Bratten v. Catawissa Railroad

60 A. 319, 211 Pa. 21, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 401
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 6, 1905
DocketAppeal, No. 175
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 60 A. 319 (Bratten v. Catawissa Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bratten v. Catawissa Railroad, 60 A. 319, 211 Pa. 21, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 401 (Pa. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Dean,

The question is as to the interpretation of the obligation of a bond secured by mortgage, delivered by defendant to M. P. Hutchinson, June 15, 1871, and the ownership of which by regular assignment and transfer had passed to Bratten, this plaintiff. The bond is dated October 1, 1870, as the day of issue, is in the sum of $500 and one of four bonds of a like sum issued at the same time to the same payee and of which plaintiff became the owner. Each bond, after providing for semiannual payment of interest at seven per cent, contains this stipulation:

“ That the holder of this bond shall be entitled at any time after fifteen (15) years from the date thereof to convert the principal sum into preferred stock of the said company at par upon surrender of this bond with the coupons not due annexed.”

On July 27, 1900, plaintiff notified the company in writing that his four bonds would be due August first following and that he demanded their conversion into preferred stock in accordance with the provision in the bonds and mortgage. The company refused to comply with the request, but the 27th of November following made this proposition in writing to plaintiff: “You are herewith tendered the sum of $2,036.33 August 1, 1900, at the rate of six per cent per annum to this date.” Which tender the plaintiff refused. The company had issued and there were then in the market two issues of its pre[23]*23ferred stock, one called the “ old preferred ” and the other the “ new preferred ” each at par value of $50.00 per share and as plaintiff averred and proved selling in the market at $58.00 per share. He brought suit against defendant for damages, claiming the market price of forty shares of the preferred stock with interest from August 1, 1900, the date of his demand for conversion. The court below directed a verdict for defendant and plaintiff appeals.

At the date the bonds matured there were but two classes of stock, common and preferred, and in the fifteen years before maturity the company had issued no other. By the act of incorporation of the company, March 21, 1860, P. L. 234, it had authority to issue $3,350,000 of stock, $2,200,000 of preferred and $1,150,000 of common, each share of the par value of $50.00; of the preferred the act itself directed that 3,000 shares should be applied in discharge of a “ confidential ” debt to the Erie Railroad Company. All the stock, common and preferred, specifically mentioned in the act had prior to 1869 been issued, at least in the minutes of the company for that year it is called “ outstanding.” But in the original act was this further provision, “And the said corporation may by a vote of its preferred stockholders at a meeting duly and specially convened at which three-fourths in amount of said preferred stock shall vote in favor thereof, shall have a right to increase the amount of the preferred or common stock for real estate for use of said company or for the extension of its road.”

Under this authority the company determined to extend its road to Williamsport* A meeting of the preferred stockholders was called, which meeting on September 16, 1870, resolved to execute a mortgage upon all its property to secure a loan of $1,000,000 and issue bonds to that amount in denominations of $500 and $1,000 to be used in the construction of the extension to Williamsport; the bonds to be payable, principal and interest, at the end of thirty years or be convertible at the end of fifteen years into preferred stock at the option of the holder. The plaintiff’s bonds are part of those authorized by this resolution at this meeting of preferred stockholders. The legislature by .Act of December 29, 1869, P. L. 1870, authorized all corporations to increase their capital stock fifty per cent of any amount theretofore authorized, provided the [24]*24authority to increase should not apply to any corporation until it duly accepted the act. The Catawissa Company did not accept the act until September 28, 1871, hence, although the authority existed in 1870 to increase the debt fifty per cent it was ineffectual so far as concerned defendant until it had accepted the act. But on October 5# 187^ more than a year after it had accepted the act, the company authorized an issue of 20,000 shares equal to $1,000,000 par value of preferred stock; this is called the “new preferred.”

It may be conceded that under the act of 1869 authority to increase the debt fifty per cent had not then become operative, yet full authority to make the extension to Williamsport had been' conferred by the act of 1860, and full authority to increase the debt was in existence by the act of 1869 and became effective as to this company as soon as the simple formality of acceptance was observed. This was the- condition of affairs when the preferred stockholders met on September 16, 1870, and authorized the execution of the mortgage and bonds.

It is not necessary in this case to discuss the respective rights of common and preferred stockholders, or the relative rights as to each other of first, second and third preferred stockholders. No such questions arise here. The holders of the common stock are not interested or, if they are, they are not parties to the issue. The question is, what is the right of this bondholder by the terms of his bond against the company which issued it? “The surroundings of the parties at the time of making the contract and the subject-matter thereof are always admissable to ascertain theirjmtention, if their expression be ambiguous or disputable:” Dixon-Woods Co. v. Phillips Glass Co., 169 Pa. 167; Ellis v. Lane, 85 Pa. 265. Under the act of 1860 there was an authorized issue of 44,000 shares of preferred stock but ten years of construction work had been going on and this had all been used. There was none in the treasury, and, so far as appears, none in the control of the company. A mortgage had been executed and recorded which provided that the bonds should be payable in -fifteen years at the option of the holder by converting them into preferred stock; they could not have meant preferred stock then in existence, for none, as they knew, was within reach of the company. But fifteen years would elapse before the option by [25]*25the holders of the bonds could be exercised. The authority to create the new preferred stock lawfully under the act of 1869 by merely filing a certificate of the president and treasurer of the company with the auditor general that it had accepted the act, would apply the act to this company. With this knowledge, the company issued this bond. According to its express terms this plaintiff now demands his preferred stock. The company knew he had such right and might claim to exercise it in fifteen years ; what is their answer to his demand ? That none of the other bondholders have demanded preferred stock, and in substance, that the company has no preferred stock to be used for such a purpose. It tenders him the face value of his bonds in money. This was in plain disregard of its obligation and of the bondholders’ right.

We do not say the company was bound to go into the market and buy up its own stock at any price to deliver to the optional bondholders ; if all the bondholders exercised their option at the same time and demanded preferred stock, and the company had been compelled to go into the open market and buy, that would have sent the price up, as appellee’s counsel argues, to a ruinous point; but prudent business men need not have subjected their company to this alternative.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 A. 319, 211 Pa. 21, 1905 Pa. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bratten-v-catawissa-railroad-pa-1905.