Hambleton v. Rhind

40 L.R.A. 216, 36 A. 597, 84 Md. 456, 1897 Md. LEXIS 18
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 5, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 40 L.R.A. 216 (Hambleton v. Rhind) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hambleton v. Rhind, 40 L.R.A. 216, 36 A. 597, 84 Md. 456, 1897 Md. LEXIS 18 (Md. 1897).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are ten appeals now before us in a single record, but only one opinion will be required to cover them all; because, whilst there are some slight variations in minor details, the material facts in all the cases are identical and precisely the same legal principles are applicable to them.

Sometime in the early fall of eighteen hundred and ninety-two the appellee, Colden Rhind, a resident of the State of Georgia, obtained authority from the Governor and Treasurer of South Carolina to float for that State, upon certain stipulated terms, an issue of about six millions of her four per cent bonds, the proceeds of which were to be used in retiring an outstanding and shortly maturing prior series known as “ Brown Consols.” He proceeded to New York, and after endeavoring, without success, to organize a syndicate to purchase the bonds, suggested a change in the character of the securities and then resumed his efforts. By the new scheme the bonds instead of being four per cent, forty-year bonds were, subject to the approval of the Legislature, to be four and a-half per cent, twenty-forty-year bonds, and were, when negotiated, to net the State par. Rhind approached a banker by the name of Lancaster, who carried on business in both New York and Richmond, and agreed to give him, as compensation for his aid in forming a syndicate, one-third of the commission which Rhind himself might realize out of the transaction. Failing to secure a sufficient number of subscribers in New York, Lancaster, acting for and as the agent of Rhind, proceeded to Richmond in the month of December, and there enlisted the co-operation of the banking firm of Williams & Son, one of whose members suggested that he [476]*476could probably fill up the syndicate from amongst his acquaintances in Baltimore. Accordingly, with the sanction and approval of Lancaster, I. Skelton Williams went to Baltimore in the latter part of December, approached and interviewed the appellants and others, and solicited them to join the syndicate; and if this was not done with the knowledge of Rhind, certainly it was subsequently ratified by him. Williams represented to the appellants that all the/ subscribers to the bond purchase were to be placed on the! same footing of perfect equality, and that each was to shard alike in the profits of the venture. He further represented that there were expenses connected with the syndicate that would have tó be provided for out of the profits. After considerable negotiation a sufficient amount was conditionally subscribed in Baltimore to make up with what had been taken elsewhere, the sum of two millions of dollars ; and the Baltimore Trust and Guarantee Company was selected as the agent of the syndicate toj carry out and consummate the transaction. Each of the appellants became a subscriber and each signed a memorandum setting forth the terms and specifying the amount of his subscription; and whilst these papers were executed at different times they all bear date on the thirtieth of December, eighteen hundred and ninety-two, and they were all executed in anticipation of the purchase of the bonds from the State. The material parts of these subscription contracts are in these words: “2. The said Trust Company shall pay to R. A. Lancaster & Co. of New York City, for syndicate expenses, two-thirds of the interest on said bonds from January 1st, 1893, to July 1st, 1893, that may be received by it, that is to say, a commission of 1 Per cent, out of the interest or profit received on said bonds. 3. The said * * * shall have no right by virtue of his said subscription to actual delivery of said bonds from said Trust Company, but shall, in addition to the interest provided for by section 2 hereof, be entitled to receive from said Trust Company a share of the whole profits, if any, [477]*477that may be realized by the sale of said bonds by syndicate, at a greater price than that paid for the same, the share of the said * * * in the said profits to be in the proportion that the number of the said bonds subscribed for by him may bear to the whole number of bonds subscribed for by the syndicate. 4. The said Baltimore Trust and Guarantee Company is also authorized to pay R. M. Marshall & Bro. $2,500; the Bank of Charleston, N. B. A., $1,000; the Baltimore Trust and Guarantee Company $500, and such other expenses as maybe authorized by the syndicate. 5. It is understood that the syndicate shall have the same rights and privileges in the balance of about $3,800,000 of bonds as hereinbefore provided with reference to the said $2,000,000 of said bonds.” The subscriptions first made related only to the sum of two millions of the issue, but under the fifth clause an option was given to the subscribers to take the residue of the bonds, amounting to three millionsAwp_hundred_„ancL-fifty^thousand dollars, .on precisely^ the same, terms. This option was availed of on March the seventh, eighteen hundred and ninety-three. It was understood that the subscriptions for the first two millions were only to be binding in the event that the syndicate should succeed in disposing of that amount of the bonds to parties in .South -Carolina or elsewhere outside of the syndicate. This condition having been ultimately complied with, a meeting of the members of the syndicate was held in Baltimore, on January the eleventh or twelfth, eighteen hundred and ninety-three, and this meeting was attended by Lancaster. It is proved beyond the possibility of doubt that Lancaster then and there and repeatedly afterwards unequivocally declared that he had no interest beyond about five hundred dollars for travelling expenses, in the fund payable under the second clause of the subscription agreements to R. A. Lancaster and Company “for syndicate expenses.” He urged the members of the syndicate not to press him with inquiries as to what disposition was to be made of this fund for “syndicate expenses,” and strongly intimated that [478]*478it was to be used in some way among parties who exercised political influence in South Carolina; though he declared emphatically that he knew not to whom the money was to go and persistently protested that he did not wish to know. This fund, as the clause already quoted from the subscription agreement shows, was to be raised by deducting two-thirds from the amount of the interest due July the first, eighteen hundred and ninety-three on the new four and a-half bonds. The syndicate agreeing to take the two millions of bonds at par fiat as of July the first, and also agreeing under the option to take the remaining three millions two hundred and fifty thousand, the interest coupons to mature that day for the preceding six months and amounting to two and a-quarter per cent., were to be the property of the syndicate, and out of their proceeds, when paid by the State Treasurer, a portion of the profits of the members was to be derived after the syndicate expenses and the other items named in the fourth paragraph of the subscription papers were first subtracted. It is obvious, therefore, that one of the things which the members of the syndicate contracted to get and one of the things that was to be their common property, under both the original subscription and the option, was this six months’ interest amounting at two and a-quarter per cent, on the two millions of dollars to the sum of forty-five thousand dollars, and on the remaining three millions two hundred and fifty thousand dollars to the further sum of seventy-three thousand one hundred and twenty-five dollars, and aggregating the gross sum of one hundred and eighteen thousand one hundred and twenty-five dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
40 L.R.A. 216, 36 A. 597, 84 Md. 456, 1897 Md. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hambleton-v-rhind-md-1897.