Ithaca Trust Co. v. Ithaca Traction Corp.

162 N.E. 93, 248 N.Y. 322, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1267
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 N.E. 93 (Ithaca Trust Co. v. Ithaca Traction Corp.) 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
Ithaca Trust Co. v. Ithaca Traction Corp., 162 N.E. 93, 248 N.Y. 322, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1267 (N.Y. 1928).

Opinion

*326 Pound, J.

The action is to foreclose a second mortgage given by the Ithaca Street Railway Company, dated January 2, 1894. Prior to it is a first mortgage to defendant-respondent Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, dated July 1, 1892.

The Ithaca Street Railway Company, when the mortgage in suit was executed, owned and operated an electric street railway in the city of Ithaca. The Cayuga Lake Electric Railway Company operated a line about two miles in length which was an extension of the line of the Ithaca Street Railway Company on Tioga street to Cayuga lake. It was first leased by and then merged into the Ithaca Street Railway Company and became a part of its system in July, 1898. The original fine of the Ithaca Street Railway Company was extended in 1899 or 1900 by the construction of the loop which became an integral part of the system.

The Ithaca Street Railway Company on July 1, 1907, executed a third mortgage. Foreclosure followed in 1912. The property of the Ithaca Street Railway Company was sold to Fitz, chairman of a reorganization committee. The Ithaca Traction Corporation, defendant-appellant, was organized in 1914 and the property of the Ithaca Street Railway Company was transferred to it. The Traction Corporation made a mortgage to the predecessor of the appellant Irving Bank-Columbia Trust Company, covering all its property.

The judgment in this action directs the sale of practically all the property of the Traction Corporation. Judgment is also given against the defendants-appellants, Traction Corporation and Trust Company for $99,050 cash proceeds of the sale of the Remington Salt Company power house hereinafter referred to.

*327 The question presented on this appeal is as to the extent of the underlying mortgages and the property and rights secured thereby. The Traction Corporation claims that property and rights are included in the judgment which was never owned nor acquired by the Ithaca Street Railway Company. A patient examination of complicated facts is necessary to reach a proper conclusion on this point.

In addition to the corporations already named others are to be considered.

1. Ithaca and Cayuga Heights Railway was incorporated in 1904. It connected with the Ithaca Street Railway Company and extended north to the village of Cayuga Heights which is contiguous to the city of Ithaca and for residential purposes practically a part thereof. It was operated first by the Ithaca Street Railway Company, into which it was merged, then by its receivers and since by the Traction Corporation, which has extended the line about eight hundred feet to the north.

2. New York, Auburn and Lansing Railroad Company, which in 1905 built a steam railroad from Auburn to a junction with the Ithaca Street Railway Company near Renwick, now Stewart Park in Ithaca. Electric service was introduced at South Lansing, several miles from the Ithaca end. Its affairs were interwoven with those of the Ithaca Street Railway Company. A mortgage on its property was foreclosed at the time of the 1907 foreclosure of the third mortgage on the Ithaca Street Railway Company. A reorganization plan for both corporations followed. Fitz, as chairman of the reorganization committee, bought both properties. The steam railroad passed to Central New York Southern Railroad Corporation, organized to carry out the plan. The street railroad property passed to the Ithaca Traction Corporation, similarly organized. The plan was to make the Central New York Southern Railroad Corporation the holding corporation of the stock of the Traction Corporation and *328 the Traction Corporation a subsidiary of the Central New York Southern Railroad. The power property, hereinafter referred to, passed to the Traction Corporation and the Central New York Southern Railroad received bonds of the Traction Corporation as compensation.

By the terms of the underlying mortgages all after-acquired property and all extensions of the road were covered in the most comprehensive manner. Every interest that the railway company could acquire in relation to its railway system was included.

When the Traction Corporation obtained its title in 1912 to the property of the Ithaca Street Railway Company it acquired it subject to the underlying mortgages and all the broad and sweeping terms and provisions thereof.

The plaintiff takes the position, which has been sustained by the referee and the Appellate Division, that when the Traction Corporation obtained its title the Railway Company had and operated a street railway system, including its own property as described in the mortgage, together with after-acquired power facilities, the Loop and the Cayuga Lake and Cayuga Heights extensions and mergers above referred to, all of which were necessary and appropriate to its physical operation.

The appellant Traction Corporation, which acquired for the greater part of its own properties, the property of the Ithaca Street Railway Company, seeks to unscramble the property of the Ithaca Street Railway and separate from it the power facilities by which the railway was operated, the Cayuga Heights extension and other items which were at least utilized by the railway before the Traction Corporation acquired its title.

A mortgage by a public utility corporation is valid in respect to after-acquired property necessary and appropriate for its physical operation under its franchise and the performance of its public duties. (Platt v. N. Y. & Sea Beach Ry. Co., 9 App. Div. 87; affd., on op. below, *329 153 N. Y. 670.) The property in question is of such a character as to be an integral part of the mortgaged property if it was acquired by the Railway Company. It was used as a part of the Ithaca Street Railway system. The question is whether the Ithaca Street Railway Company acquired the property or whether it merely operated it. A substitution clause in the mortgage subjects all new appliances and property such as cars, generators, etc., to the lien of the mortgage. It has no application here. Prior liens on after-acquired property are protected but no prior hens are in controversy in this case.

Appellants’ point that the after-acquired property clauses operate only on property acquired within the capacity of the corporation at the time the mortgages were made and do not cover extensions afterwards authorized, has no force. The extensions were authorized when made or were subsequently validated, including ah hens thereon. (L. 1893, ch. 679.) So as to the point that these clauses do not spread to property acquired by merger. The Loop, the Cayuga Lake and the Cayuga Heights property, ah minor extensions of the main line, were acquired by the Ithaca Street Railway Company as part of its local system and so became subject to the mortgages. It took actual possession of them and operated them as a physical and visible part of its road. The Ithaca Traction Corporation took these properties as a part of the Ithaca Street Railway system. It has no prior equities therein. Metropolitan Trust Co. v. Chicago & E. I. R. R. Co. (253 Fed. Rep. 868) has to do with comphcated consolidations and has no apphcation here.

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Bluebook (online)
162 N.E. 93, 248 N.Y. 322, 1928 N.Y. LEXIS 1267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ithaca-trust-co-v-ithaca-traction-corp-ny-1928.