Buffalo Loan, Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. Medina Gas & Electric Light Co.

56 N.E. 505, 162 N.Y. 67, 16 E.H. Smith 67, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1223
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 56 N.E. 505 (Buffalo Loan, Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. Medina Gas & Electric Light Co.) 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
Buffalo Loan, Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. Medina Gas & Electric Light Co., 56 N.E. 505, 162 N.Y. 67, 16 E.H. Smith 67, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1223 (N.Y. 1900).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

This action was brought to foreclose a mortgage executed by the Medina Gas Light Company to the plaintiff, the Buffalo Loan, Trust & Safe Deposit Company, as trustee, under date of September 15, 1886.

The action was instituted at the request of the German-American Bank of Buffalo, as alleged owner of ten bonds of a thousand dollars each, secured by the mortgage.

A joint answer was interposed on behalf of the Medina Gas & Electric Light Company and the Holland Trust Company of the city of Hew York.

The original mortgagor, the Medina Gas Light Company, was duly consolidated in 1891 with the Medina Electric Company and assumed the name of the Medina Gas & Electric Light Company, the new company assuming all of the obligations of the old corporations. After such consolidation the Medina Gas & Electric Light Company executed a second mortgage to the Holland Trust Company of Hew York, to secure the sum of $75,000 in bonds.

The contest in this action grows out of the claim made on behalf of the Holland Trust Company that as matter of law its lien is superior to that of the first mortgage.

The capital stock of the Medina Gas & Electric Light Company consisted of 300 shares of the par value of $100 each, and at the time of issuing the first mortgage, and for some years thereafter, one Robert A. Stranahan was the owner of 298 shares; Horace Bacon one share and J ames Robertson one share; Robertson was the president of the company and Stranahan the secretary, and the three shareholders were the directors.

*72 On the 15th day of September, 1886, at a meeting of the directors, the issuance of the ten bonds and the mortgage securing the same was duly authorized by resolution, which, among other things, provided: “ Resolved, that the president cause such bonds and mortgage to be prepared in such form and containing such conditions as he shall deem proper, and when prepared he cause the corporate seal to be affixed thereto and execute the same under his hand, attested by the signature of the secretary, and that when the same be so prepared and executed he make delivery of such mortgage and negotiate the said bonds upon the best terms possible.”

In pursuance of this resolution, and on the 15th day of September, 1886, the officers of the company duly executed the bonds and mortgage, and on the 20th of September, 1886, the plaintiff, by its secretary, duly signed the mortgage and accepted the trust therein reposed in it. The president and secretary of the mortgagor company did not acknowledge the execution of the mortgage until the 18th of September, 1886.

The bonds are due on the 15th day of September, 1906, with interest at six per centum per annum, payable semi-annually, at the office of the plaintiff on the 15th days of March and September in each year. Coupons were duly attached to each bond representing these interest payments.

The bonds provided that in case default should be made in the payment of any semi-annual installment of interest, and it continued for the period of six months after the interest became due and had been demanded, principal and interest of all the bonds should become due.

On the 21st day of September, 1886, the day following the date that the plaintiff, by its secretary, signed the certificate upon each of the ten bonds, Stranahan pledged to the plaintiff all of the bonds as collateral security for an individual loan of $6,000, made to him by the plaintiff that day. Stranahan was at that time indebted to the plaintiff in the further sum of $6,000, and it held as collateral to that loan stock of, the Tonawanda Gas Light Company, which stock was also pledged to the plaintiff for the new loan of $6,000. The *73 plaintiff afterwards made further loans to Stranahan until his indebtedness amounted to the sum of $14,650.

The findings of the referee are in substance as follows, viz.: The oniy delivery ever made of said mortgage by the mortgagor to the plaintiff was by Stranahan to Clark, the secretary of the plaintiff, on the day the mortgage was presented to Clark for signature and acceptance of the trust therein contained, and the only delivery of the bonds to the plaintiff was on the same day, by Stranahan, at the time he pledged them to the plaintiff for his individual loan of $6,000. There is no evidence that any of the moneys advanced by the plaintiff to Stranahan was applied by him to any of • the purposes recited in the resolution, by virtue of which the mortgage was executed and the bonds issued, and there is no evidence that Stranahan had any power or authority from the Medina Gas Light Company to pledge the bonds for his individual debt; the plaintiff received the same with notice that Stranahan had no such power or authority.

The referee found as a conclusion of law that this transfer of the bonds was an unauthorized diversion from the purposes for which they were issued, and did not give the plaintiff title to the same as against the Medina Gas Light Company.

It will be observed that the plaintiff occupies a dual position in this case, to wit: Trustee under the first mortgage and a holder of the ten bonds as collateral security for the loan made to Stranahan individually.

More than four years later, and on the 27th of December, 1890, Stranahan was indebted to the German-American Bank, doing business in Buffalo, in the sum of $8,000 and interest. On the day last mentioned the German-American Bank commenced an action, by attachment and publication of summons, against Stranahan, and caused the ’warrant of attachment to be levied upon the interest of Stranahan in 305 shares of the stock of the Tonawanda Gas Light Company and the said $10,000 of bonds of the Medina Gas Light Company then in the possession of the plaintiff.

*74 Almost immediately the German-American Bank discontinued this action, withdrew its attachment and paid to the plaintiff the sum of $14,650, in which sum Stranahan was indebted to it at that time, and received the Tonawanda Gas Light Company stock and the ten bonds of the Medina Gas Light Company, held as collateral for the debt so paid.

At the time the German-American Bank paid this money to the plaintiff, it did so at the request of Stranahan, who was still the owner of 298 shares of the capital stock of tiie Medina Gas Light Company, and upon his representation and the representation of Charles E. Clark, secretary and treasurer of the plaintiff, that the bonds were good and valid securities.

It further appears that at the time the German-American Bank paid the money to the plaintiff, it had no notice of any irregularity or illegality in the issue of the bonds originally, except such notice as might arise from the fact that all of the coupons which fell due on the 15th of March, 1887, to and including the coupons which fell due on the 15th of September, 1890, were attached to the bonds and apparently unpaid.

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Bluebook (online)
56 N.E. 505, 162 N.Y. 67, 16 E.H. Smith 67, 1900 N.Y. LEXIS 1223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buffalo-loan-trust-safe-deposit-co-v-medina-gas-electric-light-co-ny-1900.