Anthony v. Campbell

112 F. 212, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4087
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 25, 1901
DocketNos. 1,515, 1,516
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 112 F. 212 (Anthony v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anthony v. Campbell, 112 F. 212, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4087 (8th Cir. 1901).

Opinions

THAYER, Circuit Judge,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

The record discloses that on November 1, 1888, the Kansas Investment Company, a corporation of that state, issued a series of debenture bonds amounting to ¿50,000, and, to secure their payment, deposited with the Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Company, hereafter termed the “Boston Company,” certain securities, consisting of notes secured by mortgages on lands principally situated in Kansas, to an amount exceeding by 5 per cent, the par value of the debenture bonds. These debentures were sold in Scotland, and Hugh Campbell, the appellee in one of the cases, and the appellant in the other, became the purchaser of four of the debentures, ea.ch for the sum of ¿5O0, which by their terms matured on November 1,1894. As the debentures were not paid at maturity, Campbell brought an ac[215]*215tion and recovered a judgment against the Kansas Investment Company on November 27, 1897, in the sum of $10,621.52. After the issuance of the aforesaid debentures, and some time in July, 1890, the Kansas Investment Company transferred to the Investment Trust Company, a Colorado corporation, which is represented in this proceeding by Bennett R. Wheeler, its receiver, all of its property and assets, including its equity of redemption in the securities at that “time held by the Boston Company, which had been deposited to secure the payment of the aforesaid debenture bonds. This latter investment company, which for convenience will be referred to as the ■“Colorado Company,” appears to have been organized by the stockholders and officers of the Kansas Investment Company, most of whom exchanged their stock in the Kansas Company for stock in the Colorado Company; the purpose of the stockholders and officers being, apparently, to conduct operations in future under a Colorado charter, which would impose less liability on them as stockholders than was imposed at the time by the laws of “Kansas. If there was a different motive in organizing a successor corporation under the laws of Colorado, we have failed to discover it. The securities that were thus transferred to the Colorado Company, consisting of notes and mortgages, and land mostly situated in Kansas, were of great value. The Colorado Company, after its organization, was controlled and managed by substantially the same persons who had previously controlled and managed the Kansas Investment Company, hereafter termed the “Kansas Company.” Afterwards, during the years 1893 and 1894, the Colorado Company issued a large number of debentures, amounting in the aggregate tq $2,500,000, and at the same time transferred the bulk of its assets, which also consisted of notes and mortgages, to the City Real Estate Trust Company, a Kansas corporation, al's trustee, to secure the payment of its debentures. This latter company will be referred to hereafter as the “Real Estate Company.” Its agreement with the Real Estate Company, whereby the latter was constituted a trustee, contemplated obtaining possession of the securities of the Kansas Company then in the hands of the Boston Company, and the transfer of the same to the Real Estate Company as security for its own larger issue of debentures. To accomplish this object the Colorado Company made a proposition to the Scotch debenture holders to exchange the debentures issued by the Kansas Company for the new debentures of the Colorado Company which were to become due on June 1, 1904. All of the Scotch debenture holders, except Campbell, consented to this exchange subsequent to November I, 1894, when their debentures matured; and shortly thereafter they surrendered the old debentures of the Kansas Company to the Colorado Company, receiving in lieu thereof the debentures of the last-named company, which were termed “General Issue Debentures.” Inasmuch as Campbell refused to accept the debentures of the Colorado Company, and insisted on payment of the debentures of the Kansas Company which were held by him, the Colorado Company was unable to obtain possession of the securities deposited with the Boston Company, and was unable to deposit them with the Real Estate Company as security for its “gen-

[216]*216eral issue debentures,” as it had contemplated doing. To overcome this latter difficulty, it resorted to the expedient of calling upon the Boston Company, as trustee, to sell the securities in its hands at public auction, on the pretense that such a sale was necessary to pay off and discharge the outstanding debentures of the Kansas 'Company, all of which, with the exception of the four held by Campbell, were then in its hands; the same having been taken up and retired with its own debentures. At the sale made by the Boston Company," as trustee, in pursuance of the request for such a sale, which emanated ostensibly from the Real Estate Company, but was made in fact by the Colorado Company, the securities were sold by the trustee on June 19, 1895, and were purchased by George C. Morrell for the sum of $15,600. After the sale of the pledged securities they were delivered by Morrell to the Real Estate Company, which occupied the- same office as the Colorado Company, and was controlled by the same persons. The Boston Company received in cash for securities of the par value-of' $255,000 the sum of $612; that being the distributive share of the purchase money which was due to Campbell as the holder of four debentures, amounting to about $10,000. The trial court adjudged that this sale was fraudulent and void, and that it be held for naught, in so far as Campbell was concerned, and that the securities passed into the hands of the Real Estate Company and subsequently into the hands of the receiver of the Colorado Company, cumbered with a lien in favor of Campbell for the payment pro rata of the four debentures by him held. Anthony and Wheeler, the appellants in case No. 1,515, insist that this paid of the decree is erroneous, which contention on their part presents the principal questions to be determined by that appeal. The propositions advanced by the appellants in support of this general contention that we deem it necessary to consider are as follows: First, that the trial court improperly allowed Campbell, the intervener, to amend his intervening complaint by alleging in such amended pleading that the sale of the securities by the Boston Company on June 19, 1895, was fraudulent and void; second, that the sale in question, in view of all the circumstances which attended it, was neither fraudulent nor voidable; third, that the Boston Company was a necessary party to a proceeding which was intended to challenge the validity of a sale made by that, company as a trustee; fourth, that the intervener’s right to the relief eventually granted by the trial court was barred by laches; and, lastly, that the intervener has ratified the sale in question, and for that reason cannot be heard at this time to question its validity. We will consider these propositions in the order in which they are above stated.

In support of the first proposition it is said that the intervener should not have been allowed to amend his intervening complaint so as to challenge the .validity of the sale that was made by the Boston Company, since in' his original complaint he failed to state any.such ground for relief, but averred the existence of a general lien upon all of the securities in the hands of the! receiver in favor of all the creditors of the Kansas Investment Company, growing out of the transfer by that company of all its assets to the Colorado Company [217]*217in July, i8go, under the circumstances heretofore stated.

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Bluebook (online)
112 F. 212, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-v-campbell-ca8-1901.