Dakota Trust Co. v. Lucky Strike Coal Co.

215 N.W. 89, 55 N.D. 593, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 140
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 215 N.W. 89 (Dakota Trust Co. v. Lucky Strike Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dakota Trust Co. v. Lucky Strike Coal Co., 215 N.W. 89, 55 N.D. 593, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 140 (N.D. 1927).

Opinion

Birdzell, Ch. J.

This is an action to foreclose a trust deed given to the plaintiff by the Lucky Strike Coal Company. On March 25, 1921, the board of directors of the coal company passed a resolution authorizing the execution of a deed to secure an issue, of $50,000 of bonds. The deed was executed on March 25, 1921, and recorded April 13, 1921. It refers to and describes the obligations to be secured by it, reciting that the coal company is indebted to the holders of the indebtedness described in the principal sum of $50,000 as evidenced by 260 gold notes bearing even date, all maturing on September 25, 1921, payable in gold coin but providing that the notes may be paid by *596 the coal company by delivering to the holders a like amount of the first series of bonds maturing-years from date. The form of the note is contained in the deed and is as follows:

Gold Note
Lucky Strike Coal Company Bismarck, N. D.
Dakota Trust Company, Trustee.
Total Issue, $50,000.
Bismarck, North Dakota, March 25, 1921.

On or before September 25, 1921, without grace and for value received, the Lucky Strike Coal Company, a North Dakota corporation, promises to pay to the bearer thereof, at the office of the Dakota Trust Company, in Fargo, North Dakota, One Hundred Dollars, ($100) in gold coin of the United States of its present standard of weight and fineness, with interest thereon at the rate oi^ eight per cent (8%), pei annum: Provided, however, the maker hereof reserves the right to make such payment in bonds and hereby specially agrees to make the same by the delivery to the holder hereof, of a like amount of the First Series of Bonds of the said Lucky Strike Coal Company maturing -years from the date hereof and drawing interest at the rate of eight per cent (8%), per annum, payable semi-annually, and paying the holder hereof the accrued interest hereon from the date of this note to the date of said bonds.

This note is one of a series of notes numbered from 1 to 260, both inclusive, of even date herewith, issued by said Company, aggregating the total sum of Fifty Thousand ($50,000) Dollars and all ratably, secured by a mortgage upon the property of said Company, duly recorded, given to the Dakota Trust Company of Fargo, North Dakota, as Trustee, to secure the payment thereof.

This note shall not be valid until the certificate of authentication endorsed hereon shall be attested by the signature of the President or Vice President of the Trustee above named.

Lucky Strike Coal Company,
Attest: By.............. President.
................Secretary.

*597 Subsequent to the deed notes or bonds to the amount .of $7,700 were issued and sold either for money or for goods delivered and services rendered. (These bonds were referred to in the trial court as class 1 bonds, while others are referred to as class 2 and class 3 bonds, and they will be so designated here.) The intervener, Mary H. Anders, became the owner of $4,300 worth of these class 1 obligations. It was found that the bonds did not sell readily, whereupon the manager of the company approved a change in their terms which would make them fall due in November instead of September and which would strike out the provisions for refunding through first series bonds. $9,900' worth of these bonds were sold. They are referred to as class 2 bonds. All of the remainder of the bonds, $31,400, were found to have been issued to secure pre-existing indebtedness of the company. These are designated as class 3 bonds. In addition to the obligations evidenced by the various bonds, some forty miners filed liens aggregating approximately $12,000. There is also a judgment in favor of the Bismarck Bank. The trial court in its judgment directed the foreclosure of the mortgage, declaring bonds of classes 1 and 2 to be valid and of class 3 to be invalid. Judgment was rendered for $25,445.66, principal and interest, plus $2,396.21 trustee’s expenses and compensation and, in addition, for costs and disbursement*. A sale of the property was ordered, with the proceeds to be applied, after payment of costs, expenses, disbursements and compensation, to the payment of the first and second class bonds. The miner’s lien of John Powell, which was filed in September, 1921, was held to be subordinate to the lien of the trust deed but superior to the liens of the other miners, which were all filed in the following year. The judgment lien of the Bismarck Bank is held inferior to the lien of the trust deed and to that of Powell, blit superior to the other miners’ liens.

Prom this judgment, the intervener, Mary II. Anders, has appealed, and contends that the court erred in holding class 2 bonds to be secured on a parity with class 1. Mercer county, Nettie Ilayes and the numerous defendants owning miners’ liens have appealed and likewise attack the judgment in so far as it admits class 2 bonds to share in the proceeds of the sale on an equality with class 1. There is also a specification that the court erred in holding one of these liens, that of John Powell, in the sum of $98.64, filed September Í4, 1921, to *598 be subordinate, and in holding all the other miners’ liens filed at later dates to be inferior to the liens of the second class bondholders.

The Marshall Malaise Lumber Company, Margaret N. Farr, and Lloyd C. Quinn, being owners of bonds of the third class, also appeal from the judgment, specifying error upon the findings of the trial court to the effect that the notes held by them were not delivered to them or their predecessors in interest for value, but were delivered as collateral security for pre-existing indebtedness.

Thus, there is presented for our consideration, first, questions of the validity of the bonds, and, second, priority of the liens. Considering, first, the appeal of the intervener, Mary H. Anders, are the bonds of the second class invalid or not entitled to share in the security on an equality with her first class bonds? The due date, September 25th, is stricken out and over it is written November 1st. The paragraph under which the maker reserved the right to pay in long term bonds is stricken out entirely. Hence, these bonds of the second class are in reality short term notes falling due November 1, 1921, instead of September 25, 1921, and without the privilege of redemption by the issuance of first series bonds. Each note, however, recites that it is one of a series numbered from 1 to 260 of even date, aggregating the total sum of $50,000, all secured by a mortgage given to the Dakota Trust Company and that it is not to be valid until authenticated by the signature of the president or vice president of the trustee. It bears a certificate of authentication as of March 25, 1921; likewise, a certificate of registration as of a later date. The appellant Anders, while making no contention that these bonds are not secured by thd mortgage, argues that they are necessarily inferior and siibsequent to the lien of her unaltered bonds.

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

Related

Scherk v. Newton
152 F.2d 747 (Tenth Circuit, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 N.W. 89, 55 N.D. 593, 1927 N.D. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dakota-trust-co-v-lucky-strike-coal-co-nd-1927.