Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co.

181 F. 575, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5596

This text of 181 F. 575 (Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York 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. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co., 181 F. 575, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5596 (circtsdny 1910).

Opinion

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

The complainant (and its predecessor) brought suit to foreclose mortgage of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company to Morton Trust Company dated March 21, 1902. A large part of the property covered by this mortgage was already subject to a mortgage by the same railway company to Guaranty Trust Company, upon which suit has been brought and decree of foreclosure and sale entered. Foreclosure suit under the Morton Trust mortgage being prosecuted to final decree, and the property being described in separate lots in the form of decree submitted for signature, this court held:

“As to lots 13 to 18 Inclusive it is questionable whether they are covered by this mortgage. That question should be first determined, and thereafter such items as are found to be covered can be disposed of at supplementary sale where bondholders will have abundant opportunity to buy them in. A mere reference to the description of these items, which consists merely of numerous claims and choses in action against various persons and a few bonds, indicates that their possession is in no way necessary to the operation of the unitary railway system. There is no reason why the court should delay disposing of that system and securing relief from its further operation merely because the mortgagee contends that some of these claims are covered by its mortgage. It is not intended by this reservation to delay the disposition of these questions as to lots 13 to 18. A day will be named for hearing argument upon thorn, and decision as to all of the disputed items may reasonably be expected before the summer vacation.” Opinion filed May 31, 1910. 179 Fed. 1010.

[576]*576Sale under the first mortgage having been postponed, decision as to these lots can be filed in ample time. Complainant proposes an amendment to the decree in this suit, which would allow sale to take place without prejudice to the rights of any one and postpone the decision of all questions as to these lots to some later day. But these questions have been fully argued, and they may as well be disposed of now; there will presumably be enough other questions to occupy the court’s attention in the future. Moreover, if the present decision is of such a character that any one wishes to review.it, that can be done at the opening of the October term of the Circuit Court of Appeals; the cause being entitled to a preference.

Lot 14.

Lot 14 consists of:

“All the right, title and interest of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company in and to any and all claims and rights of action against the following street surface railroad companies, which accrued prior to March 21,1902 (the date of the mortgage), and are not hereinbefore included and directed to be sold as part of the property hereinbefore described and designated as lot one, viz.: Broadway & Seventh Avenue Railroad Company (and 18 other designated companies).”

Lot 1 includes (as subdivision 2):

“All claims, demands and rights of action whatsoever of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company or its receivers against the Broadway & Seventh Avenue Railroad Company arising out of or connected with the subject-matter of said lease (that is, the lease of the latter company to the Houston, West Street & Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company, to whose rights the Metropolitan Street Railway Company had succeeded).”

Lot 1 contains also similar clauses as to 7 more of the 18 other lessor companies, namely, Eighth Avenue, Forty-Second Street & Grand Street Ferry, Ninth Avenue, Sixth Avenue, Twenty-Third Street, Bleecker Street, and Fulton Ferry, New York & Harlem.

The claims against these lessor companies are for obligations arising under the contract of lease, mainly if not wholly for money expended by the lessee in betterments on the property leased such as the installation of electric motive power, etc. They arise out of or are connected with the sutiject-matter of the lease. Complainants contend that they are covered by the clause in the mortgage which enumerates:

“All and singular the railroads, railroad routes, estates, leaseholds, properties, rights, privileges and franchises described as follows, to wit, * * * together with all and singular the improvements on said properties and ail and singular the railroads, lands, buildings, structures, fixtures, privileges, franchises, rights of way, trackage rights, contracts, consents, leaseholds, easements and other rights and interests now owned by the railway company, * * * and also all maps, drawings, profiles, , licenses, records, deeds, contracts and agreements, patents and patented inventions, and processes now owned by the railway company.”

Complainant correctly states that all of the companies against which the claims enumerated in lot 14 existed were companies forming part of the railway system of the mortgagor covered by the mortgage to the complainant. All of them were leased to the mortgagor or operated under trackage agreements. All of these leases and agreements are ex[577]*577plicitly covered by the mortgage. In each case there was physical connection between the lines owned by the Metropolitan and the lines of each of the companies respectively. A car operated over the tracks owned by the mortgagor could have passed successively over the lines of every one of these companies without leaving the rails. The whole outfit constituted a unitary railway system which was covered by mortgage. The conclusion is equally correct that:

“Contracts under which any subsidiary company is liable to the Metropolitan for equipping or improving the property of such subsidiary company are unquestionably contracts in relation to the railroad system operated and mortgaged by the Metropolitan Company.”

The clause above, quoted from the mortgage, is a broad one, and the court is not persuaded that it should be narrowed so as to exclude claims arising against these lessor or subsidiary companies under the contracts which they made with the Metropolitan; it is sufficient limitation to hold that the mortgage covers only such as are limited to property or interests connected with the railroad system of the mortgagor. With such limitation the claims enumerated in lot 14 are covered by this mortgage. Some of these claims, however, are covered also by the mortgage to Guaranty Trust Company and are within the terms of the decree foreclosing that mortgage. They are also specifically enumerated in lot 1 as described in the decree in this suit, and should not be twice enumerated. Lot 14 should, therefore, be amended by striking out the claims under the eight leases listed in lot 1. What is left after such amendment should be sold with the other property covered by this mortgage.

Lot 17.

This lot includes:

“Any and all demands, claims, contracts, rights, Interests, notes, bonds, stocks, ckoses In action and all assets and property of every nature and description, real and personal, except cash in hand, including all interest of its receivers therein which belonged to or were of Metropolitan Street Railway Company on March 21, 1902, not hereinbefore in lots one to sixteen, both inclusive, specifically described and designated.”

This of course does not include any claims against the leased lines already provided for. It is thought that the language above quoted from the mortgage was not intended to cover any “stocks” because it is immediately succeeded by an enumeration of shares of stock.

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Related

Morton Trust Co. v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co.
179 F. 1010 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
181 F. 575, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-loan-trust-co-v-metropolitan-st-ry-co-circtsdny-1910.