Hitchcock v. Midland Railroad

33 N.J. Eq. 86
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 33 N.J. Eq. 86 (Hitchcock v. Midland Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hitchcock v. Midland Railroad, 33 N.J. Eq. 86 (N.J. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

According to the bill, the property of the New Jersey Midland Railway Company was under foreclosure. Previous to or pending the proceedings, a plan of re-organization of the company, by or in the interest of such of the bondholders as should agree to it and contribute to the expense of carrying it out, was adopted, and, by circular, bondholders were invited to come in and participate in the benefits of the arrangement. A committee, called the re-organization committee,” was appointed. Among those who constituted it was Howard P. Dechert, and he was its sec[88]*88retary. By the circular before mentioned (a copy of which was received by the complainant), those who were interested in the matter were informed that all first mortgage bondholders, desirous of participating in the purchase of the road at the foreclosure sale, were to deposit their bonds with the Central Trust Company, in the city of New York, on or before the 31st of December then next, together with one-quarter of one per cent, on the amount of such bonds, in cash, for defraying the costs of foreclosure and expenses incident thereto, taking the receipt of that company therefor, countersigned by the representative of the permanent committee, to be thereafter appointed to perfect the organization in such form as they should determine; and that the holders of the second mortgage bonds, who should desire to avail themselves of the provisions of the plan, were to deposit their bonds and pay a like percentage thereon, on or before the same date, taking a like receipt therefor from the trust company, countersigned as before mentioned; and that any balance over such costs and expenses of foreclosure would be applied in settling with those first mortgage bondholders who should not join in the purchase of the road, and the remainder, if any, was to be paid into the treasury of the new company. The circular was accompanied by a notice, which formed part of it, that in accordance with the plan, a committee of trustees, the names of the members of which were given, had been constituted, and that the office of the committee was at a designated place in the city of New York. Among the names was that of Mr. Dechert, to whose name the addition of secretary was made.

The complainant, on the 13th of January, 1879, was the owner of one of the first mortgage bonds, and on that day she offered it to the Central Trust Company, for the purpose of depositing it with that company, under and in pursuance of the before-mentioned plan of re-organization, but the trust company refused to receive it, and referred her to the re-organization committee. On that day she offered the bond to the committee, and it was received by them through Mr. Dechert, their secretary, pursuant to the plan of re-organization, and to enable her to participate therein. [89]*89At the same time, she paid to. the secretary her assessment, and took the receipt of the committee. The receipt was as follows :

“ Be-organization Committee of the Hew Jersey Midland Eailway Co.
“ Deposit of First Mortgage Bonds. Name, Mrs. J. G. Hitchcock.
“Address, Longmeadow, Mass.
“One bond of $1,000 each,.Nos. 235. Coupons commencing Feb’y 1,1874.
“Amount of bonds......'.$1,000 00
“Assessment. 2 60
“Date of deposit, Jan. 13, ’79.
“ Eec’d the above,
“ H. P. Dechert,
See’y”

Three days afterwards, Mr. Deehert, as secretary of the committee, deposited the bond with the trust company, together with other bonds amounting to $4,000, and took from the trust company a certificate for the five bonds in his own name, individually.

The property of the railroad company was sold under the fore- . closure, and was bought in by or in behalf of the re-organization committee, in pursuance of the before-mentioned plan, and a new company was formed according to the statute. The committee approved a plan for the settlement or compromise of the debts, claims or liabilities of the old company, but on what terms they refuse to tell the complainant. They have now ceased to act. The new company is about to issue its bonds in place of those of the original company, which were deposited with the committee under the plan, and as authorized by the provisions of the apt “respecting railroads sold under mortgage” (Rev. p. 944), and to deliver them to the persons holding and presenting the certificates of deposit of the trust company, under the plan, and it refuses to recognize the receipt given to the complainant, or to deliver her any bond therefor, unless it is accompanied by the certificate of the trust company. Neither Deehert nor the committee has ever returned her bond to her or given her any certificate of deposit of the trust company therefor or anything representing it, nor have they or any of them given to her any other bond, certificate or receipt whatever. She is still the owner of [90]*90the bond. She has in vain demanded of the committee the return of her bond or the delivery to her of the certificate of the trust company acknowledging the deposit of it, and she has, but in vain, demanded from the new company a bond of $1,000 in place of her bond, according to the plan of re-organization. The bill is filed against the new company and the members of the committee, and it'prays that the complainant may be decreed to be the owner of the bond, and to be the person'to whom any bond under the plan of re-organization is to be given instead thereof; and that the new company may be decreed to issue a bond to her instead of the bond delivered to the committee, or that the defendants may be decreed to account to her for the proceeds or fair value of her bond, and to pay it or them to her accordingly, out of the funds in their hands arising from assessments on the bonds; and that the new company may be enjoined from issuing any bond to any one but the complainant, instead of her bond; and it prays for relief generally.

The defendants demur. For causes, they assign want of equity, want of a necessary party (the present holder of the complainant’s bond), and that the complainant has an adequate remedy at law. They insist that the complainant does not show herself entitled to the relief she seeks because she does not show that she complied with the provisions of the plan of re-organization. It is necessary, they insist, that she should show that she deposited her bond with and paid her assessment to the trust company. For some reason which does not appear, the trust company, as before mentioned, declined to receive them, and referred her to the committee, its principal (for the trust company was merely the agent or depositary of the committee), and she went to the committee and delivered the bond, with her assessment thereon, to them. This was a compliance with the direction of the plan; and in receiving the bond and assessment themselves, the committee waived the provision for deposit with the trust company. Nay, after they received the bond and assessment they deposited the former with the trust company themselves, and if their officer (and he was not only their officer, but one of their number), fraudulently took a certificate from the trust company in his own [91]*91favor, when he ought to have taken it in favor of the complainant, that fact cannot prejudice her.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.J. Eq. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hitchcock-v-midland-railroad-njch-1880.