First National Bank v. Stretcher

129 P.2d 830, 169 Or. 532, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 96
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 129 P.2d 830 (First National Bank v. Stretcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Stretcher, 129 P.2d 830, 169 Or. 532, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 96 (Or. 1942).

Opinion

RAND, J.

On July 15, 1927, the Morgan-Bushong Investment Company executed and delivered a mortgage or deed of trust to the Lumbermen’s Trust Company, as trustee, to secure an issue of 6 per cent serial redemption bonds, aggregating the principal sum of $500,000. These bonds are designated in the mortgage or deed of trust as serial redemption bonds and, under its terms, are redeemable serially on the 15th day of July of each year commencing with the year 1928 and continuing until 1947.

The mortgage or deed of trust provides for the resignation or removal of the trustee and the appointment of a new trustee for insolvency or inability to act. Pursuant to this authority, the plaintiff is the successor trustee under said mortgage or deed of trust and, as such, brought this suit, seeldng to compel the defendants to interplead and to obtain a judicial determination as to what particular bondholders are entitled to prorate the sum of $6,666.67, which the trustee had in its possession and has brought into court and deposited with the clerk.

The property covered by the mortgage or deed of trust consists of the unexpired portion of a leasehold estate in lots 1, 2, 7 and 8, block 213, in the city of Port *535 land. The lease creating the estate provides that the estate shall continue for fifty years and terminate on January 19, 1963. It also provides that the lessee shall construct a building thereon and, in compliance therewith, what is known as the Morgan Building has been constructed and is now situate on said premises.

The mortgage or deed of trust also provides:

“The Company covenants that it will on or before the 10th day of August, 1927, and on or before the 10th day of each calendar month of each year thereafter so long as any bonds issued hereunder shall be outstanding, pay to the Trustee one-twelfth (1/12) of the aggregate face amounts of bonds then outstanding hereunder and maturing by their terms on the 15th day of July next ensuing, which money shall by the Trustee be credited to a Serial Redemption Fund Account and shall be applied by it upon the payment of such bonds as they shall mature.”

Prior to July 15, 1932, the Lumbermen’s Trust Company had become insolvent and the Equitable Trust Company had been appointed as trustee under the mortgage. It, too, became insolvent and later went into the hands of a receiver. Prior to said date, the Morgan-Bushong Investment Company advanced and paid over to one or the other of said trustees sufficient moneys to redeem all bonds maturing prior to said date and also to pay the interest on all outstanding bonds, and these moneys were so applied by the then trustee.

In addition thereto, the Morgan-Bushong Investment Company had advanced and paid to the Equitable Trust Company the sum of $12,000 for the purpose of having the same applied in part payment of the principal of bonds maturing on July 15, 1932, amounting *536 to the sum of $18,000. This sum was misapplied by the Equitable Trust Company in the purchase of other securities and on said date no part of said sum of $12,-000 was available to be applied in the redemption of said bonds. At the same time, the Morgan-Bushong Investment Company, although it continued as a going concern, had become unable to meet its obligations under the mortgage and, by reason of the foregoing, none of said bonds were redeemed at said time and none of the interest accruing on the other bonds was paid. Later, and by order of the court which appointed the receiver, the Security Savings and Trust Company, which had succeeded as trustee under the mortgage, collected from said receiver the said sum of $12,000.

Upon the happening of said default, a bondholders ’ committee was appointed and a contract was entered into between said committee and a large number but not all of the bondholders. Only a part of the owners of bonds maturing on said date entered into said contract. Those whose bonds matured on said date and who refused to enter into said contract have been paid from said fund of $12,000 two-thirds of the principal of the bonds held by them, while those whose bonds matured on said date and who entered into said contract have received nothing from said fund. By this transaction, the $12,000-fund was reduced to the sum of $6,666.67, the amount now on deposit with the clerk of the court.

By its decree, the court below held that only those whose bonds matured on July 15, 1932, and who had received no part of the $12,000 (the respondents herein), were entitled to share in the distribution of the moneys now on deposit with the clerk of the court. From this decree, all other defendants, except those *537 whose default had been entered in the case, have appealed.

It is well settled that a sinking fund under a bond mortgage is a trust fund, the title to which passes from the debtor to the trustee who holds it for the benefit of the bondholders. See Armada State Bank v. Union Guardian Trust Co., 262 Mich. 487, 247 N. W. 787; Equitable Trust Co. v. Green Star Steamship Corp., 291 F. 650; Warder v. Brady, 115 F. (2d) 89; Truby v. M. & T. Trust Co., 141 Misc. 507, 253 N. Y. S. 108; and Tucker v. Empire Trust Co., 242 App. Div. 380, 274 N. Y. S. 895.

It is clear, therefore, that the title to the $12,000 deposited with the trustee by the Morgan-Bushong Investment Company for the partial payment of the principal of the bonds maturing on July 15, 1932, amounting to the sum of $18,000, passed to the trustee for the benefit of the holders of those particular bonds and that, since two-thirds of the holders thereof have not received their proportionate part of said sum, they are still entitled to have the balance of said sum distributed to them in preference to that of any other bondholder whose bonds matured at a later date, unless something has occurred, as contended by the appellants, to divest them of such right.

After its appointment, the bondholders’ committee collected from certain directors of the Morgan-Bushong Investment Company the sum of $45,000 in settlement of a claim that these moneys had been wrongfully paid to them as dividends upon their stock in said company, and this money was thereupon prorated among the owners of all bonds then and now outstanding as part payment of the interest that had accrued upon said bonds. Because the respondents herein received their *538 proportionate share thereof, the appellants contend that the respondents are now estopped to assert any preference or right superior to that of the remaining bondholders to the fund now on deposit with the clerk ■of the court.

In Mitchell v. Hughes, 80 Or. 574, 157 P. 965, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice McBride, said:

“Where there is no intention to waive, there is no waiver, unless the conduct of the alleged waiver is such as to have misled the waivee to his prejudice. ‘Waiver involves both knowledge and intention; an estoppel may arise when there is no intention to mislead. Waiver depends upon what one himself intends to do; estoppel depends upon what he caused his advisary to do.’ 40 Cyc. 255.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 P.2d 830, 169 Or. 532, 1942 Ore. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-stretcher-or-1942.