Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Central Trust Co.

69 S.E. 708, 135 Ga. 472, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 7
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 14, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 708 (Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Central Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central of Georgia Railway Co. v. Central Trust Co., 69 S.E. 708, 135 Ga. 472, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 7 (Ga. 1910).

Opinion

Evans, P. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

In its last analysis this is an action to recover interest which the second and third preference income bondholders, through their respective trustees, claim was applicable to such purpose from the income of the railway company for the fiscal'year 1907, according to- the contract between the railway company and the trustees, as contained in the bonds and the mortgages given to secure their payment. As the bonds and mortgages of the two series of income bonds are identical in form and terms, and differ only in giving preference in payment to the second over the third, we will discuss the questions raised as if there were but one case. Indeed, the two cases were consolidated and tried as one case in the trial court. The bond and mortgage constitute the contract between the complaining bondholders and the railway company, and the rights of the former and the obligations of the latter are controlled solely by a construction of the contract in its application to the issues made by the pleadings.

It is élementary law that in the interpretation of written contracts courts should diligently examine the whole instrument to ascertain the intention of the parties, and, if the contract is not ambiguous, that intention must be found within the four corners of the instrument. The mortgage begins with a recital that the mortgaging railway company is possessed of all the charter powers [479]*479of the old Central Railroad and Banking ComjDany of Georgia (which corporation formerly owned substantially all of the property mortgaged), and that by virtue of its charter it possessed full power to purchase, lease, and operate other lines of railroad and also to own and run steamboats and vessels to facilitate the business operations of the mortgagor; and that in pursuance of such powers the mortgagor, besides owning the main and branch line of the old corporation, had contracted for and purchased additional lines described in the mortgage. It was further recited that it was necessary for the mortgagor to borrow a large sum of money “which is and will be required to purchase and pay for the title to such main line of railroad and branch, and to pay for other railroads, leaseholds, steamship stocks, bonds, and other properties hereinbefore specified,” and to execute and issue bonds for the loans, and to secure their payment “by mortgages upon its railroads, stocks, bonds, property, and franchises, and the income thereof.” It was further recited that the board of directors, with the unanimous approval of the stockholders, were empowered in the name of the mortgagor to execute a mortgage on all railroads, equipment, stock, etc., to secure the payment of income bonds for a stated sum, “with interest thereon at the rate of not exceeding five per cent, in any one fiscal year, . . only out of the net income and earnings of such railroad and other properties, available for such^purpose . . on the first day of October in each year and when declared on such terms as are provided in the mortgage securing such bonds.” A form of the bonds was incorporated in the mortgage, which contained an obligation to pay the principal of the bond, “with interest thereon from November 1st, 1895, at a rate not exceeding five per cent, in any one fiscal year, . • . ' on October 1st of each year, when declared to be earned and due. Such interest is non-cumulative and shall be payable only out of the net earnings and income of the said Railway Company applicable for such purpose, when 'and as the same shall be ascertained and fixed‘for each preceding fiscal year in the manner and upon the conditions provided in the mortgage securing these presents.” The mortgage recited that it was executed “to secure equally the payment of the principal and interest of all such bonds at any time outstanding and lawfully issued,” and covered all the railroad, estates, rights, etc., as described therein (subject to a first mortgage of $7,000,000 upon the main [480]*480line, a first mortgage of $1,000,000 on the Mobile division, a first mortgage of $>840,000 upon the Macon and Northern division, a consolidated mortgage of $18,500,000 and first income-preference mortgage of $4,000,000); also all future acquired lines of railroad and all “franchises, properties real or personal, which the railway eompany may or shall hereafter possess, or become entitled to possess, for the purpose of or in connection with said lines of railway or any branch or leased or separate line/5 and also certain stocks including 19,950 shares of the capital stock of the Ocean Steamship Company (which stock was in possession of the Central Trust Company and held by it under the terms of a prior mortgage executed by the Central Railroad and Banking Company of Georgia to secure outstanding bonds), and 2,800 shares of preferred stock and ten shares of common stock pf the YTightsville and Tennille Railroad Compan}r. The mortgage,contained many other provisions, including those set out in the statement of facts and noted as paragraph 8 in the mortgage. This paragraph contains a carefully prepared enumeration of items to be employed in the computation of net earnings' and income applicable to the payment of interest on the income bonds.

One of the main points of difference between the litigants is the extent of the limitation on the directors5 discretion in managing the corporation, imposed by the words, “cost of repairs, renewals, and reasonable betterments to the railroad equipment and property for its economical and efficient operation.55 The trustees for the income bondholders insist that these words debar the directors of the railway company from using its income and earnings in making payment for additions or permanent betterments, to the prejudice of the income bondholders. The railway company contends,'that the mortgage is not a contract to pajr interest, but is a contract to pay the principal of the bonds absolutely, and from time to time, to-use, for the payment of interest (not to exceed five per cent.), available funds the maximum of which shall be measured by the net income of the railway company as defined in the mortgage; that the various provisions of the mortgage amount to no more than an agreement to pay dividends if earned, and the directors5 discretion in using the earnings of the company was not intended to be so curtailed that the physical properties could not be expanded and developed so as to meet the requirements of the- growth of the country, [481]*481the increase of business, the competition of new roads; and that it was not intended that the corporation should be fettered in the preservation of its financial independence and in the discharge of its obligations to the public.

Every contract possesses its own individuality, which must be observed in its interpretation. When these income bonds were issued, it is manifest that the obligor and obligee regarded it to their mutual advantage to enter into this form of contract. The obligor promised to pay not only the principal sum, but also interest thereon at a-rate not exceeding five per cent, in any one fiscal.year, when declared to be earned and due according to a carefully prepared plan for the ascertainment of a fund out of which it was payable. The-mortgage unequivocally declares that it was executed “to secure-equally the payment of the principal and interest of all such bonds.”The issuance of the income bonds was something more than a-pledge of the good faith of the corporation that interest was to be' paid if earned; it amounted to something more than an agreement' to pay dividends if dividends were earned.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 708, 135 Ga. 472, 1910 Ga. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-of-georgia-railway-co-v-central-trust-co-ga-1910.