Glines v. Henwood

103 F.2d 226, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3540
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 7, 1939
DocketNos. 11303, 11345
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 103 F.2d 226 (Glines v. Henwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glines v. Henwood, 103 F.2d 226, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3540 (8th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

STONE, Circuit Judge.

On December 12, 1935, the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company, a Missouri corporation, filed a petition for reorganization under Section 77 of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended, 11 U.S.C.A. § 205. On the same date a similar petition was filed and a similar order entered including the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company of Texas, as a subsidiary debtor, in the same debtor proceeding. On April 21, 1936, the court made an order directing the trustee to pay interest on first mortgage certificates. That order recited that corresponding semi-annual instalments of such interest, due on the first days of May and November, thereafter, should be paid “during the pendency of this proceeding, unless by further order entered herein this court shall direct otherwise.” Such instalments of interest were paid under the above order up to the instalment due May 1, 1938. On April 25, 1938, the trustee filed a petition asking advantage of the ninety day grace period for payment of that instalment, which resulted in an order to that effect. On June 17, 1938, the trustee prayed an order authorizing and directing him to pay such interest instalment on or before July 25, 1938. To this petition the trustee under a first terminal and unifying mortgage and a committee of bondholders under that mortgage filed separate answers challenging the right to payment of this interest. Various holders of the above certificates, the trustee under the certificates, the debt- or, and the trustee filed separate replies to the above answers. A hearing was had, findings of fact were made and conclusions of law stated and order entered authorizing the trustee to pay such interest. From that order the committee of bondholders under the first terminal and unifying mortgage and the trustee thereunder bring joint appeals, one granted by this Court, and one by the District Court.1

The issue sought to be raised by the above answers was that the responsibility of the debtor for payment of this interest on the certificates was an unsecured claim or, if secured, only to the extent of something less than one-half the amount of interest. The replies challenged this position in toto and further pleaded estoppel by judgment and by conduct.

The situation out of which the above issues arose is as follows. In 1891, the debtor, the subsidiary debtor, and the Tyler Southeastern Railway Company (a Texas corporation) were owners of railway lines which together constituted a major part of the main lines of the principal debtor as then and now existing. February 12, 1891, the debtor executed a single bond for $9,895,000 to the Central Trust Company of New York, “as trustee for the holders of certain certificates hereinafter mentioned”. This bond was due November 1, 1989, and bore interest (without coupons) at the rate of 4 percent, payable semi-annually on the first days of May and November. January 13, 1891, the subsidiary debtor executed a similar mortgage to the trust company “as trustee” for $9,-445,000. The due date, rate of interest and interest payments being as in the above mortgage. On January 13, 1891, the Tyler executed a similar first mortgage to the trust company “as trustee” to secure a single bond for $660,000, with due date, interest rate and interest payments the same as in the two above mortgages.

The total of the three bonds secured [228]*228by the three above mortgages was $20,000,-000. In the preamble of the above mortgage which was executed by the principal debtor it is recited that the purpose of the indenture is “to provide for and secure in part the payment of the full amount of the principal * * * and of interest” of certain “First Mortgage Certificates” in the aggregate sum of $20,000,000 to be issued by the trust company and counterr signed by the president or vice-president of the debtor. These certificates were to be in amounts of $1,000, 'due November 1, 1989, with 4 percent interest, payable semiannually, represented by coupons. The preamble recited, also, the issuance of the bond for $9,895,000 to provide for the payment of the certificates and that there had been further deposited with the trust company, as trustee, and for the same purposes the above bonds for $9,445,000 of the subsidiary debtor and of $660,000 of the Tyler Southeastern Railway Company.

Also, upon the same dates of the first mortgages, above, each of the three parties executed a second mortgage for single bonds of less amounts, aggregating $10,-000,000, which were similarly utilized to secure an. aggregate issue of “Second Mortgage Certificates” to the same amount.

On January 1, 1912, the principal debt- or executed a first terminal and unifying mortgage securing coupon bonds of an aggregate limit of $100,000,000, payable January 1, 1952, with interest at 5 percent, payable semi-annually.

No interest has been paid since initiation of these debtor proceedings upon any of the above obligations, except the interest upon the first mortgage certificates which have been paid semi-annually under the order above mentioned.

In this situation the claim of the trustee and of the protective committee under the terminal and unifying mortgage is that the principal debtor is liable upon its first mortgage only to the extent of the interest earned by it up to 4 percent upon the amount of the bond secured by that mortgage and that as to any further amount of payment on the interest due on the certificates the holders thereof must look to the earnings of the subsidiary debtor and the Tyler Southeastern, respectively, for interest.upon the bonds secured by their respective mortgages and that the guaranty of the principal debtor of the payment of interest by those two companies is not secured by its mortgage and constitutes no more than an unsecured obligation. If this contention be true it would, of course, be necessary to segregate and determine the earnings of the three roads and to ascertain that the net earnings of each, sepa-. rately, was sufficient to meet the interest obligation on the respective bonds before the trustee would be authorized to pay this interest. Therefore, the main issue is whether the first mortgage of the principal debtor covers payment of the full interest on the entire issue of first mortgage certificates.

Before reaching this main issue we are met by three contentions, any one of which, if sound, would determine this case without an examination of the merits of the main issue above stated. These three issues are as follows: (I) estoppel by judgment; (II) estoppel by conduct; and (III) lack of power to make such guaranty because of certain statutory provisions of the State of Missouri, under which State the principal debtor is incorporated.

I. Estoppel by Judgment.

Appellees rely upon the above order of April 21, 1936, authorizing the trustee to pay the interest due May 1, 1936, and semi-annually thereafter, until further order of the court, as being res judicata of the above main issue here. Appellants seek to avoid such conclusion by claiming that the present issue as to debtor’s first mortgage was not involved in the above order and that the present proceeding for payment of the interest coupons due May 1, 1938, is a different proceeding so that the doctrine of res judicata does not apply. The petition of the trustee upon which the order was made sets forth that the payment of such interest, in so far as the subsidiary debtor and the Tyler Southeastern are concerned, “is guaranteed by the principal debtor”. It in nowise offers the issue or even suggests the issue that such guaranty is supported by the mortgage of the principal debtor.

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Related

In re St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co.
53 F. Supp. 914 (E.D. Missouri, 1944)
National Lead Co. v. Nulsen
131 F.2d 51 (Eighth Circuit, 1942)
Sonken-Galamba Corp. v. Atchison, T. & S. F. RY. Co.
124 F.2d 952 (Eighth Circuit, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 F.2d 226, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glines-v-henwood-ca8-1939.