Burrage v. Smith

18 F.2d 515, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 1997
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 1927
DocketNo. 4754
StatusPublished

This text of 18 F.2d 515 (Burrage v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burrage v. Smith, 18 F.2d 515, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 1997 (5th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

BRYAN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a final decree dismissing a bill of complaint filed by leave of court in a receivership suit. The bill was based on the alleged fraud of Imbrie & Co. in three separate and distinct transactions. Jurisdiction was entertained in a single suit, because the District Court, through its various receivers, including the receivers of Imbrie & Co., was in possession of the subject-matters in controversy. Prior to their failure in March of 1921, Imbrie & Co. were investment bankers. In 1913 they became the principal stockholders of the Brinson Railway, whose name in 1915 was changed to Savannah & Northwestern Railway, and later was merged in the Savannah & Atlanta Railway. The line of railroad was so extended that by 1917 it reached from Savannah to Camak, Ga., and connected at the latter place with the Georgia Railway. By that time, Imbrie & Co., owned all of the common stock and three-fifths of the preferred stock of the Savannah & Atlanta Railway. They acquired from a lumber company a 3,-000-acre tract of undeveloped land at Port Wentworth on the Savannah river about six miles above Savannah, and a spur track about three miles long, which connected with the track of the railway at Newtonville? This spur track is referred to in the record as the Newtonville lead. The objects of the purchase of the Port Wentworth property were to secure a tidewater terminal, develop industries, provide tonnage for the railway, and thus increase its business with its connecting and other railroad companies. To accomplish these objects, the Port Wentworth Terminal Corporation was organized, and several industrial enterprises were located on-the water front. Industrial tracks were built which connected the industries with the Newtonville lead, and by means of it with the railway. The railway owned all the stock of the terminal corporation, and Imbrie & Co. were fis[516]*516cal agents for both. The directors of the terminal corporation were either members or employees of the firm of Imbrie & Co. or directors of the railway. In 1921 Imbrie & Co., the railway company, and the terminal corporation were all. placed in the hands of receivers.

The following are the questions raised on this appeal, and the essential facts in the light of which those questions must be decided:

(1) Did the District Court err in refusing to set aside a 99-year lease from the terminal corporation to the railway of the Newtonville lead.and the industrial tracks on the Port Wentworth property? That lease, though dated December 31,1917, was not actually executed until March of 1918. It was not authorized by the board of directors of the terminal corporation, but was recorded, and a subsequent mortgage, executed October 1, 1920, by that corporation, to the Equitable Trust Company, and approved by its board of directors and stockholders, was made subject to it by specific reference to its date and the book in which it was recorded; and the rent reserved by the lease was accepted by the terminal corporation up until the time it was placed in the hands of a receiver, and has since been accepted by its receiver. The railway operated the industrial tracks from the beginning, and it was always the intention of all the parties interested that the terminal property should be used for the benefit of the railway. To carry out that intention, the railway also, on December 31,1917, conveyed the Newtonville lead to the terminal corporation, and the latter included in its lease both the Newtonville lead and the industrial tracks. The consideration to the railway for its deed of the Newtonville lead was $101,500 of the terminal corporation’s notes, which Imbrie & Co. received and credited on that corporation’s indebtedness to them.

It i§ claimed that the Newtonville lead was covered as after-acquired property by a previous mortgage of the Brinson Railway, and that Imbrie & Co. could and should have secured a release under a clause of that mortgage. The railway never applied for the release, because it did not have the money with which to pay- for it, and for that reason the deed to the Newtonville lead was withheld from record. On October 1,1917, in order to raise funds to repay advances made by Imbrie & Co., the terminal corporation issued notes for $700,000, payable in three years, and also issued participation certificates of the par value of $100 each, which entitled the holders to its net earnings until they should equal in amount the par value of the certificates. Imbrie & Co. took the potes and some of the certificates and sold them to the general public. The indenture, under which the notes were issued, provided that no mortgage or other incumbrance should be placed on any of the real property of the terminal corporation until all the notes were paid, , and that, if any of that corporation’s real property should be sold, the proceeds should either be deposited with the trustee under the note indenture or invested in property to be kept free from incumbrance. At the maturity of these notes on October 1, 1920, the terminal corporation executed its above-mentioned mortgage to the Equitable Trust Company, to secure an issue of $2,000,000 of bonds on all its real estate. Of these bonds, $1,000,000 were issued, Imbrie & Co. took $800,000 face value, and agreed with the terminal corporation to exchange bonds for notes issued in 1917, and all the notes except $74,500 were either paid or exchanged for bonds. The lease provided that the railway should pay all taxes on the leased property, pay for the upkeep of the tracks, and' 7 per cent, upon the cost thereof. At the time of the receiverships about 40 per cent., or seven miles, of the industrial tracks were producing revenue to the railway, and it was paying at the rate of $19,000 annually to the terminal corporation, besides .$10,000 for taxes and upkeep, a gross annual rental of over $4,000 per mile of tonnage producing track. The testimony was undisputed that the rental was fair for the service received, although it was insufficient to enable the terminal corporation to meet its obligations.

(2) Did the District Court err in refusing to set aside a deed by which the terminal, corporation conveyed 75 acres of land at Port Wentworth to* the Cuban-Atlantic Transportation Company? In the winter of 1919-20 Imbrie & Co.’s manager at Savannah recommended to them the building of terminal facilities at Port Wentworth to be so equipped as to provide facilities for the shipment 'of coal to Cuba and as to receive sugar from Cuba. At that time there was a great demand for sugar in the United States. There was already in existence a corporation known as the Cuban Atlantic Transport Corporation, the stock in which was held by Garcia, Guidera, and James, who severally agreed to supply the sugar, the necessary coal barges, and the coal. In reliance upon their representations, it was agreed that the transport corporation would convey all its assets, subject to liabilities, to a new corporation. Pursuant to that agreement, a new corporation, the Cuban-Atlantic [517]*517Transportation Company, was organized, with a capitalization of $500,000 first preferred stock, $150,000 second preferred stoek, and 20,000 shares of common stoek without par value. For the purpose of providing a site for the proposed terminal and warehouse, the terminal corporation conveyed to the Cuban-Atlantie Transportation Company the 75 acres of land in question, and was to receive as consideration for its deed all the second preferred stock and all the common stoek, out of which it expected to realize $170,000.

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Bluebook (online)
18 F.2d 515, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 1997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burrage-v-smith-ca5-1927.