Baker v. Consolidated Gas & Electric Co.

42 Misc. 95, 85 N.Y.S. 1030
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Misc. 95 (Baker v. Consolidated Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Consolidated Gas & Electric Co., 42 Misc. 95, 85 N.Y.S. 1030 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

White, J.

The defendant, the Consolidated Gas and Electric Company, is a domestic corporation engaged in the business of manufacturing and distributing gas and electricity at Batavia in Genesee county, in this State; the Bochester Trust and Safe Deposit Company is also a domestic corporation authorized by law to hold and execute the trusts hereinafter mentioned. The defendant, the New York Security and Trust Company is a domestic corporation, its principal office and place of business being in the city of New York, where it is engaged in doing a general trust and banking business.

On November 1, 1890, the defendant the Consolidated Gas and Electric Company, executed and delivered to the Holland Trust Company a first mortgage upon all and singular its real and personal property then owned by it, or thereafter to be acquired, together with its franchises and the rents, issues, income and profits of its property, as security for $80,000 of its bonds, and interest thereon, at the rate of six per cent, per annum, payable on the first days of May and November [97]*97in each year thereafter, and also to secure the deposit of a sinking fund of two per cent, per annum on the amount of said bonds by the said mortgagor, with its said trustee, as additional security for and to be used in the payment of said bonds at their maturity. By the terms of the said mortgage and said bonds they are to mature November 1, 1910. This mortgage provides in express terms that “ in case default shall be made in payment of the principal or interest of said bonds, or any of them or any part of either as said principal and interest shall fall due according to the tenor of said bonds, or in case the mortgagor shall fail to keep its taxes and assessments paid, or in case it shall fail to pay any specific or general lien upon its property, which may be necessary or essential to the protection of the security created by the mortgage, or if it shall fail to pay the premiums for insurance or to keep the property insured as required by the trustee, * * * then if default be made in either or any of the cases above mentioned, or (in) the principal or interest of said bonds or any or either of them, and if sufficient funds to pay the principal or interest of the said bonds or any of them are not provided at the place of payment within sixty days after payment thereof has been demanded at said place of payment and upon the request in writing of a majority in amount of the holders of such bonds, it shall be lawful for the trustee to grant, bargain and sell the property mortgaged, * * * such sale to be had at public auction, * * * and out of the proceeds of the sale to pay the expenses thereof and the bonds secured by said mortgage.”

■The mortgage further provides that, “ In any proceedings for the foreclosure thereof by reason of a default on the part of the mortgagor, the trustee shall be entitled to have a receiver appointed as a matter of right. The trustee is not bound to take any action under the mortgage unless thereto requested in writing by the holders of at least one-half of* all of the said bonds then outstanding, nor unless such request be accompanied by satisfactory indemnity against all costs, expenses and liabilities incident to the desired action. The trustee is not under obligation to do or refrain from doing any act pursuant to the request of any bondholder * * * [98]*98imtil such bondholder shall indemnify * * * it against costs, expenses, outlays, counsel fees, and other reasonable disbursements for which it may become liable on proceeding to carry out such request.”

The bonds contain no provisions concerning a -default of any kind, but provide simply for the payment of the principal at maturity with semi-annual interest and the two per cent, for the sinking fund, all payable at the office of the trustee. This action was commenced February 4, 1903. On November 1, 1902, the defendant, the Consolidated Gas and Electric-Company, bad defaulted in the payment of the interest due upon the bonds on that date, and the same had not been paid when this action was begun, but has been paid since, from which it appears that when this action was begun such default had existed ninety-four days. On the first day of May and November, 1902, the mortgagor also made default in the payment of $800, due to the sinking fund on each of those days, respectively, which default still continues. It was also in default in not having kept up the insurance according to the terms of the mortgage.

On January 11, 1892, the defendant, the Consolidated Gas and Electric Company, executed and delivered to the said Holland Trust Company the mortgage herein sought to be foreclosed upon all its property to secure an additional issue of $20,000 of its bonds, which according to their terms and tenor will mature on February 1, 1912, and are redeemable at any time after five years from their date, at the option of the mortgagor. They bear interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum from February 1, 1892, payable semi-annually.

The bonds secured by this mortgage provide that if. at any time or times, any part or portion óf the first bonds and mortgage * * . * or of the interest on any of said bonds or said mortgage, or the coupons accompanying said bonds or any part thereof shall become and be and remain due. and payable for the space of sixty days, then and in such case the whole of this bond and the accrued interest thereon and all the coupons that shall represent any of the accrued interest thereon and the principal of the accompanying mortgage, and the accrued interest thereon, and every part thereof shall be[99]*99come due and payable immediately.” All other provisions concerning defaults, and their effect upon the rights of the parties and the remedies therefor, are precisely the same in this as they are in the first mortgage.

All the bonds under both mortgages were issued for cash and are outstanding and unpaid. The plaintiff is the owner oi $16,000 of the second mortgage bonds. Soon after the second mortgage was made the defendant, the Rochester Trust and Safe Deposit Company, was substituted as trustee under both mortgages, and is now acting as such in place of the Holland Trust Company.

Just before the commencement of this action the plaintiff served upon the defendant, the Rochester Trust and Safe Deposit Company, a written notice of the fact that the said Consolidated Gas and Electric Company had made the default herein before mentioned, and claiming that by reason of its failure to pay the interest due November 1, 1902, on the first mortgage bonds, the whole of the amount secured by the second mortgage had become due, at the same time, and in and by the same notice the plaintiff requested the said Rochester Trust and Safe Deposit Company to begin a'foreclosure of the mortgage herein sought to be foreclosed, and take such other steps as would adequately protect her interests. The said defendant refused to take any action in the premises. Since the commencement of this action the said Consolidated Gas and Electric Company has paid to the trustee all interest due upon both mortgages, prior to November 1, 1903, but the plaintiff has to this time refused to take from the trustee the interest due upon her bonds February 1, and August 1, 1903, $960 in all.

It seems to be plain that two distinct remedies are provided by the first mortgage itself for its enforcement in case of failure on the part of the mortgagor to keep and perform its conditions on its part to be kept and performed.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Misc. 95, 85 N.Y.S. 1030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-consolidated-gas-electric-co-nysupct-1903.