James v. . Cowing

82 N.Y. 449, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 384
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 82 N.Y. 449 (James v. . Cowing) 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
James v. . Cowing, 82 N.Y. 449, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 384 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The defendant was trustee of a railroad mortgage made by the “West Side Elevated Patent Railway Company ” to secure its bonds of $500, each, issued to the amount of $750,000. By the terms of the mortgage the trustee was authorized, in case of default, to institute proceedings for foreclosure upon the written request of holders of the bonds to the amount of $100,000. A default occurred; the proper request was made; and the trustee lawfully, and in the performance of his duty, commenced a foreclosure. The mortgage contained. further provisions defining the authority of the trustee in case of a sale, which were, in substance, that, upon the written request of a majority of the bondholders, he should be authorized to purchase the mortgaged property at the sale for the benefit of the bondholders, and thereupon take such measures as seemed necessary to organize a new company or corporation for the use and benefit of such bond holders, in such manner and upon such terms and conditions as a majority should, in writing, direct, and to which corporation so organized he should convey the property purchased by him at the foreclosure sale. Before the day of sale was reached and action upon these provisions of the mortgage became necessary the plaintiff intervened. Claiming to be the owner of some of the bonds, and that his rights were imperiled by the foreclosure, he presented a petition asking for a stay of proceedings. After some negotiation an order was entered in the action, to which his counsel assented, by the terms of which the trustee was directed upon the sale to bid “ for the benefit of all the holders of the bonds secured by *453 the mortgage sought to be foreclosed up to the sum of $450,-000.” Although the duty of the trustee to purchase at the sale was, by the terms of the mortgage, dependent upon the written request to that effect of a majority of the bondholders, and no such request seems to have been made, yet he must be held to have had that right, and to have been bound to perform that duty as against the present plaintiff, through whose intervention and with whose consent the order to purchase was" made. Since, by the terms of the mortgage, no restraint as to price was put upon the trustee in case he should purchase, but the amount of his bid was left to his own discretion unless otherwise lawfully controlled, we must hold that the only restraint upon or limitation of that discretion was contained in the order of the court referred to. That simply required him to bid “ up to ” $450,000. It did not forbid' the offer of a higher price if, in the exercise of his judgment as trustee, he should deem it best for the interest of the bondholders to bid a larger sum. The minimum price at which he should allow others to buy was indeed fixed by the order, but the amount beyond that at which he should buy was still left to his judgment and discretion.

He did in fact bid $750,000, and took the title to the property covered by the mortgage, and held it in trust for the benefit of the bondholders. Of course he did not actually pay on the one hand, or receive on the other, the $750,000. Whatever may have been the form of the receipts in the foreclosure proceedings, the trustee did not in fact receive the money. The transaction simply changed the bondholders from the position of creditors of the company, to that of actual owners of the property through the perfected title of their trustee.

Thus far the action of defendant Cowing was blameless. His next step, however, was a violation of the provisions of the mortgage. He had two duties remaining plainly imposed upon him by the terms of his trust: First, to take measures to organize a new company or corporation “ for the benefit of the holders of the bonds secured by the mortgage,” and, second, to re-convey the property so purchased by him to such new corpora *454 tian. Instead of so doing, he advertised the property for sale at public auction, and for the sum of $100,000, being the highest bid at the sale, conveyed it to the “Hew York Elevated Railroad Company.” This he had no right to do. His sole authority as trustee, by the véry terms of his trust, was to form the bondholders into a corporation and convey the property to them. He had no right to sell at all.

A very ingenious and forcible argument was made on behalf of the appellant in justification of this act of the trustee.' It was urged that, not having purchased upon the written request of the holders of a majority of the bonds, but only under the order of the court, the purchase by the trustee was not for the purposes of the mortgage, but only for the benefit of the bondholders. The order, however, was made in the pending action for the foreclosure of the mortgage. It was made upon the intervention of a bondholder seeking directions to the trustee for the proper performance of his trust. It must, therefore, be construed as a direction to the trustee, as such," and guiding his action under the trusts of the mortgage. Whether properly made, because of the absence of the written request, cannot be a question here. Both parties before us assented to a purchase by the trustee.

It is again said that the new corporation, referred to in the mortgage, was to be organized “ upon such terms, conditions and limitations, and in such manner as the holders of a majority of said outstanding bonds” should direct or request in writing ; and since such majority of bondholders requested a sale, such a .reorganization as the mortgage called for was, in fact, impossible of execution. But the request for a sale gave no authority to make it, at least, so long as a single bondholder dissented and insisted upon the performance of the trust according to its terms. Hor can we say that such performance was impossible. If the trustee had refused to sell, as beyond his authority, we should presume that those who sought a sale would concur in thq reorganization provided for in the mortgage, rather than the contrary.

But if for this reason, or for any other, the due execution of *455 his trust seemed to the trustee impossible, he should have sought the direction of the court, so that all parties could have been heard, and the rights of all protected. To admit such a discretion for a trustee as is here claimed might in many cases make him independent and despotic.

It is claimed, also, that the “Yew York Elevated Railroad Company,” which became the purchaser from the trustee, was substantially the organization provided for in the mortgage, because a majority of the bondholders had gone into it and had determined that it was “ for their use and benefit ” that the mortgaged property should be transferred to it. Without discussing the character or origin of that corporation, or considering the facts presented to us as establishing that its object and aim was to do a wrong to the bondholders under the first mortgage and sacrifice their priority to subsequent and questionable liens, it is enough to say that such corporation in no sense answered the requirements of the mortgage, or the purposes of the trust. If those purposes had been fully carried out, the property mortgaged would have gone to the bondholders. Each one of them would have had his proportionate part of the property represented by its equivalent of stock. • But the capital of the “Yew York Elevated Railroad Company” was $10,000,000, and its property much more than that covered by the mortgage of $750,000.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.Y. 449, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-cowing-ny-1880.