In re Times Pub. Co.

183 F. 603, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 107
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 9, 1910
DocketNo. 3,364
StatusPublished

This text of 183 F. 603 (In re Times Pub. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Times Pub. Co., 183 F. 603, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 107 (E.D. Pa. 1910).

Opinion

J. B. McPHERSON, District Judge.

The Times Publishing Company carried on a printing and publishing business in Oxford, Chester county, Pa., and was adjudged bankrupt in January, 1909. Its real estate was afterwards sold discharged of liens, and the distribu[604]*604tion of this fund gives rise to the present dispute. Certain relevant facts appear in the referee’s report:

“On December 31, 1904, the company executed a mortgage covering the said real estate to R. A. Walker, as trustee, to secure the payment of a bond issue amounting to the sum of $12,600. This mortgage was duly recorded in the recorder’s office of Chester county in Mortgage Book N 5, vol. 119, p. 368, ^nd bonds to the amount indicated were issued, and the mortgage remains unsatisfied of record.
“Of these bonds the following are outstanding in the hands of their owners, and are unpaid:
Ellen L. Thomas, Anna B. Thomas, and Pauline L. Thomas......$1.900
Kate Smith......... 1,200
Knights of Golden Eagle, Lodge No. 232......................... 1,000
Roland Flaherty................ 600
Eri H. Poley................................................... 1,000
Isaac Wood, trustee............. 700
O. P. Swisher.................. 500
$6,900
“Some time prior to April 1, 1907, the corporation, desiring to increase its plant, decided to and did on that date create a new mortgage to secure a bond issue of $25,000, naming the Kennett Trust Company as trustee.
“This mortgage covers the same real estate as the first mortgage and remains of record in the recorder’s office of Chester county in Mortgage Book K 6, vol. 134, p. 144, and remains unsatisfied. The secretary and treasurer of the Times Publishing Company, and the person in its active management at the time of the creation of both mortgages, was O. E. Morrison.
“In due course in the proceedings in bankruptcy, Francis G. Andrews was elected trustee, and upon taking possession of the books, papers, and assets of the company he found in a private box owned and kept by the said O. E. Morrison in the National Bank of Oxford a bundle of bonds, which had been issued by the company under the mortgage for $12,500 above referred to, amounting to the sum of $5,600. With these bonds was a paper in the handwriting of C. E. Morrison in the following language:
“ ‘These bonds are part of first issue, and the holders exchanged them for a like amount in the new issue. They are not an indebtedness against the company. C. E. Morrison.’
“With these bonds and the paper just quoted was a paper of which the following is a copy:
“ ‘We the undersigned bondholders of the Times Publishing Company under the issue in existence March 1, 1907, do hereby agree to exchange our present holdings for a like amount in a new issue for twenty-five thousand dollars to be secured in the same manner and conditions as our present bonds. Eri H. Poley. O. P. Morris.
“ ‘Jeanette S. McCullough. Chas. Swisher.
“ ‘Rebecca J. Runner. S. E. Nivin:
“ ‘R. H. Ferguson. Stewart Badgett.
‘W. Anderson.’
“In order to raise additional funds for the business purposes of the company, it doubtless was Morrison’s plan to secure the surrender by the holders of the bonds then outstanding under the first mortgage, and with this in’ view he secured possession of the bonds found in his private box under the agreement above quoted, and probably under an additional verbal stipulation that before the plan would be carried to completion there would be a surrender of all the bonds.
“With this understanding the holders whose names appear above, except Chas. Swisher, surrendered their bonds amounting to $5,100, and received bonds in exchange therefor of like amount secured by the second mortgage.’’

Further facts are stated in the course of this opinion. After the second mortgage was executed and recorded, the following persons [605]*605became the owners and are now the holders for value of the new Issue, cither as purchasers for cash or as pledgees for money loaned:

Kri H. X’oley.................$ 300 J. H. Ya.nia.ll................ 300 L. Mary Frame...............$ 300 P. F. Hamilton............... 500
National Bank of Oxford......1,000 Farmers’ Nat. Bank of Oxford 1,000
Christiana Nat. Bank.........1.500 11. R. Montgomery............ 2,100
W. If. Beyer.................. 2,000 II. W. Cha If ant........ 500
Abram Ferguson........ „..... 000 Mahlon Ironsides.............. 400
Amia J. Ferguson........ 100 Sarah Jackson................ 500
Jacob Shook.................. 1,000 Eva Bowden........... 1,000

The signers of the foregoing agreement will be called the “assenting bondholders.” They held $5,600 of the first issue, and if they have lost their rights under that mortgage the fund for distribution is large enough to pay in full the nonassenting bonds, and leave a balance to be apportioned among all the bonds (including those now in the hands of the assenting bondholders) that were issued under the second mortgage. But if all the bonds under the first mortgage, both assenting and nonassenting, are .entitled to priority, the whole fund will be thus absorbed, leaving nothing for bonds under the second mortgage. The vital question therefore is whether the assenting bondholders must claim under the second mortgage only, or whether they are still entitled to insist upon their legal rights under the first mortgage. The referee decided that the}- had lost these rights, basing his ruling upon the following ground:

“The rule is a familiar one that' he who puts it in the power of another to commit a fraud must bear the consequence; when one of two parties who are equally innocent of actual fraud must lose, the one who by misplaced confidence in an agent or attorney has been the cause of the loss shall not throw it on the other. Xander v. Commonwealth, 102 Pa. 430.”

The rule is undoubted, and if the facts require its application the assenting bondholders must bear the loss, which in that event would be due to misplaced confidence in a faithless agent. But in my opinion the evidence does not establish a case in which the rule should be applied, as I think can be made clear in a short discussion.

A word may be said at the outset concerning Morrison’s memorandum found with the assenting bonds. It is plainly a self-serving declaration and should be disregarded, tie could not draw his own conclusions about the legal effect of the transaction, and bind the assenting bondholders by an ex parte statement.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 F. 603, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-times-pub-co-paed-1910.