Franklin Trust Co. v. Rutherford, Boiling Springs & Carlstadt Electric Co.

41 A. 488, 57 N.J. Eq. 42, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 67
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 9, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 A. 488 (Franklin Trust Co. v. Rutherford, Boiling Springs & Carlstadt Electric Co.) 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
Franklin Trust Co. v. Rutherford, Boiling Springs & Carlstadt Electric Co., 41 A. 488, 57 N.J. Eq. 42, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 67 (N.J. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

This is a bill to foreclose a mortgage given by the defendant corporation to the complainant corporation to secure an issue of fifty bonds of $1,000 each.

The complainant corporation is organized under the laws of •the State of New York, and located at Brooklyn, in said state. The defendant corporation is located in Bergen county, in the State of New Jersey. The mortgage covers the defendant corporation’s electrical plant, situate in the neighborhood of Rutherford, in said county. It bears date May 1st, 1893, acknowledged June 26th, 1893, by the mortgagor, and by the mortgagee, complainant, on June 27th, 1893, and was recorded on June 28th, 1893. The bonds are payable in twenty years after date, with sémi-annual interest coupons annexed, at three per cent, each, and the mortgage and the bonds also provide that each year thereafter the defendant corporation shall pay to the complainant, in addition to the interest, the sum of $2,000, with which it shall purchase and cancel two of the bonds; and it also contains a provision that, in ease of failure for three months so to do, the whole of the bonds shall become due and payable.

[44]*44The complainant, by its bill, alleges that all the $50,000 of bonds were issued and negotiated by the defendant corporation and came to the hands of the defendant Charles C. Southard; that the sinking fund for the spring of 1894 and of 1895 was provided, and that four of the bonds were paid therewith, leaving forty-six outstanding, all in the hands of the defendant Southard; that the sinking fund for 1896 and 1897 was not provided; that the interest for May 1st, 1897, was not paid in full, and that the interest for November 1st, 1895; May 1st, 1896, and November 1st, 1896, was only paid in part; whereupon, at the request of the defendant Southard, the holder of the bonds, the complainant declared the whole mortgage due and filed its bill to foreclose on the 14th of June, 1897. After-wards, on July 28th, 1897, interest to the extent of $1,080 was deposited with it by the defendant corporation, but whether accepted by Mr. Southard does not appear.

The defence by the defendant corporation is — first, that the bonds and mortgage were executed and delivered in pursuance of a written contract entered into between the defendant corporation and one George H. Southard, by which said Southard agreed to advance certain sums of money on account thereof at certain specified times, and that said contract and the mortgage, though executed by the officers of the company, never received the sanction of a proper meeting of the board of directors or a proper meeting of the stockholders of the corporation, as required by law, and are therefore void; second, usury, in that the bonds were sold by the defendant corporation at a usurious rate to George H. Southard, who is the brother of Charles C. Southard, and who was, at the time, the president of the complainant corporation, and that Charles C. Southard is not a bona fide holder of the bonds; third, that if the bonds are not usurious, then that Southard never did, in fact, advance the money according to his contract, and that the contract was, in its terms, so grossly unfair and extortionate on the part of Southard as to be a fraud upon the stockholders in general of the company, and that Southard is not entitled to declare the bonds to be due at this time, because, after charging him with [45]*45the amount that he actually extorted from the company at the start, there is no default in the letter of the contract.

There is little dispute as to the actual facts in the case. The circumstances are these: On the 1st of May, 1893, the Electric company’s affairs were in this condition: it had, nominally, $30,000 of stock, divided into three thousand shares, of $10 each. The books do not show, distinctly, how that stock was held, as no stock ledger was kept, but as to five hundred of the three thousand shares, there can be no doubt that they were held as follows : By a Mr. Brunner, one share; Mr. Alyea, five shares; Mr. Mada, ten shares; Mr. Soley, fifteen shares; in all, thirty-one shares, of the par value of $310, which were held by parties not in the management of the company. The other shares actually issued at that time were — to a Mr. Appleton, one hundred and eighty-two shares; to a Mr. Jordan, one hundred and eighty-two shares; to a Mr. Burrows, fifty shares, and to a Mr. Buys, fifty-five shares, making four hundred and sixty-nine, and with the thirty-one before mentioned, five hundred shares. Appleton and Jordan were, respectively, the president and treasurer, and Burrows and Buys were employes of the company. On May 15th, 1893, one thousand shares were issued to the wife of Jordan and one thousand shares to the wife of Appleton. Whether they had been previously regularly allotted to them, so that they were the substantial owners at any time prior to the 15th of May, does not appear. Adding those, we have the total stock issued $25,000. In addition, there was, on the 15th of May, 1893, a certificate made out to Mr. George H. Southard for five hundred shares, making up the whole three thousand. But, as will appear hereafter, Mr. Southard was not at that time entitled to the issue of that stock to him, and for present purposes I shall hold that he was not the holder of it at that time.

The plant of the company was then subject to a previous mortgage given to a New Jersey trustee to secure fifteen bonds of $1,000 each, which were held by various persons in different parts of the United States. Appleton, as we have seen, was the president, Jordan the secretary and treasurer, and Buys and [46]*46Burrows employes. Those four constituted the whole or a majority of the directors.

Mr. Appleton, the president, claimed that the company was indebted to him for cash advanced to the extent of $14,000. Of this alleged claim there is no proof.

In that situation, Mr. Appleton, who, as well as Mr. Jordan, lived in Brooklyn, applied to Mr. George H. Southard, the president of the complainant company, who also lived in Brooklyn, to advance some money to the company, and the result was an agreement in writing dated the 3d-of May, 1893, purporting to be between the defendant corporation, executed by its president, Mr. R. Ross Appleton, and Mr. George H. Southard as an individual, which witnessed that the defendant corporation agreed to sell to Mr. Southard $40,000, being part of an issue of $50,000 of first mortgage six per cent, gold bonds, secured by a first mortgage to the Franklin Trust Company, complainant, upon all the plant of the defendant company, and also to sell to him $5,000 at par of fully-paid stock of said company, all for the sum of $33,000, payable as follows: May 9th, $6,000; July 1st, $6,000; July 15th, $6,000; August 15th, $5,000; September 1st, $5,000, and October 1st, $5,000, the bonds to be dated May 1st, 1893, payable twenty years after date; the mortgage to provide for a sinking fund of $2,000 annually, to be paid to the trustee and used by it in redeeming $2,000 of the bonds in each year, providing for the drawing of the bonds to be canceled by lot if the same could not be purchased at par, the remaining $10,000 of bonds to be issued only for extensions and betterments; and the defendant corporation agreed that part of the proceeds of the sale of the $40,000 of bonds should pay off and cancel the $15,000 of mortgage bonds outstanding against the property.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A. 488, 57 N.J. Eq. 42, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-trust-co-v-rutherford-boiling-springs-carlstadt-electric-co-njch-1898.