Long-Bell Lbr. Co. v. NAT. BK. OF COMMERCE OF SEATTLE

214 P.2d 183, 35 Wash. 2d 522, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 480
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1950
Docket30966
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 214 P.2d 183 (Long-Bell Lbr. Co. v. NAT. BK. OF COMMERCE OF SEATTLE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long-Bell Lbr. Co. v. NAT. BK. OF COMMERCE OF SEATTLE, 214 P.2d 183, 35 Wash. 2d 522, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 480 (Wash. 1950).

Opinions

Mallery, J.

This is an appeal from a declaratory judgment interpreting a contract.

The plaintiff-appellants are; (1) The Long-Bell Lumber Company, hereinafter called Long-Bell, and (2) Messrs. [524]*524Morris and Goodrich, its officers, who represent Long-Bell in real-estate transactions under this contract and whom we shall call the reconstituted diking district committee or RDDCom. The defendant-cross-appellants are: (1) the protective committee for certain local improvement. district bondholders, hereinafter called the LIDCom, and (2) Mr. Warrens, the managerial agent of the two committees in the real-estate transactions. The National Bank of Commerce is joined only to bind it as custodial trustee of the lands involved in the real-estate transactions.

In 1925, there was created Cowlitz County Consolidated Diking Improvement District No. 1, hereinafter called DD. It undertook diking improvements, levied assessments upon the land within the district, which encompassed the city of Longview, and issued bonds to the amount of $3,260,000. Shortly after DD was created, there were created many local improvement districts, hereinafter called LID, for the construction of improvements in the city of Longview. Improvements were undertaken, assessments levied on the land and bonds issued to the amount of $3,185,794.34.

The primary source for redemption of all these bonds was assessment of lands within DD and LID, both of which encompass roughly the same area. But this source alone was insufficient to make the bonds marketable. Since the lands were being developed by the Longview Company, hereinafter called Longview, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Long-Bell, Long-Bell guaranteed nearly all of the bonds to make them salable.

Financial difficulties overtook the districts and Long-Bell. By 77 (b) proceedings under the Federal bankruptcy law, Long-Bell’s liability as guarantor of the bonds was discharged and, in lieu thereof, on November 30, 1935, Long-Bell common stock was placed in two separate trusts, one for the benefit of DD bondholders and one for LID bondholders. By the terms of each trust, bondholders could require their respective trustee to sell the Long-Bell stock and apply the proceeds ratably to the payment of the respective bonds. In this manner, Long-Bell would be [525]*525discharged of its guaranty liability and would become subrogated to the rights of bondholders to recover from the primary obligors, the DD and LID, to the extent of the payments made from stock liquidations.

Of course, all lands subject to DD and LID assessments were subject to taxes. Tax and assessment delinquency increased, with tax liens being superior to assessment liens. Foreclosure of a tax lien extinguished the accrued assessment liens on the land’ in question. Upon tax hen foreclosure, Cowlitz county could, and frequently did, resell tax-foreclosed land at a price sufficient only to pay the delinquent taxes but insufficient to pay the aggregate of the delinquent taxes and delinquent DD and LID assessments. As foreclosures increased, the county acquired much land within the districts which, as a result of foreclosure, was freed from accrued DD and LID assessment liens. In March, 1937, there remained unpaid DD bonds in the principal amount of $2,125,500 and LID bonds in the principal amount of $1,499,500. It became distressingly apparent that DD and LID bondholders never would be repaid when so much of the source of redemption for their investment could be extinguished and was about to be extinguished in this manner. Moreover, already depressed land values in the districts, the basis for assessments, dropped sharply as soon as the market was flooded with the tax-foreclosed land.

This was the situation on August 30, 1937, when (1) the Longview Company, (2) the DDCom, and (3) the LIDCom executed the “Three Party Agreement,” hereinafter called TP A, which is before us for interpretation.

All the parties were interested in stabilizing the local land values so that county tax foreclosures would prejudice them as little as possible. The committees had no funds with which to finance a scheme to salvage assessments and land values, and had no promotional talent or facilities with which to carry out such a scheme. Longview had the promotional facilities for buying, improving, and selling land, plus the interest of a large landowner.

[526]*526By the terms of TP A, Longview was to advance money and furnish management for a real-estate undertaking which contemplated the inducing of bidding on land parcels at county resales so that the prices received would satisfy all the delinquent taxes and assessments. In this manner, since the county would transfer assessments thus collected to the DD and LID redemption funds for repayment to the bondholders, the assessments, which otherwise would have been extinguished by foreclosure, would be salvaged for the benefit of the bondholders. Longview, by the terms of the agreement, was to take its chances on recovering its advances, interest, and commission out of such moneys as resale operations could produce. The net gains, after repaying the advances and operations costs, including fees for Longview’s services, were to be paid into a special fund, hereinafter called fund seventeen, and it was agreed that seventy-five per cent of this fund was to be paid to the DDCom and twenty-five per cent to the LIDCom. The agreement stipulated that bondholders who had deposited bonds with the committees in return for certificates of deposit, hereinafter called c/d’s, would share the proceeds •of the operation only until they had been paid the par value of their c/d’s plus three per cent interest. Longview was given the right to purchase all the interest of either or both committees but the committees reserved the. right to terminate its managerial agency.

TPA operations were very successful but the committees did not rely solely on fund seventeen to recover on the bonds. In 1942 and 1943, while its bonds were in default, each committee exercised its right to compel the trustee to liquidate the respective Long-Bell stock trusts. In addition to these recoveries, installments on assessments were being paid to the DD and the LID so that the c/d’s received partial payments of principal and interest out of their respective bond redemption funds.

After liquidation of the trusts, Long-Bell surrendered its subrogation rights as guarantor of the bonds against the DD and the LID.

[527]*527Differences eventually arose between the committees and Longview. July 31, 1944, the committees terminated Long-view’s agency and appointed Mr. Warrens as successor managerial agent of TPA operations. On the same day Longview was merged into Long-Bell.

October 1,1945, Long-Bell exercised its TPA option rights and purchased DDCom’s interest for $396,044.37, which wiped out the DDCom’s debts and paid the balance due on its outstanding c/d’s. Long-Bell appointed its own officers as RDDCom and, according to TPA’s terms, commenced to recover the option price plus three per cent by participating in fund seventeen to the amount of seventy-five per cent thereof.

The main controversy is over how long Long-Bell can take seventy-five per cent of moneys coming into fund seventeen.

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Long-Bell Lbr. Co. v. NAT. BK. OF COMMERCE OF SEATTLE
214 P.2d 183 (Washington Supreme Court, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
214 P.2d 183, 35 Wash. 2d 522, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-bell-lbr-co-v-nat-bk-of-commerce-of-seattle-wash-1950.