Interstate Trust & Banking Co. v. Breckinridge

181 So. 535, 189 La. 1057, 1938 La. LEXIS 1260
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 2, 1938
DocketNo. 34561.
StatusPublished

This text of 181 So. 535 (Interstate Trust & Banking Co. v. Breckinridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interstate Trust & Banking Co. v. Breckinridge, 181 So. 535, 189 La. 1057, 1938 La. LEXIS 1260 (La. 1938).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

The Mortgage & Securities Company, hereinafter referred to as the Company, was a Louisiana corporation domiciled in New Orleans and, according to the agreed statement of facts, “for many years, did a large and extensive business in the underwriting and sale of various types of securities”. The Company w'as placed in receivership on August 8, 1929.

On August 1, 1924, the Company entered into an agreement, evidenced by writing, *1059 with the Canal Commercial Trust and Savings Bank of New Orleans (the name of the bank being later changed to Canal Bank and Trust Company), referred to as a “Depositary” or “Trustee”, by which agreement the Company “proposes to set over, assign and transfer to the Depositary from time to time certain notes (and the debts evidenced thereby), secured by first mortgages, hereinafter called the ‘Securities’ (Quoted from preamble of written instrument.) The instrument contains sixteen articles. Article I provides that:

“The Company shall transfer and assign said Securities to the Depositary, and the Depositary shall accept said Securities and the Title thereto, in trust for the benefit and account of the Company and of each and every person or corporation that may be or become the owner of an undivided part or share of said Securities and to whom shall be issued or transferred any First Mortgage Participating Certificate or Certificates, as herein described, evidencing the ownership by the holder thereof of an undivided part or share of said Securities.”

Article II of the instrument reads as follows:

“The Company has reserved, and shall have, the right to sell undivided parts or shares of said Securities as the same are assigned and delivered to the Depositary, and to issue and deliver to the purchasers of said parts or shares, respectively, First Mortgage Participating Certificates each representing a part or share of the Securities then or thereafter deposited under the terms of this Agreement equal to the proportion which the purchase price named in the Certificate bears to the total aggregate face value of the Securities then or thereafter deposited with the Depositary; provided always that there shall not be at any time issued and outstanding Certificates exceeding in amount the aggregate face value of the Securities so assigned and transferred to' the Depositary.”

Article III of the instrument provides that:

“The Company has and shall have the right to issue, in accordance with the terms hereof, First Mortgage Participating Certificates in form substantially as follows.”

Then follows the form of certificate which the Company proposed to issue. The purpose or reason for the transfer of the securities by the Company to the Depositary is explained in the preamble to the instrument, as follows:

“Whereas, said Securities are to be so transferred and deposited, and these presents are prepared for the purpose of facilitating sales by the Company of parts, or shares of said Securities to be evidenced by First Mortgage Participating Certificates, hereinafter sometimes referred to as ‘Certificates’, each Certificate representing such part or share as may be in said Certificate described, each evidencing the ownership by the purchaser of undivided parts or shares respectively in said Securities.”

On March 2, 1934, F. Prevost Breckinridge and Percy H. Sitges became the successor Depositaries or Trustees to the Canal Bank and Trust Company. And the present suit was brought against them in their representative capacities.

*1061 Jasper S. Brock, State Bank Commissioner in charge of the Interstate Trust & Banking Company, now in liquidation, brought the present suit against Breckinridge and Sitges, alleging that the bank was the holder and owner of certificates Nos. 173, 178, 186 and 187, issued by the Mortgage & Securities Company, said certificates aggregating the total face sum of $24,000.00; that said certificates were issued in accordance with a certain indenture dated August 1, 1924 (which is the written instrument herein-above referred to) ; that the Mortgage & Securities Company is hopelessly insolvent and the only possible source of liquidation of the certificates held by petitioner is from collections on securities delivered to the Depositary or Trustee under the agreement dated August 1, 1924.

It is further alleged that the Mortgage & Securities Company became in default according to the provisions of the said indenture on July 1, 1929, and that accordingly it became the right and duty of the Depositary or Trustee to collect the proceeds of the securities deposited with it under the terms of the indenture for the pro rata benefit of all the holders of outstanding participating certificates issued by the Company, including those held by the plaintiff, and that at the time of default there were outstanding certificates, including those held by petitioner, amounting to $79,687.00. It is further alleged on information and belief that the said Breckinridge and Sitges, as Depositaries or Trustees, have made substantial collections on the deposited securities and have made therefrom various and sundry pro rata distributions to all of the holders of said certificates except plaintiff; that plaintiff, as the holder of the said four certificates, is legally entitled to its pro rata share of all collections made, and that the withholding from petitioner of its pro rata share therein was unjustified, illegal and without warrant in law.

Plaintiff prayed for judgment against Breckinridge and Sitges as Depositaries or Trustees, ordering them to pay the plaintiff in preference and priority over all other holders of such certificates “a sum equal to the proportion that $24,000.00 bears to $79,-687.00 of all collections heretofore made on the securities deposited with the Trustees and/or Depositaries under the indenture of August 1st, 1924; that after the payment of this amount to petitioner, the $24,000.00 in Texas Participating Ctfs. held by petitioner, Interstate Trust and Banking Co., in Liquidation, be decreed to be of equal rank to all other outstanding Texas Participating Certificates and as such, entitled to share pro rata in all future collections made on securities deposited with the Trustees and/or Depositaries under the indenture of August 1st, 1924”.

Breckinridge and Sitges, in their representative capacities, answered the suit and denied, for lack of sufficient information, practically all of the allegations of the petition. But they later supplemented their original answer by alleging that their predecessor, as Depositary or Trustee, had, under and in accordance with the trust agreement, dated August *1, 1924,

“distributed Fifty ($5,0.00) Dollars on each One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars par value of so called participating certificates *1063 issued under said indenture, except on those numbered 173, 178, 186 and 187 mentioned in the petition herein filed, and that your respondents have distributed One Hundred and Ninety-Two and 3%oo ($192.30) on each One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars par value of said so-called participating certificates, except on the four above mentioned.”

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Bluebook (online)
181 So. 535, 189 La. 1057, 1938 La. LEXIS 1260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-trust-banking-co-v-breckinridge-la-1938.