Fidelity Trust Co. v. Hoboken & Manhattan Railroad

63 A. 273, 71 N.J. Eq. 14, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 97
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 6, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 63 A. 273 (Fidelity Trust Co. v. Hoboken & Manhattan Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Trust Co. v. Hoboken & Manhattan Railroad, 63 A. 273, 71 N.J. Eq. 14, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 97 (N.J. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Magie, Chancellor.

The bill in this cause is filed by the Fidelity Trust Company, the complainant, as the holder in trust of a mortgage upon certain property and franchises now belonging to the Jersey City, Hoboken and Paterson Street Railway Company, and it states that the mortgage secures bonds, issued and outstanding, to the amount of $1,291,000. It further states that there are mortgages securing bonds outstanding to the amount of $2,998,000 upon said property and franchises, which are prior liens to the mortgage held by the complainant. The bill makes parties defendant the Hoboken and Manhattan Railroad Company, a corporation of the State of New Jersey, and the New York and Jersey Railroad Company, a corporation of the State of New York (which two companies are engaged in the construction of tunnels under the Hudson river between New Jersey and New York); the Jersey City, Hoboken and Paterson Street Railway Company, and the Public Service Corporation of New Jersey.

¡/The bill prays relief by an injunction restraining the Hoboken and Manhattan Railroad Company and the New York and Jersey [17]*17Railroad Company from committing waste or destruction upon the premises covered by the complainant’s mortgage by making excavations thereon and removing the tracks, buildings or other property thereon.

Upon filing the bill with its accompanying affidavits, an injunction issued according to its prayer. • -•

The Hoboken and Manhattan Railroad Company and the New York and Jersey Railroad Company have filed an answer, with accompanying affidavits, and given notice of a motion to dissolve the injunction. The motion has been brought to hearing upon the bill and affidavits, the answer and affidavits, and rebutting affidavits presented by the complainants.

It may be premised that the question presented in this cause is in no respect affected by .conclusions reached in any of the litigations between the answering defendants and the Jersey Gity, Hoboken and Paterson Street Railroad Company, or any of the stockholders'thereof, respecting their contractual relations under the instrument hereafter described. This bill is one by a mortgagee seeking to stay waste which, it avers, will diminish the security of the mortgage of which it is trustee.

It may also be premised that since complainant occupies the position of a mortgagee, holding a mortgage in trust for the protection and security of bondholders, its position and its duty as such trustee cannot be affected by the fact that some of its directors are also directors in the Jersey City, Hoboken and Paterson Street Railway Company, or in the Public Service Corporation, or are stockholders of either company. If an impairment of the mortgage security is shown sufficient to require equitable relief for the protection of the bondholders, the complainant not only has the right, but it is its duty, to protect those for whom it holds the mortgage in trust.

Among the various matters pressed upon my consideration as-disclosing an impairment of the complainant’s security in the¡ nature of waste are the following:

First. It is claimed that the act of the defendants which is; complained of, and which will be hereafter more particularly described, will prevent the Jersey City, Hoboken and Paterson [18]*18Street Railway Company, the owner of the property and franchises included in the mortgage, from extending its terminal facilities at Hoboken, as required by its present and prospective needs, and as necessary to preserve its traffic and profits.

Second. It is claimed that the defendants the Hoboken and Manhattan Railroad Company and the New York and Jersey Railroad Company are engaged in securing rights to construct a system of street railroads in Hudson county, to be connected with a terminus proposed to be made on lands covered by the mortgage, under contracts between the defendants, and which railroads, when so connected, will compete for the carriage of passengers with the railroads upon which complainant’s mortgage is secured.

Third. It is further claimed that the scheme and plan entered into by the defendants is impracticable, or cannot be put into operation without paralyzing, or rendering wholly' or partially useless, at least a part of the system of railroads on which complainant’s security depends.

The answering defendants, by their answer, deny that they are engaged in securing rights to construct street railroads to be connected with the terminus and their tunnel railroad, and also deny that their plans will destroy or tend to destroy the value of the terminal tract, or tend to diminish the security of complainant’s mortgage.

The facts upon which these questions are presented must be briefly stated. The mortgage of complainant covers a plot of ground in Hoboken which I will call the terminal plot. It is four-sided, but of irregular shape. On the west it bounds upon Hudson street for about two hundred feet; on the south it adjoins the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company’s land for about six hundred feet; on the east it adjoins the property of the Hoboken Eerry Company for i little over fifty feet, and on the north it adjoins lands which, on the maps presented on both sides, are marked as “Hudson Place,” for about six .hundred feet. Upon this terminal plot and along its south side, close to the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company’s land, the tracks of what I shall call the surface system of the Jersey City, Hoboken and Paterson Street Railway [19]*19Company run .easterly for about its whole length, and then, turning by two loops, pass into Hudson Place, and so proceed westerly. One of the above-described loops is not only partly on Hudson Place, but also partly on the property of the Hoboken Ferry Company.

The tracks of what I shall call the elevated system of the Jersey City, Ploboken and Paterson Street Railway Company come from the west to the terminal plot, reaching it at present .upon the surface, and then run eastei'ly along it, and, by a loop partly on the terminal plot, but extending out into Hudson Place, return to the terminal plot and pass westwardly on its surface to Hudson street, where they begin to ascend to the elevation on which that line is built. It will, -therefore, be observed that at present the elevated system is upon the surface of the terminal plot. There are also upon its surface, in connection with that system, other tracks, called stub tracks, but they do not seem to be commonly or frequently used.

From this description it will be observed that the terminal plot covered by complainant’s mortgage does not include part of the loops, either of the surface system or of the elevated system. The loop that is within the property of the Ploboken Ferry Company seems to be affected by an agreement made between that company and the North Hudson County Railway Company, a former owner of the terminal plot, to the effect that in case of the erection by one of the parties of any viaduct or-structure upon the lands of the other, the occupancy thereof should be considered to be by parol license only, which may be revoked by the owner of the lands upon ninety days’ notice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 A. 273, 71 N.J. Eq. 14, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-trust-co-v-hoboken-manhattan-railroad-njch-1906.