Guaranty Trust Co. v. Mexican Petroleum Co.

245 F. 901, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1018
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 5, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 245 F. 901 (Guaranty Trust Co. v. Mexican Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guaranty Trust Co. v. Mexican Petroleum Co., 245 F. 901, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1018 (S.D.N.Y. 1917).

Opinion

MAYER, District Judge.

This is an action brought to recover $320,-000, claimed to be due from defendant to plaintiff, under the terms and provisions of the deed of trust given by defendant to the Standard Trust Company of New York (to whose rights by merger plaintiff has succeeded) to secure an issue of bonds for an aggregate principal amount of $12,000,000, executed on October 3, 1911. In October, 1911, for the purpose of borrowing money for its lawful corporate purposes, defendant, in pursuance of resolutions adopted by its hoard of directors and stockholders, duly authorized the issue of certain first lien and refunding sinking fund gold bonds, for an aggregate principal amount [902]*902of $12,000,000, and in pursuance of due authorization it made and executed to the Standard Trust Company of New York its mortgage and deed of trust, dated October 3, 1911. Under said deed of trust defendant deposited and pledged with the Standard Trust Company of New York certain stocks and bonds of various corporations. Bonds of defendant were issued under the deed of trust to the amount of $5,-940,000; there being outstanding at the present time approximately $2,200,000 of the said bonds.

The bonds issued under the deed of trust contained certain sinking fund provisions, whereby defendant is required to make yearly payments to plaintiff to constitute a sinking fund, the amount of such payments to be computed upon the production of oil by defendant, but not to exceed 15 per cent, of the maximum amount of bonds then outstanding. Article 2, section 2, of said deed of trust provides as follows :

“Whenever any underlying bonds deposited with the trustees hereunder shall be purchased, redeemed, or paid by means of a sinking fund created in pursuance of a mortgage or other instrument securing the same or providing for the issue thereof, the amount paid for the purchase, redemption, or payment thereof shall be paid to and received by the trustee and added to the sinking fund hereinafter in this indenture provided for.”

Article 5, section 1, of the said deed of trust, contains the following provisions:

“The percentage, if any, which shall have been stated in the bonds of any such series as being the minimum sinking fund payment shall be calculated on the maximum amount of such first lien bonds of such series theretofore issued. The percentage, if any, stated in the bonds of any such series to ba payable as a maximum sinking fund shall be similarly calculated; the Limited Company, however, being credited, in reduction pro rata of the sinking fund payments to be made by the Limited Company to the trustee as aforesaid on each such 1st day of October, with an amount equal to the aggregate of all payments made to the trustee, during the calendar year ending on each such 1st day of September next preceding pursuant to the sinking fund requirements of any instruments securing or providing for the issue of bonds or other obligations pledged with the trustee hereunder.”

Defendant deposited and pledged with plaintiff, under the deed of trust, certain bonds of the Mexican Petroleum Company of California, issued under a mortgage duly made by that company to the Southern Trust Company of Los Angeles as trustee. The mortgage to the Southern Trust Company contained certain sinking fund requirements under which the said trust company was directed to dispose of any moneys which might come into tire sinking fund therein provided for, either by making certain investments thereof, or by purchasing bonds of the issue secured by the said mortgage. In July, 1916, the Southern Trust Company purchased $320,000 principal amount of the. bonds of the said California Company from the plaintiff, which bonds had been deposited by the defendant under its deed of trust, and paid therefor the sum of $320,000 to plaintiff. The total amount of the sinking fund payments due from defendant to plaintiff on October 1, 1916, under the provisions of the deed of trust, and the bonds issued thereunder, was the sum of $891,000, being the maximum amount of [903]*90315 per cent, of the bonds issued. On October 1, 1916, defendant paid to plaintiff, under the said sinking fund provisions, $571,000.

This suit is brought to recover the difference between the maximum amount of the sinking fund payments, namely, $891,000, and the sum of $571,000 thus paid by defendant lo plaintiff. Defendant contends that under article 5 of the deed of trust the payment to plaintiff of $320,000 for the purchase of bonds of the California Company which had been pledged under the deed of trust should be taken in reduction of the sinking fund payments required under defendant’s deed of trust. Plaintiff contends that under article 2 this amount is to be “added to” the sinking fund payments otherwise provided for, and that there is a balance of $320,000 due from defendant to plaintiff.

[1] Defendant, for a separate defense, sets forth facts which it contends constitute an estoppel. It is, of course, an elementary principle of the construction of written instruments that their various clauses' should be harmonized, if possible, and the courts seek to avoid a construction which will nullify or render inconsistent one clause or provision with or as against another. In view of the conclusion stated on the argument, it is necessary merely to state briefly the reasons therefor.

[2] The phrase “added to the sinking fund,” means “becomes a part of the sinking fund.” This clause was not intended to affect “the amounts payable” to the sinking fund, all of which was elsewhere fixed; but its sole object was to make it clear that the moneys thus received by the trustee should, instead of being held by it, or reinvested by it, be considered as a part of the sinking fund, but, of course, always subject to each and every specific provision regarding the amount and administration of that fund. Only two alternatives exist — either the proceeds of these bonds are a part of the sinking fund or they are not. If no such clause were found in the mortgage, it would not be a part of the sinking fund. But, since the clause is found in the mortgage, it follows that these proceeds do become a part of the sinking fund, and hence they become governed by all of the sinking fund provisions, just as though it had been paid into the sinking fund by defendant directly, and one of those specific provisions of the sinking fund article is the one upon which defendant relies.

Plaintiff’s argument, to the effect that the words “add to” must be considered as equivalent to “increase the amount of,” fails to take into consideration that the clause does not say that the thing to which these moneys is to be added is the full amount of the installments which defendant would otherwise be compelled to pay. On the contrary, the thing to which these moneys is to be “added” is the “sinking fund hereinafter in this indenture provided for,” and the very provision thus referred to contains the credit clause relied upon, thus making it clear that, while this language fixes the first element of which the sinking fund in any given year will be composed — that is to say, the amount of the proceeds of bonds sold as aforesaid — yet that it makes no effort at all to determine the amount of the other portion of the sinking fund, to wit, the amount that should be paid [904]*904by the defendant directly to the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 F. 901, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guaranty-trust-co-v-mexican-petroleum-co-nysd-1917.