Manor Coal Co. v. Beckman

133 A. 893, 151 Md. 102, 1926 Md. LEXIS 87
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 11, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 133 A. 893 (Manor Coal Co. v. Beckman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manor Coal Co. v. Beckman, 133 A. 893, 151 Md. 102, 1926 Md. LEXIS 87 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The Three Forks Coal & Coke Company of Garrett County, a Maryland corporation, on October 19th, 1906, conveyed to the Commercial Trust Company, of Philadelphia, a Pennsylvania corporation, certain coal lands in Garrett County, in trust to secure an issue of bonds aggregating in par value $80,000 and payable in fifteen years, hereinafter called “first mortgage bonds.” The equity of redemption in the property, by several mesne conveyances, became eventually vested in the Manor Coal Company, a corporation and one of the appellants, and that company conveyed it by two mortgage deeds of trust, dated respectively May 1st, 1920, and May 2nd, 1920, to the Franklin Trust 'Company of Philadelphia, also an appellant, to secure two issues of bonds, the first aggregating in amount $206,800 and the second, $89,200. When that was done holders of first mortgage bonds to the amount of $65,500 exchanged those bonds for bonds of the Manor Ooal Company, but the holders, of such bonds aggregating in par value $14,000, hereinafter for brevity referred to as the “minority bondholders,” failed or declined to make that exchange, and those bonds remain unpaid and unsatisfied.

The property conveyed by the deed of trust to the Commercial Trust Company consisted of several tracts of unimproved coal land in Garrett County, separated from each other by other tracts of land which had been acquired by the Manor Coal Company prior to the execution of the deed to the Franklin Trust Company, and which the appellants contend were essential to the profitable and convenient use of the separated tracts conveyed to the Commercial Trust Company by the Three Forks Coal & Coke Company.

Under the terms of the latter conveyance, as we have stated, the bonds secured thereby payable in 1921, and interest thereon at the rate of four per cent, was payable semi-annually in April and October. It contained no pro *105 vision, for a sinking' fund, but it did provide that, in case of default in the payment of the principal or interest due on the bonds, “all of said bonds intended to be secured hereby, shall at once become due and payable and these presents are hereby declared to be made in trust, and the said Commercial Trust Company, its successors and assigns, are hereby authorized and empowered at any time thereafter, upon the request of a majority of the bondholders, to sell the property hereby conveyed, or so much thereof as may be necessary, and to grant and convey the same to the purchaser or purchasers thereof, his, her or their heirs or assigns.” The bonds were not paid at maturity but, in the absence of any request by a majority of the bondholders to that effect, the Commercial Trust Company failed to take any steps to enforce their payment. Thereupon the minority bondholders, the appellees in this case, demanded that it sell the property under the power contained in the deed of trust for the satisfaction of their debt. The company refused to take that action and the minority bondholders then filed the bill of complaint in this case, in which they asked that the property described in the deed of trust to the Commercial Trust Company be sold, and the proceeds of sale applied to the payment of their bonds, on the theory that the Manor Coal Company, which had mortgaged to the Franklin Trust Company the property secured by the deed of trust to the Commercial Trust Company, had secured a majority of the first mortgage bonds, and that it was against its interest to have the Commercial Trust. Company mortgage enforced, because that would impair the security of the bonds of the Franklin Trust Company which it received in exchange for the first mortgage bonds.

The bill was filed against the two trust companies and the Manor Coal Company, but subsequently the Johnstown Coal & Coke Co., J. H. Beckman, and Gilmor S. Hamill, former owners of a majority of the Commercial Trust Company bonds, were permitted to intervene in the case as defendants and to* answer the bill.

So far as the controlling questions involved in it are concerned, the case was in effect tried on bill and answer, *106 supplemented, by defendants’ testimony and stipulations of counsel, and the facts upon which those questions depend are to he in the main ascertained from the pleadings. It is therefore necessary to' refer to SO' much of the pleadings as may he material to the issues in the case, but before doing that we will state the main questions presented by the appeal, which are these:

Eirst, whether a majority of the first mortgage bonds are in-the hands of persons whose interests are opposed to a foreclosure of the mortgage from the Three Forks Coal and Coke Company to the Commercial Trust Company.

Second, whether the minority bondholders, after default had been made in the payment of their bonds, demanded that the Commercial Trust Company enforce the mortgage by which they were secured.

Third, if it was refused, and if the interests of a majority of the bondholders were opposed to such a foreclosure, whether the court, upon the request of the minority bondholders, in the exercise of its general chancery jurisdiction, had the power to decree a sale of the mortgaged property to enforce the payment of the bonds secured by the mortgage to' the Commercial Trust Company.

And fourth, whether the minority bondholders can be compelled to accept in satisfaction of their bonds anything less than the par value thereof, or the proceeds of a judicial sale of the property pledged to secure them.

Under the terms of the deed of trust to the Commercial Trust Company, upon any default in the payment of the principal or interest thereby secured “all said bonds, intended to- be secured hereby shall at once become due and payable and these presents are hereby declared to be made in trust, and the said Commercial Trust Company, its successors and assigns, are hereby authorized and empowered at any time thereafter upon the request of a majority of the bondholders, to sell the property hereby conveyed, or so much thereof as may he necessary, and to grant and convey the same to the purchaser or purchasers thereof, his, her or their heirs or assigns.”

*107 The bill of complaint, after setting out in substance the facts to which we have referred, in the fifth paragraph thereof, referring to that power, went on to charge, “That after the time for the payment of said bonds and when they were past due and default had been made in the payment thereof, your orators demanded of the Commercial Trust Company of Philadelphia, Trustee, as. aforesaid, that it proceed to exercise the power of sale granted to it in said deed of trust securing said bonds and to cause the property described therein to he advertised and sold as provided in said deed of trust, for the satisfaction of themselves and all of the bondholders whose past due bonds, were secured thereby, but that said trustee refused so to do until requested by the holders of a majority of the bonds secured by said deed of trust, notwithstanding they were so informed and knew that the said the Manor Coal Company, the present owner of the property mortgaged to' secure said bonds, had bought up and was now the owner and possessor of more than fifty per cent, of said bond issue.”

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 893, 151 Md. 102, 1926 Md. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manor-coal-co-v-beckman-md-1926.