Claflin v. South Carolina R.

8 F. 118
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 8 F. 118 (Claflin v. South Carolina R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claflin v. South Carolina R., 8 F. 118 (circtdsc 1880).

Opinion

Waitts, Chief Justice.

This is a suit in equity by holders of bonds of the South Carolina Railroad Company, secured by what is known as the second mortgage, to foreclose that mortgage, subject to the lion of prior encumbrances. It naturally divides itself into six parts, which, for convenience, will be considered separately. They are: (1) The first mortgage; (2) the second mortgage; (3) the syndicate; (4) the sales of parts of the mortgaged property; (5) the attachments in Georgia; (6) the wharf property.

3. As to the first mortgage :

The original name of the South Carolina Railroad Company was the Louisville, Cincinnati & Charleston Railroad Company. In that name, and under the authority of an act of the general assembly of South Carolina, passed December 12,1837, the company issued bonds, payable part in London and part in Charleston, to the amount of .•£■150,000, which fell due January 1, 1866. The payment of these bonds, principal and interest, was guarantied by the state, and secured by statutory mortgage to the state on all the property and funds of the company in South Carolina. The name of the company was changed in 1843, and thereafter it was known as the South Carolina Railroad Company. In 1865 it became apparent that these bonds could not be met at maturity. Accordingly the general assembly of the state, on the twenty-first of December, 1865, passed another act, petitioned for by the company, authorizing the issue of other sterling bonds for the principal and interest of the first, and to be substituted for them. As the substitution was made the new bonds were to be guarantied by the state, and this guaranty was to have the effect of continuing the original statutory mortgage in force the same as if no change had been made. Some exchanges were effected under this authority, but, on the whole, the scheme was a failure. In addition to the bonds thus put out, the company was in debt for other bonds, issued in 1849, amounting in all to $175,000, which wore to fall due, some on the first of January and some on the first of October, 1868. Under these circumstances, after negotiation with the bondholders, it was—

[120]*120“ Deemed advisable, for the better securing of the said debts, that all the said bonds should be delivered up and cane elled, and new bonds issued in substitution thereof; the payment of said bonds to be secured by a mortgage to trustees of the estaté, real and persona], of the * * * company, including therein all the real and personal property * * * situate within the limits of the state of Georgia, and not includ ed in the statutory mortgage created by tile act 'of 1867.”

Thereupon the company—

“Resolved to execute its bonds, payable in London, for an amount not exceeding in the aggregate the sum of £543,500, * * * to be dated on the first day of January, A. D. 1868, and to be payable to bearer, with interest thereon at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually, * * * on the presentation of the proper coupons at the office of Messrs. Dent, Palmer & Co., in the city of London, * * * which said bonds shall be substituted for the sterling bonds now outstanding and payable in London.”

The company also—

“ Resolved to execute certain other bonds, not exceeding in the aggregate the sum of £76,500, * * * to be dated on the first day of January, A. D. 1868, and to be payable to bearer, with interest at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually, * * * on the presentation of the proper coupons at the office of the * * * company, in the city of Charleston, * * * which said bonds shall be substituted for the sterling bonds * * * payable in Charleston.”

It was also—

“Resolved to substitute for the bonds issued in the year 1849, and payable in currency of the United States, * * * or to apply to the satisfaction of said bonds, upon such terms as may be agreed upon, the sterling bonds to be issued as hereinbefore provided for, so as to retire all the said bonds now payable in currency of the United States.”
“To secure the true and punctual payment of the said bonds, * * * the company * * * resolved to pledge and mortgage to .the-[trustees named] all the real estate, wherever situate, which is now owned or may hereafter be acquired by the said company, and all the rolling stock and other personal property used, or necessary, in the operating of said railway.”

In accordance with this scheme, bonds, with a mortgage to secure them, to the full amount of ¿6620,000, were executed by the company, and certified by the mortgage trustees. Provision was made in the 'mortgage for a substitution of bonds “payable in lawful money of the United,'States, with interest not exceeding 7 per cent, per annum,” for the new sterling bonds provided for, “upon terms to be agreed upon by and between said company and the bondholders desiring such substitution;” but the pound sterling on all payments of sterling bonds, or the interest thereon made in Charleston, was “to be estimated at four dollars and forty-four and four-ninths cents.”

[121]*121All the old issues of bonds have been taken up by exchange or otherwise, and cancelled, except—

{1) Guarantied Louisville, Cincinnati & Charleston sterling bonds, - . £16,050
(2) Guarantied South Carolina sterling bonds, ... £8,000
(8) Bonds of J 819, Nos. 191, 192, 193, - - - @1,500
(4) Guarantied South Carolina sterling bonds, pledged to E. L. Trenholm in 1870, - - - - - £5,400
(5) One other bond of same character, (No. 463,) - £600
Against this the receiver now holds bonds originally put into the hands of the London agents for exchange, and which have not been used for that purpose, - £24,450
Currency bonds in the possession of and owned by the company when this suit was begun, - - - - - $2,000

It is conceded that there are now outstanding in the hands of bona fide holders, and entitled to the benefit of the mortgage security—

New sterling bonds, ------ £309,550
New currency bonds, ------ @1,114,000

The same is true of items 1, 2, and 8 in the statement above, •showing the unretired bonds of the old issues.

It is also conceded that £620,000 was more than the old debt. If all the old bonds had been out when the new were issued, their aggregate, principal and interest, would not have reached this sum. They were not, however, all out. Some had been taken up by the company before that time; and it is apparent, from the evidence, that an issue of the whole amount of £620,000 would leave a surplus of $400,000 and more, after fully providing for what were left outstanding. All the bonds of the now issue are now outstanding except such as are held by the receiver. No questions are raised as to any save the following:

(1) Amount pledged to several creditors of the company as security for moneys loaned, outstanding in the hands of the pledgees, October 1,1872, when the second mortgage was made, - @114,000
(2) Amount pledged to O. II. Manson as security, January 19, 1877, @20,000
(8) Amount pledged to 13. F.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claflin-v-south-carolina-r-circtdsc-1880.