Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Memphis & C. R.

83 F. 870, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2890
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 10, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 83 F. 870 (Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Memphis & C. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee 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. Memphis & C. R., 83 F. 870, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2890 (circtwdtn 1897).

Opinion

LURTON, Circuit Judge.

This is a bill under which it is sought to foreclose a mortgage styled the “First Consolidated Mortgage” of the Memphis & Charleston Railroad Company. It was intended that two older series of bonds would be retired by bonds secured hereunder. In part this has been done, though not altogether. It is therefore sought to sell subject to the lien of the senior outstanding mortgages. This consolidated mortgage was made August 20, 1877, to secure an issue of bonds aggregating $4,700,000. Of these only $2,264,000 have been actually issued. The remainder are in the hands of the trustee, and held for the purpose of taking up outstanding first and second mortgage bonds. These consolidated bonds mature January 1, 1915, and have annexed coupons for interest, pay[871]*871able eac-b recurring six months. The case comes on now to be heard upon the pleadings and proof, and a final decree of foreclosure is soughi. both for principal and interest. The right to such a decree is predicated upon a default in the payment of interest accruing July 1, 1891, January 1, 1894, July 1, 1894, January 1, 1895, and July 1, 1895; this bill having been filed August 2,1895.

The bill particularly alleges (hat demand bad been made for the payment of the interest accruing July 1, 1893, and that payment was refused; that this default continued for more than 60 days after such demand; that thereupon holders of more than one-third in value of the outstanding bonds had, by' an instrument in writing, filed with the trustee, elected that (he principal of the said bonds should immediately' become payable, and requiring the trustee; to foreclose the mortgage. This precipitation of the maturity of the principal of the bonds is claimed or assorted by virtue of the first proviso of the mortgage, which is in these words:

“In case default shall at any time be made by the party of the first part in the due and punctual payment of any installment of semiannual interest at any time becoming due and payable upon any of the said bonds within the aggregate amount of forty-seven hundred thousand dollars, issued under the security of this mortgage, as aforesaid, and if any such interest shall remain in arrear and unpaid for sixty days after demand thereof, then, and in such case, if, and when thereafter, the holders at the time being of one-third in amount of the then outstanding bonds issued under and entitled to the benefit of tlie security of this mortgage shall, by instrument or instruments executed by them respectively, or their attorneys in fact thereto duly authorized, and delivered to the party of tlie second part, or its successor or successors, as trustees hereunder, so elect, the principal sum secured by and payable upon all and singular the said bonds, within tlie aggregate amount of forty-seven hundred thousand dollars, issued under the security of this mortgage as aforesaid, with all arrears of interest thereon, shall become immediately due and payable, although the time for the payment of said principal originally stipulated in said bonds shall not yet; have arrived: anything in the said several bonds contained to the contrary notwithstanding.”

Every important averment of this bill is put in issue both by the Memphis & Charleston Railroad Company and the Central Trust Company of Yew York, which is made a defendant to the bill as trastee under a mortgage junior to the consolidated mortgage. The principal objection urged against a decree of foreclosure; for the principal of the mortgage debt turns upon the authority of one D. Willis James to sign "the declaration of maturity for his wife, who owned four bonds of §1,000 (Rich, and for two brothers, each owning twenty bonds of $1,000 each. Mr. James signed the names of his wife and brothers by himself as attorney. The defendants say that be was not the “attorney in fact thereto duly authorized” of the said signers, and that, if these names be eliminated, a valid election by one-third in value of all outstanding bonds has not been declared, it clearly appears that Mr. James bad a general parol authority from his wife and brothers to act for them as he deemed best in respect to the management and disposition of these securities. But it is also admitted that he had no written letter of attorney particularly authorizing him to do this act. That these persons owned the bonds for which tlieir names are signed is sufficiently made out by the general statement to that effect in Mr. James’ deposition. Being [872]*872wholly undisputed, we see no reason for inquiring into the source of his information. After the'filing of this bill, these persons, in writing, formally confirmed and ratified the act of D. Willis James in maldng the declaration of maturity now in question. If the legal effect of this ratification is to put the agent in same position as if he had had authority to do the act when done, there is no necessity for considering the question at the bar as to the meaning of the provision in the mortgage touching the election of holders of bonds through “attorneys in fact thereto duly authorized.” The general doctrine in respect of the -ratification of the acts of one assuming without authority to act for another is that a subsequent “ratification operates upon the act ratified precisely as though the authority to do the act had been previously given.” Cook v. Tullis, 8 Wall. 338. “In short,” says Justice Story, “the act is treated throughout as if it were originally authorized by the principal, for the ratification relates back to the time of the inception of the transaction, and has a complete retroactive efficacy, or, as the maxim expresses it, ‘Omnis ratihabitio retrotrahitur.’” Storv. Ag. § 244. The principle is clearly stated in the well-considered case of Wilson v. Tumman, 6 Man. & G. 236, where it is said:

“An act done for another by a person not assuming to act for bimself, but for such other person, though without any precedent authority whatever, becomes the act of the principal, if subsequently ratified by him. In such case the principal is bound by the act, whether it be for his detriment or advantage, and whether it be founded on a tort or on contract, to the same extent, and with all the same consequences, which follow from the same act done by his previous authority.”

Counsel for defendants seek to take this case without the general effect of ratification by an application of the not very clear statement of a limitation found in section 246 of Story on Agency, where it is said that third persons will not be bound by the retrospective consequences of ratification “if the act done by such person would, if authorized, create a right to have some act or duty performed by a third person, so as to subject him to damages or losses for the nonperformance of that act or duty, or would defeat a right or an estate already vested in the latter.” This limitation is evidently deduced from such cases as Buron v. Denman, 2 Exch. 167, Right v. Cuthell, 5 East, 491, and Mann v. Walters, 10 Barn. & C. 626. These were cases of notices given of the determination of leases by unauthorized persons assuming to be agents of the landlord. That Judge Story bases his text upon that class of cases is not only evident from the cases cited in the notes to the text, but from the stronger fact that he illustrates the meaning of an otherwise cloudy statement by the illustration:

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

Related

Yaeger v. Giguerre
23 N.W.2d 22 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1946)
In re Tidewater Coal Exchange
274 F. 1011 (S.D. New York, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 F. 870, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-loan-trust-co-v-memphis-c-r-circtwdtn-1897.