Geller v. Macon, Dublin & Savannah Railroad

190 Misc. 903, 75 N.Y.S.2d 818, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3486
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 190 Misc. 903 (Geller v. Macon, Dublin & Savannah Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Geller v. Macon, Dublin & Savannah Railroad, 190 Misc. 903, 75 N.Y.S.2d 818, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3486 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1947).

Opinion

Max J. Wolff,

Referee. The defendant, a railroad corporation organized under the laws of Georgia and not authorized to do business in the State of New York, has appeared specially and has moved to set aside the service of a summons within the city of New York upon its assistant secretary. The question here is whether it has been doing business within the city of New York of a kind and to an extent sufficient to bring it within this court’s jurisdiction. I

The defendant’s railroad lines are wholly in Georgia. It has no bank account or other property in New York. In 1907, it executed within the city of New York a first mortgage trust indenture covering a bond issue amounting to approximately $1,500,000. The mortgaged property, real and personal, lies within the State of Georgia. One of the trustees, the New York Trust Company, is located in the city of New York. The interest coupons were all made payable at the office of the New York Trust Company in this city, and the principal of the bonds, which matured January 1, 1947, was also made payable at the same place. The mortgage indenture required the defendant to maintain either an office or agency in the borough of Manhattan for the purpose of registering the bonds. It also provided that auction sales under the mortgage were to take place in New York. All bonds issued under the mortgage were delivered to the trustee in the city of New York for validation.

In the autumn of 1946, the defendant made plans to extend the maturity of the bonds from January 1, 1947, to January 1, 1972. The president of the defendant and its comptroller came [905]*905to New York on three or four occasions and consulted with members of a New York law firm concerning the preparation and promulgation of a plan of extension. As a result of these conferences such a plan was drawn in the office of defendant’s New York lawyers. It was printed and distributed to numerous persons. In connection with this plan and its approval, which was required to be obtained from the Interstate Commerce Commission, several conferences were held in New York between the defendant’s president, its comptroller, officers of the New York Trust Company, and defendant’s lawyers.

Certain of defendant’s officers solicited various bondholders in the city of New York to deposit their bonds under this extension plan and spent considerable time here, the evidence does not disclose how much,'for that and other purposes associated with the plan. The New York Trust Company was named subdepository for the purpose of receiving bonds from holders consenting to the extension.

The plan has not yet become effective as apparently a sufficient number of bonds have not been deposited. Between the fall of 1946, and the summer of 1947, bonds in the face amount of approximately $587,000 have come into the possession of the New York Trust Company as subdepository.

The approval of the defendant’s hoard of directors to the promulgation of the plan was given in Georgia, where all meetings of the directors were held.

Correspondence with bondholders and others concerning the plan was conducted from the office of defendant’s New York lawyers, to whom all inquiries from bondholders and others (even those made to the company in Georgia) were referred. Apparently it was thought best that the correspondence .be handled by one acting as- an officer rather than as an attorney, and a member of the said firm of New York lawyers was elected assistant secretary of the defendant. As such officer this lawyer has corresponded and communicated with bondholders and others about the plan. His duties as assistant secretary were confined solely to the preparation of the plan and the bringing about of its acceptance by bondholders; and included the working out of legal and other details-with the Interstate Commerce Commission and with the New York Trust Company as trustee under the mortgage and subdepositary under the plan. This assistant secretary, Mr. J. E. Carroll, was elected in the fall of 1946 and remained in that office until March, 1947, when he was served with a summons in this action. The day after such service was made upon him he resigned as assistant secretary, [906]*906but continued without change his work in connection with the! plan of extension. |

The proposed plan in printed form, as sent out to bondholders j and others, contained the following direction:

Any inquiries regarding the foregoing should be addressed to J. E. Carroll, Assistant Secretary, Macon, Dublin and Savannah Bailroad Company, 23rd Floor, 15 Broad Street, New York 5, N. Y.
Very truly yours,
Macon, Dublin and Savannah Bailroad Company By E. C. Cheney
Executive-Vice-President. ’ ’
The 23d floor of 15 Broad Street is the law office of Mr. Carroll’s firm. The plan was mailed to the known bondholders and to others from that office in envelopes upon which was printed the following return address:
Macon, Dublin & Savannah Bailroad Company Attention: J. E. Carroll, 23rd Floor 15 Broad Street New York 5, N. Y.”
Follow-up letters in similar envelopes were sent to bondholders, and in some of these, self-addressed stamped post cards were included, which had been addressed as follows:
“ Macon, Dublin & Savannah Bailroad Company Care of Mr. J. E. Carroll 15 Broad Street
New York 5, N. Y.”
The defendant even printed letterheads reading!
“ Macon, Dublin & Savannah Bailroad Company 15 Broad Street .23rd Floor New York 5, N. Y.”

and a supply of these letterheads and of envelopes containing a return address the same as the letterhead was kept in the office of defendant’s lawyers and used to write to bondholders, to the trustee, to the defendant’s home office in Georgia, and to others. The evidence does not show the extent of this correspondence but it is a fair inference that approximately five hundred such letterheads and envelopes were used, all in connection with the attempt to secure sufficient consents from bondholders to make the plan effective and to comply with the necessary legal details incident to the adoption of the plan.

[907]*907All of the shares of the capital stock of the defendant are wholly owned by Seaboard Airline Bailroad Company, which, though a foreign corporation, has offices in New York. The president of the defendant is the same person as the president of the Seaboard Airline Bailroad Company. The freight agent representing the Seaboard Company in New York has been instructed by the general eastern freight agent of that railroad to favor the defendant in routing freight, so that whenever possible, other things being equal, Seaboard uses defendant as a connecting carrier rather than some other line.

It appears also that one Owen, a freight agent of the defendant, visits New York every six weeks or so and that on these visits he solicits freight business for the defendant. The nature and extent of such solicitation was not shown or the amount of the business resulting from it. The evidence concerning solicitation may be dismissed from consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
190 Misc. 903, 75 N.Y.S.2d 818, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geller-v-macon-dublin-savannah-railroad-nynyccityct-1947.