Industrial & General Trust, Ltd. v. Tod

63 N.E. 285, 170 N.Y. 233, 8 Bedell 233, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1060
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 285 (Industrial & General Trust, Ltd. v. Tod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial & General Trust, Ltd. v. Tod, 63 N.E. 285, 170 N.Y. 233, 8 Bedell 233, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1060 (N.Y. 1902).

Opinion

Gray,' J.

The action was brought, and a recovery was had, upon the theory that the defendants, by their acts, were guilty of such unauthorized interference, or intermeddling, with the plaintiff’s property, as to constitute a conversion. In the language of the plaintiff’s brief, it is contended that, “the defendants, by proceeding to the sale of the railroad property without formulating a plan and under circumstances which prevented the plaintiff from protecting itself by withdrawing its bonds; by using such bonds on the purchase, and *243 by asserting absolute dominion over them, became guilty of such an unwarranted interference with the right as to constitute a conversion.” ^In my opinion, there was no case made out of conversion. That there was a breach of the reorganization agreement, in a disregard, or in a disobedience, of one of its provisions, might be assumed;. but that there were present the elements to constitute a conversion, and to give rise to a remedy in tort, I do not believe?} The relations between the plaintiff and the defendants rested in contract and were defined by the reorganization agreement.' jThe latter may lie regarded as having acted in the capacity, either of bailees, or of agents, (Gáfente r v. Gatlin, 14 Barb. 75), and it ' matters not which, in my opinion, for the purposes of the case. If the acts complained of do not appear to have been wrongful, in the sense that they were unauthorized by, and inconsistent with, the reorganization agreement, then they constituted, at most, a breach of an obligation of that agreement. plaintiffs property

It is apparent that the reorganization agreement confers very broad powers upon the reorganization committee, in their management of the bondholders’ interest, and it exempts the members from any liability, except in the case of their willful misconduct. A deposit of bonds under the agreement was to transfer to the committee the full legal and equitable title) thereto, for all the purposes of the agreement. The committee was authorized to take such steps as it might deem advisable for the formation of a new corporation and ■ for transferring to that new corporation all the assets of the old railway company, and the deposited bonds might be used for the purpose of paying for any assets or franchises purchased. So extensive was the authority of the committee that it might supply any defect or omission, deemed necessary to enable it to carry out the general purposes of the agreement, and its construction of the agreement was to be final.

In what, actually, consists the tortious act of the defendants, which is deemed to give to the plaintiff a right to complain and to maintain this action % It is in the one fact of a *244 failure to file a plan of reorganization, prior to the sale in foreclosure of the railroad. Concededly, had that been done, there could have been no complaint of unauthorized conduct. It is to be remembered, however, that proceedings to foreclose the mortgage made by the Birmingham, Sheffield and Tennessee River Railway Company had been instituted by the trustee in the mortgage, and were pending at the time of the execution of the reorganization agreement. When, shortly thereafter, a sale w-as ordered to be held, by the decree of the court, the reorganization committee was confronted with a situation not of their own creating. The committee wras called upon to act for the protection of the interests in its care, and if the members construed the agreement as conferring upon them the authority to use the deposited bonds for the purpose of purchasing the mortgaged property, how can it be said that their construction was unwarranted; or that they were not acting for, and in the interest of, the bondholders, their principals, and in the line of duty, for the conservation of their interests? The sale to, and the purchase by, the reorganization committee had the result of liquidating-the value of the bonds and of merging them in the ownership of the property. The bondholders, through their committee, got possession of the mortgaged property, as it had been contemplated, and the committee was, thereby, enabled to reorganize the railroad under the authority given it. The formulation of a plan of reorganization might well be regarded as for future consideration. As the price for the property was paid in the bonds, each holder of a certificate, representing the deposited bonds, under the reorganization agreement, became entitled to his proportionate share of the property purchased; which was evidenced by the act of the commissioner of sale, in stamping each bond with the amount it represented of the sum paid for the property. The plaintiff’s agent was chargeable with notice of the sale by the public advertisement, as by the letter of the chairman of the committee, and it seems to me clear that it was the duty of the committee to treat the plaintiff’s bonds alike with other *245 deposited bonds and to use them in acquiring the title to the } mortgaged property.

Disregarding what I consider to be an erroneous and misleading assumption of fact in the plaintiff’s contention, namely, that the defendants proceeded to a sale of the railroad property, and assuming that, by the terms of the reorganization agreement; it was implied that they were bound to formulate a plan for reorganization before the sale in foreclosure, and that, in failing to do so, they violated the reorganization agreement, where was the element of a conversion ? /Conversion at law is defined to be “ an unauthorized assumption and exercise of the right of ownership over goods, or personal chattels, belonging to another, to the alteration of their condition, or the exclusion of the owner’s rights.”^ (Bouvié'fs Law Diet.) A wrongful intention is not an essential element of the conversion and it is sufficient if it appears that thé^owner has been deprived of his property by the defendant’s unauthorized act, in assuming dominion and control. (Boyce v. Brockway 31 N. Y. 490.) jjTf, in the present case, the defendants were shown to have altered the condition ! of the plaintiff’s property, without authority, they might be i~ liable in conversion^ (See Laverty v. Snethen, 68 N. Y. 522, 526; Comley v. Duzian, 114 ib. 161,165.) The pivotal point, is, whether the defendants exceeded their powers and committed á legal tort; or whether they committed a mere breach of their agreement, in the particular claimed. Their relation to the- plaintiff rested in contract and, as it was said in Walter v. Bennett, (16 N. Y. 250), “ whatever responsibility attaches * " \ f is upon the contract and the plaintiff cannot, by changirigVtlie form of his action, change the nature of the defendant’s obligation and convert that into a tort, which the law deems to be a simple breach of an agreement.” The defendants did not part with the bonds in a way, and for a purpose, not vfi-tliin their authority ;^for with the assent of the plaintiff they held the legal and equitable title to the bonds for the purposes of the agreement; one of which was to use them in paying for any assets or franchises purchased, j It *246

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 285, 170 N.Y. 233, 8 Bedell 233, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-general-trust-ltd-v-tod-ny-1902.