acquired them, could keep them alive and reissue them so that they would carry with them their original mortgage lien. Chief Justice Waite, who delivered the opinion of the Court, said: “As
The other case cited by Mr. Thompson for liis test is Hodges’ Appeal, 84 Pa. St., 359. In that case it appeared that one Harmon executed and delivered to trustees a mortgage on property to secure the payment of two hundred hands, eacli for the sum of five hundred dollars. The property to be distributed under the mortgage realized $6,894.98. It appeared that the entire series of bonds, two hundred in number, had in fact been issued. The real question in that case was whether certain claimants were bona fide holders of the bonds on account of certain informalities in their acquisition.
The Court held that where a mortgage is a security for the whole number of a series of bonds, in a distribution of the proceeds of the mortgaged property, the holders of the bonds share pro rata in the distribution, and if a holder of
In the case at bar more than one-half- of the series of bonds were in fact not issued, nor were they withheld by the corporation for the purpose of being issued or manipulated for its own purposes at some future time, as frequently occurs in railroad securities.
Now, in such a case it would be a strange doctrine to hold that each separate bondholder is only secured by the mortgage to the extent of his aliquot portion of the property covered, to be determined by the proportion his bond holdings bear to the whole amount originally contemplated to be issued, but which were not in point of fact issued.
We think the true rule is that the security inures to the benefit of each bondholder in the proportion which his bondholdings under the mortgage bear to the entire amount actually issued and intended to be issued.
Affirmed.
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