Hackettstown Nat. Bank v. D. G. Yuengling Brewing Co.

74 F. 110, 20 C.C.A. 327, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 1896
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 12, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 F. 110 (Hackettstown Nat. Bank v. D. G. Yuengling Brewing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hackettstown Nat. Bank v. D. G. Yuengling Brewing Co., 74 F. 110, 20 C.C.A. 327, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 1896 (2d Cir. 1896).

Opinion

WALLACE, Circuit Judge.

Error is assigned of the ruling of the trial judge in directing the jury to find a verdict for the defendant.

The action was brought to recover the principal and interest of certain second mortgage bonds owned by the plaintiff, part of an issue of $1,000,000, created by the defendant, and secured by a trust deed upon all its real and personal property. The bonds bear date December 31, 1893, and are payable, the principal July 1, 1908, and the interest semiannually on the 1st days of January and July in each year, subject to conditions indorsed upon the bonds, of which the following are material:

“(4) The principal moneys hereby secured, shall become due and payable forthwith * * * if the company makes default for a period of three calendar months in the payment of any interest hereby secured thereby, and the bearer or registered holder hereof, as the case may be, before the interest so in arrear is paid, by notice in writing to the company, calls in the principal moneys hereby secured.”
“(11) Subject to the conditions of the trust deed hereinafter mentioned, the holders of three-fourths in value of the outstanding bonds of this series may sanction any agreement of the company for any modification or alteration [111]*111of tlie rights of the bondholders of this series as a class, including the release of any property charged thereby, and any postponement of the time for the payment of any moneys secured thereby, and any increase or reduction of the rate of interest; and an agreement -so sanctioned shall be binding upon ali bondholders of this series, and notice of any action thus taken shall be given to each bondholder, and each bondholder shall be bound thereupon to produce his bond to the company, and to permit a note of such modification to be placed thereon.”

The mortgage provides that the security shall be enforceable if, after default shall have been made in the payment of the principal of the bonds, and con tinned for six months or in payment of interest, and continued for three months, the holders of a majority of the bonds shall, by notice to the trustee, elect and declare the principal and interest payable. It also contains provisions for meetings of the bondholders, to be called at the request of the company, the trustee, or by holders of one-third of the amount of outstanding-bonds," provides that such meetings shall have power, by extraordinary resolution, “to sanction any modification or compromise, of the rights of the bondholders against the company or against its property, whether such rights shall arise under the bonds or trust deed, or otherwise,” and provides tnat such extraordinary resolution may be passed by the vote of holders of a majority of the outstanding bonds.

Evidence was introduced upon the trial tending to establish the following facts: Default was made in the payment of the interest coupons maturing January .1, 1894, and again in the payment of the interest coupons maturing July 1, 1894, and no part of the interest on these coupons was ever paid. After such default had continued for three months, the plaintiff, by notice in writing to the company, demanded the payment of the principal of the bonds as well as the interest. Shortly after the maturing- of the second coupons, and when it was supposed that they would not be paid, and that by reason of the continued default the principal sum of the bonds might be declared payable by the bondholders or the trustee, David G. Yuengling, who was the principal stockholder of the corporation, entered into an agreement with John F. Betz, which had for its object the purchase of a sufficient number of the bonds to enable Betz, in conjunction with Yuengling, and some of his relatives and friends, who were likewise bondholders, to control three-fourths in value of the outstanding bonds of the series. The agreement provided that. Betz should purchase a sufficient amount to control proceedings in foreclosure; that, if any of the coupons maturing subsequently to January 1, 1895, should be in default, Yuengling; would personally pay such coupons on all of the bonds purchased by Betz; that 'Betz should hold all bonds purchased by him subject to the right of Yuengling, at any time before their maturity, to demand and receive an absolute transfer thereof, together with all unpaid interest coupons, upon the repayment of all moneys advanced by Betz, with interest at 6 per cent.; and that Betz would not transfer indispose of any of the bonds thus to be purchased in any other manner until the option above mentioned should have expired. Pursuant to this agreement, Betz commenced and continued to pur[112]*112chase bonds until in December, 1894, he had acquired them to the amount of $594,600. December 1, 1894, Betz, with the holders of other bonds, which, with his, were of the amount of $728,100, executed an instrument which, in substance, after reciting the inability of the company to pay its coupons, and that it would be for the best interests of the company and its bondholders to postpone the time of payment of all coupons attached to the bonds, whether past due or to become due on or before July 1, 1896, evidenced their request and consent that tlie company and the trustee in the deed of trust execute an. agreement providing for postponing until January 1, 1900, the time for the payment of all coupons attached to the bonds of the series, whether past due or to become due and payable on or before July 1,1896. This agreement is signed by Mr. Betz for $594,-600 of the bonds, by Yuengiing for $18,800, by the estate of Yueng-ling’s father for $10,000, and by the wife of Yuengiing for $70,700. Thereafter an agreement such as was authorized by the consent was executed between the company and the trustee. December 29, 1894, a majority of bondholders composed of the same persons who executed the consent, at a meeting called pursuant to the provisions of the trust deed, voted an extraordinary resolution suspending the fourth condition of the bonds until January 1,1900. No evidence was introduced tending to show that there had been any material change in the circumstances of the company since the creation of the bonds, or that the ultimate security of the bondholders would be promoted by waiving the default in the payment of interest and deferring the enforcement of the security. There was no consultation with the minority stockholders prior to the execution of the consent. The ruling of the trial judge proceeded upon the theory that the consent of the holders of three-fourths in value of the outstanding bonds operated to extend the time of payment of the interest and principal of the bonds, and "he refused to submit to the jury the question whether the consent was made bona fide by the bondholders who were parties thereto.

We cannot doubt that a consent to postpone the payment of the demands of the minority bondholders, made collusively by majority bondholders for the purpose of defeating the remedy of the minority, and not in the exercise of an honest discretion in the general interest, is not a consent within the meaning of the eleventh condition; or that a vote at a meeting of bondholders, sanctioning a modification of the rights of the bondholders, passed by a corrupt majority for the purpose of effectuating such a collusive consent, is not within the power contemplated by the provision in the trust deed.

Community of interest, whether in the case of partners or security holders, creates mutual obligation, and imposes upon all' persons occupying that position the duty of acting in the utmost good faith towards the interests of their associates.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 F. 110, 20 C.C.A. 327, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 1896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hackettstown-nat-bank-v-d-g-yuengling-brewing-co-ca2-1896.