Lord v. . Yonkers Fuel Gas Co.

2 N.E. 909, 99 N.Y. 547, 54 Sickels 547, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 816
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2 N.E. 909 (Lord v. . Yonkers Fuel Gas Co.) 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
Lord v. . Yonkers Fuel Gas Co., 2 N.E. 909, 99 N.Y. 547, 54 Sickels 547, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 816 (N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Rapallo, J.

This action was brought for the foreclosure of two mortgages made by the corporation defendant to the plaintiff as trustee for bondholders, the first of such mortgages being dated November 1, 1880, to secure the payment of forty bonds of §1,000 each, and the second being dated February 5,1881, to secure twenty like bonds of $1,000 each. All the bonds were payable to bearer on or before November 1, 1890, with semi-annual interest, and they recited that they were made to secure the payment of money borrowed by the company for ■the purpose of carrying on its business.

The two mortgages covered the real estate of the company, also certain tools, machinery, gas mains and chattels, also certain rights, privileges and franchises granted to the company by the corporation of the city of Yonkers, permitting the company to lay gas mains in the streets, and also the corporate rights and franchises of the company, including its right to be a corporation.

*551 The company was organized under the General Manufacturing Law of 1848. Stockholders, owning at least two-thirds of the capital stock of the company, consented to the execution of mortgages upon its real and personal estate to secure said bonds, as required by chapter 517 of the Laws of 1864 and chapter 481 of the Laws of 1871, and their consents were duly filed, but no consent was given by any of the stockholders to the mortgaging of the “ franchises, privileges, rights and liberties ” of the company pursuant to chapter 163 of the Laws of 1878.

It appears from the findings of fact of the trial judge, that nine of said sixty bonds are still held by the plaintiff, unissued, and that the sum of $51,000, being the proceeds of fifty-one of said sixty bonds, was paid by the respective holders thereof to the said company after the execution of the mortgages, and before August 1,1881, and was used in the payment of debts of said company contracted in carrying on its business after the execution of the mortgages ; but it is also found that such money was paid to the company only as its debts became due, and in payment thereof, and that the holders' of said fifty-one bonds were respective purchasers for value.

The trial court found that the said mortgages were a lien upon and bound all the personal property, rights, privileges and franchises described therein. Exception was taken to this finding.

It is now claimed on the part of the appellants that the mortgage is not a lien either on the real or personal property of the company or upon its rights, privileges or franchises, and the ground upon which the invalidity of the whole mortgage is placed is that it was not given to secure debts existing at the time of its execution.

The language of the act of 1864 (Chap. 517, as amended by the act of 1871, chap. 481) is v.ery broad. It authorizes any corporation founded under the General Manufacturing Law of 1848, to secure the payment of any debt which may be contracted by it in the business for which it was incorporated, by mortgaging all or any part of the real or personal estate of such corporation, and declares that every such mortgage shall' *552 be as valid as if executed by an individual owning such real or personal estate, provided the written consent of stockholders owning at least two-thirds of the capital stock of such corporation shall be filed as directed by the act.

This provision effectually relieves such corporations from the restriction upon their corporate capacity to give any lien upon their property by mortgage or otherwise, imposed by section 2 of the same law of 1848, and, reading the two acts together, it is evident that such restriction is intended only to limit the general powers of trustees of such corporations, and subject them to the control of the stockholders, in the matter of giving mortgages or liens, and was not founded on any supposed policy of withholding from that particular class of corporations the full control of their property and the corporate power of disposing of or incumbering it, which is possessed by corporations in general. With the prescribed consent of the stockholders, they are declared to be as competent as natural persons to secure the payment of their legitimate debts by mortgage upon their real or personal property.

This power has been the subject of consideration in several cases which have come before this court since the passage of the act of 1864, and the view has been repeatedly expressed in those eases that the power should be liberally construed, and that a substantial compliance with its conditions, according to their spirit and intent, was all that was required. In Carpenter v. Black Hawk Mining Co. (65 N. Y. 43) decided by the Commission, it was held that it was not necessary that separate mortgages should be executed to each creditor to secure his debt, but that a single mortgage to one or more persons in trust for the security of all the creditors was proper, and that the mortgage might be given to secure bonds issued and delivered to creditors or sold to raise money to pay them. In that case the board of directors of the company, in 1866, by resolution authorized the president and treasurer, on receiving the assent of stockholders required by law, to cause coupon bonds of $1,000 each to be issued, secured by a mortgage on the property of the company to the amount of $250,000, for *553 the purpose of meeting expenses in construction account and general indebtedness. The assent was given and the mortgage executed, reciting that its purpose was to secure money raised and to be raised for the general business and liabilities incurred in the management and improvement of the property, and carrying on the mining operations of the company. The bonds were issued and some of them were delivered to creditors of the company, others were sold and the proceeds applied in part to the payment of debts, and in part to the expense of working the mines after the issue of the bonds.

The action was brought to have the mortgage declared void and a sale under it restrained, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff on the report of a referee, who held that the mortgage was invalid because it was not' given to any creditor to secure a debt of the company; that judgment was reversed at the General Term and the reversal was sustained by the judgment of this court, it being held by the Oommission that the mode in which debts should be secured was left to the company; that the mortgage might be directly to the creditors, or to trustees for their benefit, or to secure bonds issued and delivered to the creditors, or sold to raise money to pay them; that as some of the bonds were used for those purposes the. mortgage was, at all events, valid to the extent of the bonds which had been thus used, and was not invalid, even if also it covered bonds which were used for other purposes.

The learned commissioner delivering the opinion, (Earl, 0.,) expressed the view that under the statute a mortgage could not be made merely to raise money to carry on the operations of the company. All the other members of the Oommission concurred in the judgment, but they all declined, in terms, to express an opinion as to the validity or invalidity of the mortgage as a security for the bonds which were not delivered to pay debts, or used to raise money to pay debts, existing at the time the mortgage was executed.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.E. 909, 99 N.Y. 547, 54 Sickels 547, 1885 N.Y. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lord-v-yonkers-fuel-gas-co-ny-1885.