Ginty v. Ocean Shore Railroad Co.

155 P. 77, 172 Cal. 31, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 490
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1916
DocketS. F. No. 7080. In Bank.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 155 P. 77 (Ginty v. Ocean Shore Railroad Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ginty v. Ocean Shore Railroad Co., 155 P. 77, 172 Cal. 31, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 490 (Cal. 1916).

Opinions

This action was brought to enforce a trust, and in enforcing it to have declared void the reorganization of the Ocean ShoreRailway Company into the Ocean Shore Railroad Company, defendant. Added as defendants to the corporation are the members of the reorganization committee, the trustees who effectuated that reorganization. John Ginty, plaintiff, is or was a bondholder of the Ocean Shore Railway Company. After the commencement of this action he was joined by other bondholders in seeking the relief indicated. The court in equity found against all of the *Page 33 contentions of the plaintiffs and gave its decree for Defendants. From that decree this appeal has been taken, and all of the evidence is presented for consideration. This brief indication of the nature and result of the action it is necessary to follow with a detailed statement of fact.

The Ocean Shore Railway Company was organized as a railroad corporation under the laws of the state of California. It purposed to construct, build, and operate a railroad extending along the Ocean Shore from San Francisco to Santa Cruz. It was capitalized for five million dollars, and all of its capital stock was subscribed, the stock owners having paid on their holdings approximately two million two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. It had also issued its bonds in the sum of five million dollars under a deed of trust executed to the Mercantile Trust Company of San Francisco. These bonds had been sold to and were owned by many persons. In November, 1909, the company defaulted in the payment of interest upon its bond coupons, and again defaulted on May 1, 1910. The Mercantile Trust Company, pursuant to the provisions of the deed of trust, then declared the principal and interest of the bonds to be due, and on June 7, 1910, gave notice of sale in accordance with the provisions of the trust deed empowering it so to do. Prior to this date (in December, 1909), a creditors' bill was filed by the Baldwin Locomotive Works in the federal circuit court against the railway company. Answer thereto was filed and a receiver was appointed by the court. He took charge of the railroad property on that date. Following the notice of sale so given by the Mercantile Trust Company the stockholders and creditors of the company (other than the bondholders) caused the Mercantile Trust Company to be made a party to the action in the federal court. It obtained from that court authority to proceed with its sale under terms and conditions expressed in the court's order. At this time the financial and physical condition of the railway company and of those interested in it was, roughly stated, as follows: At the time when the sale was effectuated there was chargeable against the property the comparatively small sum of one hundred and thirty-five thousand dollars, representing the expenditures of the receiver. The stockholders had paid in about two million two hundred and fifty thousand dollars upon their subscriptions of five million dollars capital stock. *Page 34 There was owing to the bondholders five million dollars, and there was owing to other creditors about two million two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, approximately five hundred thousand dollars of which was unsecured. The distance between San Francisco and Santa Cruz by way of the railroad is eighty-three miles. Part of the road outward from the two termini had been constructed, but there was an uncompleted gap of twenty-six miles. The road was unprofitable, in the sense that its earnings could not make a fair or indeed any return upon the money invested in it.

Under the terms of the trust deed the bondholders were empowered to use their bonds on the sale of the properties in payment of the purchase price. The usual procedure in such cases followed. The bondholders were called together to enable them in combination to use the purchasing power of their bonds effectively and to take steps looking to the reorganization of the road, in the event that the organized bondholders should become the purchasers. On July 22, 1910, at a meeting of the bondholders a committee of five was selected to represent the body. The members of that committee are the defendants in this case, saving that upon the original committee was A.C. Kains, whose place was later taken by Walter S. Martin.

On July 29, 1910, the committee approved the form of an agreement under which the bondholders of the railway company should be called upon to deposit their bonds with the committee. On August 1st following, this agreement was sent by the committee to every bondholder of the Ocean Shore Railway Company, with an explanatory letter. This agreement of July 29th, as it was called and may for convenience be called, is one of the important documents in the controversy, and therefore requires further exposition. Its importance arises from the facts that it was the first and only document signed by the depositing bondholders, and (standing alone), defines in full the powers and trusts upon which the committee acted for the bondholders. It declares its purpose to be the purchase of the properties of the railway company by and on behalf of the bondholders. Under it the depositing bondholders were to place their bonds with the Union Trust Company, "there to remain for a period of nine months from this date unless sooner withdrawn and used in *Page 35 accordance with the terms of this agreement." When bonds to the face value of two million five hundred thousand dollars or upward had been deposited, then such deposited bonds could be used by the committee in its discretion "for the purpose of applying the same upon the purchase price of the property of said Ocean Shore Railway Company so to be sold." Furthermore, it expressly authorized the committee "to proceed with a reorganization of the said Ocean Shore Railway on any plan deemed practicable, and to do anything they may deem to be for the best interests of" the bondholders. Expenses incurred or disbursements made by the committee "shall be repaid to them ratably," the committee, however, serving without compensation. And finally it was provided that "there shall be no personal liability or responsibility attached to the signers of this instrument, — that is to say, there shall be nothing hereby implied or obligated by signature other than the power of the disposition of the bonds alone, said bonds only being held for any expenditures and not the owners thereof."

The sale sanctioned and ordered by the federal court fixed the minimum selling price at one million thirty-five thousand dollars, but required the payment upon the fall of the hammer of one hundred and sixty-six thousand dollars cash in payment of preferred liens under the receiver's certificates. It was incumbent upon the committee, therefore, to be prepared to pay on the sale that amount of cash. Moreover, under the terms of the deed of trust, the bondholders who did not deposit would be entitled to be paid in cash, on their bonds, an amount equal to the amount credited upon the deposited bonds which were used in the purchase of the properties, and it was distinctly declared in the agreement of July 29th that only the bonds of the depositing bondholders should be liable for all necessary expenditures. It was important to the committee then to secure the deposit of as many bonds as possible, as every bond deposited decreased proportionately the amount which would have to be paid in money to the nondepositing bondholders.

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Bluebook (online)
155 P. 77, 172 Cal. 31, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ginty-v-ocean-shore-railroad-co-cal-1916.