Belden v. . Burke

42 N.E. 261, 147 N.Y. 542, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 99, 1 E.H. Smith 542, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 979
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 42 N.E. 261 (Belden v. . Burke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belden v. . Burke, 42 N.E. 261, 147 N.Y. 542, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 99, 1 E.H. Smith 542, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 979 (N.Y. 1895).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The plaintiff, as a bondholder of the Columbus, Hocking Valley and Toledo Railway Company, brought this action in his own behalf and in behalf of all other persons holding the bonds, against the railway corporation, the trustee named in the mortgage executed to secure the payment of the bonds, Stevenson Burke and five other persons, ■called his associates in the transactions hereinafter referred to, two banking firms in the city of Hew York and three other persons who represent deceased parties or dissolved firms connected in some way with the transactions. Four of the associates of Burke were never served with process, and are not before the court, the complaint was dismissed at the trial by ■consent as to one of the banking firms, the other defendants •either have no interest in the controversy or acquiesce in the decision below, or are interested in the plaintiff’s success and have not appealed from the judgment. The only party who has appealed to this court is the defendant, Stevenson Burke, who has stipulated that in case the judgment of the court below be affirmed here, then that judgment absolute be rendered against him for the relief demanded in the complaint. He is the only defendant who has appeared in this court to •contest the decision given, he having for some reason assumed the whole burden of the litigation, and must, therefore, be considered as the sole responsible defendant.

The general purpose of the action is to compel the railway ■corporation, defendant, to make good its covenant in the mortgage to devote the bonds, or their proceeds, to the improvement of the mortgaged property and the enhancement of the value of the security to all the bondholders, and it being alleged that the defendant Burke and his associates, as directors and agents of the railway, by means of various transactions stated and found, diverted the bonds from the uses and *544 purposes for which they were issued, and virtually applied and converted them, or the proceeds, to their own use, that they account for the same to the railway company and pay the same into its treasury. The bonds in controversy amount to eight million dollars, or eight thousand bonds of one thou, sand dollars each, part of an issue of fourteen million five hundred thousand dollars, secured by a mortgage on the railway property to the Central Trust Company of Hew York as trustee, bearing date October 1, 1881. The decision of the court below, now before us for review, is to the effect that Burke and his associates are bound to account to the railway company for these eight thousand bonds or their proceeds, with interest from the time of the issue, in 1881, thus establishing a liability on the part of the defendant of fifteen million dollars or more. The complaint charges various acts and transactions on the part of Burke and his associates in regard to the issue and disposition of the bonds, constituting, as is claimed, fraud and conspiracy, or breach of trust, or both, all of which allegations have been put in issue by his answer. These complicated transactions were settled by the trial court in one hundred and forty-three findings of fact and six of law. The case comes here upon these findings alone and upon the exceptions taken by the plaintiff’s counsel to the conclusions of law upon which the complaint was dismissed. The General'Term, having reversed the judgment of the trial court,’ taking an entirely different view in regard to the defendant’s liability, these findings of fact, upon which all the parties stand, must constitute the basis of the discussion. Many of the findings are in regard to facts merely introductory or supplementary, and as they are fully stated in the report of the case in the court below (Belden v. Burke, 72 Hun, 51) it will be necessary to refer here to only a few of the findings which contain the important or fundamental facts.

On the 22d of December, 1883, the plaintiff bought in the open market at the Stock Exchange in Hew York, and lie now owns, fifty five per cent fifty-year bonds of the said rail *545 way company, certified by the trustee named in the mortgage in the manner and form therein prescribed. The interest on these bonds was payable semi-annually from the first day of September, 1881, on the first day of March and September thereafter, and the principal was not to become due till September 1, 1931, when the bonds mature. These bonds of the denomination of one thousand dollars each were a part of a large block of about six million dollars sold at or prior to the date of their issue and delivery to one of the defendant banking firms, Winslow, Lanier. & Co. When the plaintiff procured the bonds he had no knowledge of the provisions of the mortgage upon which his claim in this action is based, and did not rely on the same. He knew generally that the bonds were secured by a mortgage, and relied upon that security whatever it was. The plaintiff asserts in this action only such rights as he claims the Central Trust Company, trustee in the mortgage, could or should have asserted for him and his fellow bondholders in the performance of its duty as trustee. It has been found that it refused to bring the -action upon plaintiff’s request for the benefit of himself and the other holders of the bonds, and, upon such refusal, the action was brought in its present form, the trustee, upon refusing to become a plaintiff, having been made a defendant. The mortgage executed October 1, 1881, covers all the property and franchises of the railway company, and the Hocking Coal & Railroad Company united in it, conveying upon the same trusts some ten thousand acres of coal lands, the previous arrangements and transactions having all along contemplated the union of the properties of the two corporations, which was practically consummated, so far as it could be, by this act.

The defendant railway was created by a consolidation under the laws of Ohio of three other railways, forming a continuous line from Toledo through the Hocking valley in the state of Ohio to some point or points at or near the Ohio river, with various branches, and the scheme of consolidation had in view from the beginning the final union of the coal company property and that of the consolidated railway corporation, *546 and the execution of the mortgage was the important and one of the final acts through which that end was accomplished. The facility with which the defendant and his associates were able to bring about this result by means of contracts, resolutions and various corporate acts was due entirely to the fact that they had acquired and owned all the stock of both companies, so that both corporations were made, through the directors, to move, speak and act in absolute obedience to the will of a few men who owned them. Among the numerous questions in the case which constitute the subject of contention between counsel and in regard to which there is a wide and irreconcilable difference of opinion, the correct interpretation and meaning of certain provisions of the mortgage, thus executed, takes an important place, if, indeed, it is not at the basis of the whole controversy and the necessary premise from which every proposition asserted by the plaintiff is deduced.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.E. 261, 147 N.Y. 542, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 99, 1 E.H. Smith 542, 1895 N.Y. LEXIS 979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belden-v-burke-ny-1895.