California Gas & Elec. Corp. v. Union Tr. Co. of S.F.

172 P. 146, 178 Cal. 65, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 414
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1918
DocketS. F. No. 7518. In Bank.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 172 P. 146 (California Gas & Elec. Corp. v. Union Tr. Co. of S.F.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Gas & Elec. Corp. v. Union Tr. Co. of S.F., 172 P. 146, 178 Cal. 65, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 414 (Cal. 1918).

Opinion

*67 MELVIN, J.

Plaintiffs sued under the provisions of section 1050 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to obtain a decree determining certain adverse claims made by defendant as trustee so created by the provisions of a certain “Unifying and Refunding Mortgage.” Dissatisfied with the amount of the defendant’s recovery under the terms of the judgment, plaintiffs appeal, asking for a modification of the said judgment. The appeal is upon the judgment-roll alone, and all of the questions involved in the controversy pertain to and involve an interpretation of the “sinking fund” provisions of the “Unifying and Refunding Mortgage.”

In 1908, California Gas and Electric Corporation executed to defendant as trustee its “Unifying and Refunding Mortgage” supporting a bond issue of forty-five million dollars. This mortgage was subordinate to and subject to the lien of a prior mortgage executed by the California Gas and Electric Corporation and seventeen other earlier mortgages given respectively by predecessors in estate of the California Gas and Electric Corporation to secure the payment of bonds, the face value of which outstanding and unmatured then amounted to more than thirty million dollars. In the briefs these prior mortgages and bonds are respectively designated by the adjective “Underlying,” and we shall employ that term in this opinion.

In section 1 of article nine of the unifying and refunding mortgage the California Gas and Electric Corporation agrees, among other things, that it “will create and maintain a sinking fund, to be specially applied to the purchase, redemption, and payment of the underlying bonds and of the bonds issued under this Indenture on or before their maturity, and for that purpose will pay to the Trustee on the first day of November, 1912, and on the same day in each and every year thereafter to and including 1916, the sum of $450,000.” There is, however, the following proviso in article nine, most important in view of the fact that all of the questions involved in this litigation arise from disagreements as to its proper interpretation: “The California Corporation shall have the right to deduct from any such annual payment to be made by it on account of the sinking fund herein provided all sums paid by it during the year next preceding the date when such sinking fund payment is payable, on account of the sinking funds required to be created and *68 maintained under the respective mortgages securing the payment of the underlying bonds, upon filing with the Trustee satisfactory receipts or other evidence showing the making of such payments.”

The unifying and refunding mortgage also contained a separate and distinct covenant that the California Gas and Electric Corporation would pay all underlying bonds and the interest thereon.

At the time of the execution of the unifying and refunding mortgage there were eight of the underlying mortgages containing explicit and undoubted requirements for the creation and maintenánee of sinking funds. Of these eight, two have been satisfied and released. Two of the remaining six mortgages containing unequivocal provisions for sinking funds were so treated with reference thereto that no controversy arises over them. In each of the four remaining underlying mortgages were provisions by which the mortgagor covenanted that it would make an annual payment of a specified amount into a sinking fund; that money in this fund might be applied by the trustee to the redemption of bonds secured by the mortgage; that bonds so acquired should be deemed to be outstanding and continue to bear interest; that such interest should become part of the sinking fund; that the trustee might, upon certain conditions, invest the sinking funds in securities other than those covered by the mortgage; and that the income derived from such investments in outside securities should become a part of the sinking fund.

The first mortgage of the Sacramento Electric Gas and Railway Company (one of the underlying mortgages) contained a provision that required the mortgagor during a period of years including that covered by the controversy herein, to call in each year or to provide the trustee with funds to purchase twenty of the bonds of the par value of one thousand dollars each. These were to be immediately canceled. One of the controversies here involved is the assertion of appellants and the denial of respondent that this provision really amounted to a requirement for the creation and maintenance of a sinking fund.

None of the other underlying mortgages contains any provision for a sinking fund.

*69 The trustee named in all of the underlying mortgages with which we are concerned here was the Mercantile Trust Company of San Francisco.

On or about January 28, 1908, California Gas and Electric Corporation conveyed to its coplaintiff herein, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, all of its property, and the latter assumed all of the former’s obligations. Hereafter in this opinion we shall refer to the latter corporation as “Pacific Company” and will omit the qualification, understood in each instance, that it was acting as successor of its grantor.

This litigation is confined to transactions during the two years from November 1, 1911, to October 31, 1913. During each of these years the Pacific Company paid four hundred and fifty thousand dollars to defendant under the terms of its trust, and this action was for credits against said payments on account of alleged payments into sinking funds of trustees administering underlying mortgages. During the first of these years the Pacific Company paid large sums as interest on underlying bonds to the Mercantile Trust Company, including $79,515 interest upon bonds held in the sinking funds created pursuant to four of the mortgages which we have described above. And in the following year the amount of interest paid by the Pacific Company on bonds held in these sinking funds was $87,075. It is asserted by the Pacific Company and denied by respondent that these were payments “on account of sinking funds.” Respondent insists that they were mere payments of interest under that part of the unifying and refunding mortgage requiring the Pacific Company’s predecessor to pay interest on all bonds included within the purview of the underlying mortgages.

During each of said years the Pacific Company paid twenty thousand dollars to the trustee, Mercantile Trust Company, for the redemption and cancellation of bonds of the Sacramento Electric Gas and Railway Company. It is asserted by appellants and denied by respondent that these were likewise payments ‘1 on account of a sinking fund. ’ ’

Another point of dispute arose as follows: After the execution of the unifying and refunding mortgage the Pacific Company acquired and assumed all the obligations of four other companies—San Francisco Gas and Electric Company, Pacific Gas Improvement Company, Mutual Electric Company, and Suburban Light and Power Company. These *70 four corporations had executed mortgages, and the trustee of some other underlying mortgages had invested part of their sinking funds in some -of the bonds secured by the four mortgages.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Redondo
19 Cal. App. 4th 1428 (California Court of Appeal, 1993)
Keene v. Keene
371 P.2d 329 (California Supreme Court, 1962)
Brown v. J. P. Morgan & Co.
177 Misc. 626 (New York Supreme Court, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 P. 146, 178 Cal. 65, 1918 Cal. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-gas-elec-corp-v-union-tr-co-of-sf-cal-1918.