Bechtel v. Rorick

30 N.E.2d 451, 65 Ohio App. 455, 19 Ohio Op. 59, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 350
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 N.E.2d 451 (Bechtel v. Rorick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bechtel v. Rorick, 30 N.E.2d 451, 65 Ohio App. 455, 19 Ohio Op. 59, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 350 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

Carpenter, J.

This appeal is on questions of law and fact. The suit is one in equity to require the defendants, members of a bondholders’ committee and *456 its depositary, to account for their stewardship, to turn over to an officer of the court the records of their proceedings and all of the bonds and coupons that have been deposited with them, and to account for their collections. The plaintiffs, who, represent a small minority of the owners of the bonds deposited with the committee, bring this as a class suit “on behalf of themselves and on behalf of all other holders of certificates of deposit” of bonds with the committee.

Prior to 1931 the Everglades Drainage District of Florida had outstanding over $9,000,000 worth of bonds. On January 1, 1931, it defaulted in payment of $100,000 of principal on the bonds and about $250,000 of interest that matured that day. These bonds having been very largely sold to the holders by the firm of Spitzer-Rorick & Company of Toledo, Ohio, the defendants, Horton C. Rorick and James R. Easton, members of that firm, and one "Walter H. Lippincott, who has since died and has been succeeded by defendant Joseph R. Grundy, formed themselves into a bondholders’ protective committee and prepared a deposit agreement, dated January 2, 1931, under which they invited all holders of those bonds to become parties to the agreement by depositing their bonds or interest coupons or both with the committee in its depositary, the defendant The Spitzer-Rorick Trust & Savings Bank of Toledo, Ohio, and receive from it certificates of deposit. Over $8,000,000 worth of the bonds and many coupons were so deposited. The objective of all parties was to secure payment of as much as possible of the bonds and interest. Very full powers were conferred upon the committee by the terms of the agreement.

Article IV, Section 1, provides that the agreement should continue for three years and then says:

“The said period of three years may be extended from time to time, for such further period or periods as the committee by resolution of all of its members, *457 shall fix, but in no event shall this agreement continue for a longer entire period than six years from the date hereof, and a copy of such resolution shall be filed with the depositary. Except as otherwise expressly provided herein, depositors shall not be entitled to receive back deposited bonds and coupons, or their proceeds or other property held for the account of such bonds and coupons, before the expiration of such period of three years and of any extension or extensions thereof.”

At the end of the three-year period the committee, by proper resolution, extended the term for another three years to January 2, 1937.

July 6, 1936, the committee by resolution sought to amend the deposit agreement by striking out the first sentence of that part above quoted and by substituting for it the following:

“The said period of three years may be extended from time to time for such further period or periods as the committee by resolution of all its members, shall fix, but this agreement shall not continue beyond January 2, 1943, without such extension being made by the depositors adopting an amendment to that effect in compliance with the requirements of this agreement. A copy of such resolution or resolutions shall be filed with the depositary.”

To each depositor the committee mailed a copy of this resolution with a letter which said the deposit agreement would “terminate on January 2, 1937, unless renewed and extended before that date,” and continuing, the letter said:

“No affirmative action by depositors is necessary to so extend the deposit agreement, as under the terms of the present agreement, this amendment will so extend said agreement and become binding and in full force on all depositors who shall not have notified the committee within thirty days from mailing this notice of amendment that such, depositor desires to now with *458 draw his bonds and/or coupons, according to the terms and conditions provided in the present deposit agreement.”

The power of the committee to so amend the agreement and thereby extend its effective period is chai» lenged by the plaintiffs and this challenge presents the first and major problem in this case.

1. The agreement contains several provisions respecting the power of the committee to amend it.

Article II, Section 2 says:

“The committee shall have the power and is hereby authorized, without prejudice to or in limitation of the general powers and purposes hereof, * * * (j) to amend, modify, or change, at any time, the general purposes of this agreement, in the manner hereinafter provided.”

Article V, Section 2, provides:

“The committee shall have power, whenever in its judgment it may be advisable, to amend this agreement. All amendments shall be lodged with the depositary; but, if in the judgment of the committee, which shall be conclusive and binding, any such amendment shall materially affect the rights of the depositors, notice of such lodging shall be given in the manner provided in Article III hereof, in the case of notice of adoption or approval of any plan and agreement. * * * Any depositor at any time within thirty days after the date of mailing of such notice, or of the final publication thereof, but in no event prior to such date, except as otherwise provided herein, may withdraw from this agreement in the manner and with the effect specified in Article III hereof with respect to withdrawals from this agreement in the case of the adoption of a plan and agreement. The depositor who shall not so withdraw, in the manner aforesaid, within such period of thirty days shall be conclusively and finally deemed, for ,all purposes, to have irrevocably waived the right to withdrawal given to them by the provision *459 of this article, and shall be irrevocably bound and concluded by all such amendments, whether or not they receive actual notice of such amendment or. the lodging thereof.”

Article III gives the committee power to adopt a ‘ ‘ plan and agreement for the adjustment or liquidation and settlement” of the depositors’ claims, but if the plan “involves a compromise, reduction or scaling down of the principal amount or the interest” a copy of such plan shall be lodged with the depositary, and notice of the plan mailed to each depositor of record with the depositary, and any depositor may within thirty days of the mailing of such notice withdraw from the agreement and on surrender of his certificate of deposit and payment of his pro rata share of the expense of the committee to date, receive back his bonds and be relieved of the obligation of the agreement and cease to have any rights under it. Those who fail to so withdraw in thirty days, waive the right to do so and automatically accept the plan.

The plaintiffs urge that due to the positive language of Article IV, Section 1, quoted above, “in no event shall this agreement continue for a longer entire period than six years from the date hereof,” that provision is not subject to the amendment provisions and cannot be changed.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.E.2d 451, 65 Ohio App. 455, 19 Ohio Op. 59, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bechtel-v-rorick-ohioctapp-1939.