La Salle National Bank v. Britton

119 N.E.2d 486, 2 Ill. App. 2d 386, 1954 Ill. App. LEXIS 262
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 11, 1954
DocketGen. No. 46,204
StatusPublished

This text of 119 N.E.2d 486 (La Salle National Bank v. Britton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
La Salle National Bank v. Britton, 119 N.E.2d 486, 2 Ill. App. 2d 386, 1954 Ill. App. LEXIS 262 (Ill. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Robson

delivered the opinion of the court.

The La Salle National Bank, plaintiff, as assignee of Devonshire Hotel, Inc., a corporation reorganized in the United States District Court under the Federal Bankruptcy Act, filed a complaint in chancery to cancel undelivered Voting Trust Certificates issued in the names of the individual defendants, and to obtain payment of certain cash proceeds and dividends applicable to these certificates, in accordance with what is alleged to be the requirements of a final decree of the United States District Court. The Chicago Title & Trust Company, also a defendant, is in possession of the undelivered Voting Trust Certificates. The cause was heard on the pleadings and on written briefs submitted by the parties. The chancellor in the trial court entered the decree denying the relief sought by plaintiff. This appeal is from that decree.

The pertinent facts are undisputed. The plan of reorganization of Devonshire Hotel, Inc., was approved by the Federal District Court on September 28, 1938, and provided for the issuance of 5,145 shares of capital stock and for the delivery of such shares to three voting trustees named by the court. The trustees were to issue Voting Trust Certificates in exchange for the outstanding bonds of Devonshire Hotel, Inc., at the rate of one trust share for each $100 principal amount of bonds. In due course, all but $2,400 of the bonds were surrendered for cancellation, and the holders of the bonds so surrendered received Voting Trust Certificates aggregating 5,121 trust shares. Of the bonds surrendered, 95% were turned in by the Bondholders’ Protective Committee which had previously received them from the respective individual holders and had issued transferable Certificates of Deposit in exchange for the bonds deposited with the committee under the terms of a Deposit Agreement. The agreement provided for the appointment of a depositary, assignment to the committee of the full legal and equitable title to the bonds deposited, and authorized the committee to take such action as might be necessary or appropriate to protect the interests of the depositors. When the committee tendered its deposited bonds pursuant to the reorganization plan in exchange for Voting Trust Certificates, it furnished the voting trustees with a list of its depositors and directed that the Voting Trust Certificates to be issued in exchange for the bonds held by the committee be registered in the names of those to whom Certificates of Deposit had been issued, and that such Voting Trust Certificates be delivered to the committee’s depositary, Chicago Title & Trust Company, which would distribute them to the holders of Certificates of Deposit. This was done. The committee then notified its depositors to surrender their Certificates of Deposit in exchange for the Voting Trust Certificates registered in their respective names. In due course, all of the holders of Certificates of Deposit, except the individual defendants, surrendered their Certificates of Deposit and received their Voting Trust Certificates. Thus there were at the time of the commencement of this controversy: (1) Voting Trust Certificates issued to those bondholders who had not deposited their bonds with the Bondholders’ Committee and which were held by the Chicago Title & Trust Company as agent of the voting trustees, and which amounted to 24 trust shares. These Voting Trust Certificates were surrendered to the voting Trustees for cancellation by the Chicago Title & Trust Company. (2) Voting Trust Certificates which had been issued to bondholders who had deposited their bonds with the Chicago Title & Trust Company, as depositary of the Bondholders’ Committee, but who had not presented their Certificates of Deposit to the Chicago Title & Trust Company and received their Voting Trust Certificates. These amounted to 48 shares and are the subject of the present controversy.

In a letter to the depositing bondholders dated June 3,1939, the committee stated that successful completion of the reorganization made further action by the committee unnecessary; that no further transfers of Certificates of Deposit would be recognized after June 9, 1939; that the Deposit Agreement would be terminated “as to the bonds of this issue” on June 8, 1939; and that the depositors should exchange their Certificates of Deposit for Voting Trust Certificates.

On June 4, 1942, a final decree in the federal court was entered in the reorganization, providing in part: “10. That all Voting Trust Certificates not heretofore delivered in exchange for Bonds as provided in the Plan, shall continue to be held by Chicago Title and Trust Company, as Agent under the said Trust Agreement dated February 17, 1939, relating to the capital stock of Devonshire Hotel, Inc., or by the successor of said Chicago Title and Trust Company, as such Agent, for delivery to the persons entitled thereto under the Plan, and upon the termination of said Trust Agreement all Voting Trust Certificates which have not theretofore been distributed shall be cancelled and the distributable portion of the property held under said Trust Agreement applicable to such unexchanged Voting Trust Certificates shall be held by said Agent, or its successor, or by Devonshire Hotel, Inc., for delivery to the persons entitled thereto; provided, however, that any such Voting Trust Certificates (or the proceeds thereof) which have not been distributed within five (5) years from the date of "entry of this decree shall be delivered to said Devonshire Hotel, Inc., or its successors or assigns, to be and become the property of said Devonshire Hotel, Inc.”

Early in 1950 the voting Trustees were negotiating a sale of all the issued and outstanding stock of the debtor, and they instructed Chicago Title & Trust Company, acting as the agent of the voting trustees for the transfer of trust certificates and for the disbursement of dividends, to take the following action:

“(a) To surrender for cancellation all Trust Certificates which had not theretofore been issued in exchange for bonds.
“(b) To surrender for cancellation the Trust Certificates issued in the names of Committee depositors who had not yet taken delivery of such Certificates by surrendering their Certificates of Deposit; and
“(c) To return all dividends previously declared and paid on both groups of Trust Certificates.”

As we have stated, the Chicago Title & Trust Company complied with the directions set forth in sections (a) and (c) as to the 24 trust shares issued for the nondepositing bondholders, and that is not in controversy. But as to sections (b) and (c) or the group of Voting Trust Certificates issued for the depositing bondholders, the Chicago Title & Trust Company advised the voting trustees it could not comply because, pursuant to the plan of reorganization, these certificates had actually been issued in exchange for bonds and delivered to the Chicago Title & Trust Company, as the committee’s depositary, for the benefit of the registered owners of said certificates. As to these, the Chicago Title & Trust Company contends that it occupies a fiduciary relationship by virtue of its having acted as the depositary for the depositing bondholders and the circumstances under which the Voting Trust Certificates were delivered to it.

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Bluebook (online)
119 N.E.2d 486, 2 Ill. App. 2d 386, 1954 Ill. App. LEXIS 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-salle-national-bank-v-britton-illappct-1954.