Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Forest Park & C. R.

65 F. 882, 13 C.C.A. 186, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2271
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 2, 1895
DocketNo. 115
StatusPublished

This text of 65 F. 882 (Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Forest Park & C. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Forest Park & C. R., 65 F. 882, 13 C.C.A. 186, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2271 (8th Cir. 1895).

Opinion

CALDWELL, Circuit Judge.

This suit was. begun on the 13th day of October, 1887, by the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company of New York,, appellant, against the Forest Park & Central Railroad Company, the St. Louis, Kansas City & Colorado Railroad Company, and others, to foreclose a mortgage executed by the Forest [883]*883Park & Central Railroad Company to the appellant. The suit was instituted by the appellant, who was trustee in the mortgage, at the inquest of J. K. O. Shenvood, the holder of 79 of the bonds mentioned in the mortgage. The following is a brief summary of the facts giving rise to the suit: On October 2, 1877, the Forest Park & Central Railroad Company, hereafter called the “Park Company,” was incorporated under the general law for the formation of railroad companies in Missouri, for the purpose of building a railroad from Union avenue, between the north, line of Forest park and the Olive Street: road, to some point on Academy lane, in Central township, St. Louis county, Mo.; the length of the road to he six miles, and the capital stock $50,000. On the 7th of November, 1881, there was filed in the office of the secretary of state an amendment to this charter, authorizing this company to extend its line from Academy lane, westwardly across the north end of Oreve Coeur Lake, to a point on the Missouri river, a distance of about twelve miles, and to extend its line from its then eastern terminus, in an easterly direction, a distance of about four miles, to the tracks of the Union Depot, in St. Louis. On April 27, 1880, the Park Company exhausted its power to mortgage its property by executing a mortgage for $50,000, the full amount of its capital stock, to secure that amount of its first mortgage bonds. On March 31, 1882, the stockholders passed the following resolution on the subject of the increase of the capital stock of the company:

“Resolved (1) that the capital stock of tlie Forest Park and Central R. R. Company shall be increased to one million dollars; and resolved (2) that the bonded indebtedness of said company shall he increased to seven hundred thousand dollars, but subject to the understanding and condition that said stock and bonds shall, when issued, be placed in the hands of \V. Speed Stevens, Booneville, Mo., and L. M, Rosson, of New York City, to hold and control for the interest of the parties interested in said road, with power to' name the trustees for the bonds, and shall not otherwise be issued. The board of directors and proper officers of the railroad company axe authorized to issue said stock and bonds in the manner aforesaid.”

Mo other steps were then taken to make this increase of stock effectual. The date and amount of the increase was not certified’ to the secretary of state, as required by section 72!) of the Revised-Statutes of Missouri, and the tax required by section 708 to be paid into the state trea.sury before any increase in the capital stock of a corporation “shall be valid and effectual” was not: paid. The' record shows no meeting of the stockholders subsequent to the passage of this resolution. On the !)th day of January, 1883, the Park Company, by John F. iiume, its president, executed a mortgage to the appellant to secure an issue of 700 of its mortgage bonds, for the sum of $1,000 each, “all dated the 1st day of March,' 1882. ” This mortgage not proving satisfactory, another mortgage' for like purposes and similarly conditioned was executed and acknowledged on the 18th day of August, 1883, by William W. Walker, as president of the company, and filed for record on the 19th day of September, 1883. On the 23d day of February, 1883, the Park Company entered info a contract with the same William W. Walker for the construction of 23 miles of its road, -agreeing to [884]*884pay Mm therefor $700,000 in first mortgage bonds, and $1,000,000 of the full-paid stock of the company. At the date of its execution, Walker assigned this contract to the Missouri & Kansas Railroad Construction Company of Colorado, hereafter called the “Construction Company.” The Construction Company sublet the work, or a part of it, to subcontractors. The estimates of the work performed and materials furnished by these .subcontractors — and no other work was done by the Construction Company — amounted to something over $30,000. There was paid on these estimates only the sum of $2,245.34. The subcontractors filed mechanics’ liens on the property, and in February and April, 1S84, judgments were rendered, establishing these liens for sums aggregating $38,277.20, and decreeing the sale of the property to satisfy the same. The Park Company alone was made a defendant in these suits. Under processes issued upon these judgments, the road was duly sold to Dyer & Garland, and afterwards, by mesne conveyances, the title passed in 1884 to the St. Louis, Kansas City & Colorado Railroad Company, hereafter called the “Colorado Company.” After its purchase of the property, the Colorado Company completed the road from Clayton, west to Creve Coeur Lake, in July, 1886, a distance of 16 miles, and by 1887 hod extended it to Union, Franklin county, a further distance of 40 miles. The cost to the Colorado Company of constructing the road — excluding the cost of the right of way— from Clayton to Union was $2,300,000, all of which was expended between June, 1884, and July, 1887. The Park Company and all parties having any interest in the mortgage in suit knew that the Colorado Company was constructing and extending the road as stated, but set up no claim under the mortgage until after the road had been completed, and not then until the amendment to the charter had been filed in the office of the secretary of state and the fees required by law on the increased capital stock paid. Two hundred bonds only were certified and issued under the mortgage in suit, and they were delivered on the order of Walker, as president of the Park Company, to John F. Hume and Nathan Frank. Hume became a director of the Park Company March 31, 1882, and has continued to be such, and was the president of the company from March 31, 1882, until January 7, 1883, when he was succeeded in that office by Walker. Nathan Frank was “the financial agent of the Forest Park & Central Railroad Company, and of the Missouri & Kansas Railroad Construction Company.” There seems to have been no market for the bond’s mentioned in the mortgage in suit except at merely nominal figures; and the Park Company, being unable to raise the funds to pay the contractor or subcontractors for the work done, which amounted to less than $40,000, abandoned the enterprise. The 200 bonds which were issued were required, by the resolution of the stockholders which provided for the increase of the capital stock of the company, to “be placed in the hands of W. Speed Stevens, of Booneville, Mo., and L. M. Losson, of New York City, to hold and control for the interest of the parties interested in said road, with power to name the trustees for such bonds, and shall not otherwise be issued;” [885]*885This requirement of the resolution was not observed. Without tracing in detail the facts connected with the issue and disposition of these 200 bonds, the evidence in the record satisfies us that all of the parties who handled these bonds, including the owner of the 70 bonds, at whose request this foreclosure suit was instituted, had “full knowledge of all the foregoing facts at and before the time they acquired the bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
65 F. 882, 13 C.C.A. 186, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-loan-trust-co-v-forest-park-c-r-ca8-1895.