Mercantile Trust Co. v. Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co.
84 F. 379, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2669
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJanuary 11, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases
This text of 84 F. 379 (Mercantile Trust Co. v. Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Bluebook
Mercantile Trust Co. v. Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co., 84 F. 379, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2669 (circtsdny 1898).
Opinion
The bill alleged:
“That on or about the 1st flay of June, 1890, and at various dates thereafter, the said defendant raijway company made, executed, and issued, and, for value, delivered to various persons and corporations, its 23,000 -bonds, certified by your orator as trustee, numbered from 1 upwards, of which bonds, 17,000 were and ar.e of the denomination of $1,000 each, and 0,000 were and are of the denomination of $500 each; amounting, in the aggregate of their principal sum, to $20,000,000. Bach and all of said bonds are dated on the' 1st day of June, 1890, mature 100 years after the date thereof, and bear interest at the rate of 4 per cent, per annum, payable semiannually, in gold coin of the United States, on the 1st days of February and August in each year.” That to secure the payment of the bonds the defendant conveyed all its property to the plaintiff, by second mortgage, dated June 1, 1890, with this proviso in section 4: “But the covenant to pay the interest coupons belonging to said bonds maturing on the first of February, 1891, and each six months thereafter, to and including the coupons to mature August 1st, 1895, is subject to the following condition and agreement: The said company shall render each six months an account of the gross earnings, income, receipts, interest, dividends, or profits received from the said mortgaged property. It shall charge against such gross earnings all operating and maintenaneiug expenses, taxes, repairs, renewals, replacements, and insurance; and in each statement it shall charge six months’ interest on the forty million clollars of first mortgage bonds. Such net earnings as shall remain after the charges above specified shall have been made shall be applied to the payment of the said coupons.” And that “if it should, at any time during the said five years, be deemed expedient to apply any portion of the earnings of the said railway company to purposes other than those hereinbefore specified in this section, the said earnings may be so applied: provided, however, the written sanction of the party of the second part shall first be obtained.” That the first coupons upon all of the bonds matured February 1, 1891, and the defendant neglected and refused to render any such account for the six months ending that day. “That, as your orator is informed and believes, the defendant railway company claims and represents that there was no net earnings derived from said mortgaged property, as defined by said section 4 of said mortgage, for the six months ending February 1, 1S91; but, as your orator is informed and believes, and therefore now avers, the statements and representations of said defendant railway company in this behalf are wholly untrue and false, and, to the contrary thereof, your orator avers, upon its information and belief, derived as hereinafter stated, that net earnings from said mortgaged premises, as defined in said mortgage, for the said six months ending February 1, 1891, were made and received and existed to a very large sum, to wit, a sum in excess of the amount of interest represented by all of the coupons maturing upon that-date. That the defendant railway company has never sought or obtained, and your orator has never given, its sanction, written or otherwise, as contemplated in section 4. Your orator, however, avers, upon information and belief, that notwithstanding no such sanction or authorization has been sought or obtained from your orator, or given by it, a large proportion of the earnings for the period ending February 1, 1891, were applied to, and paid out for, expenditures other than those particularly defined in said section 4, * * * and that such excessive expenditures and unauthorized application of said earnings included amounts paid for new [381]*381side tracks, new buildings, real estate, fencing, equipment, and other purposes not included within the provisions of said section 4 as aforesaid, and that the earnings of said property during said period, so used and applied without authority in the provisions of said mortgage, and without such sanction of your orator, aggregated, as your orator is informed and believes, a. sum upwards of $900,000. And your orator further avers, upon like information and belief, that the said defendant railway company has continued to apply, and threatens to further apply, large amounts of the earnings from the said mortgaged premises to like purposes, not included in the specific provisions of said section 4, and without the sanction of your orator as in said section contemplated. In this behalf your orator avers, upon information and belief, that the said defendant railway company has entered into agreements whereby it has undertaken to pay and guaranty the payment of the following obligations: (1) All of the interest upon two million five hundred thousand dollars of the first mortgage bonds of the Kansas Oily & Pacific Railway Company. (2) All of the principal and interest of the first mortgage bonds of the Sherman, Denison & Dallas Railway Company, the authorized issue of which is one million six hundred thousand dollars, and of which two hundred thousand dollars have been issued. (3) All->of the principal and interest of the first mortgage bonds of the Dallas & Waco Railway Company, of which one million one hundred and seventy-three thousand dollars have been issued, out of a total authorized issue of two millions of dollars. (4) All of Hie principal and interest on one million of dollars of the first mortgage bonds of the Southwestern Coal & Improvement Company. That in the guaranties of said bonds of the Kansas City & Pacific Railway Company, the Sherman, Denison & Dallas Railway Company, and the Southwestern Coal & Improvement Company, the said Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company assumed excessive obligations, in large part in the interest of its own officers and directors, who were personally and financially interested in the securities so guarantied, and in the properties embraced in said mortgages. That the said Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company proposes and intends to apply the earnings and revenues from the property covered by said second mortgage to your orator as trustee to the payment and accomplishment of said guaranties, in preference to the payment of the coupons of the said second mortgage bonds.” And that this suit is instituted in compliance with a request of bondholders.
The prayer is for an injunction restraining application of any net earnings:
“That a writ of permanent injunction may be issued, under the seal of this court, perpetually enjoining and restraining the defendant, the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, its officers, agents, and attorneys, from applying (without the written sanction of your orator, as in said mortgage provided) any of the net earnings or income from the premises described in said second mortgage of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, as the same are therein defined, to any other or different use or purpose than the payment of the coupons and interest of said second mortgage bonds as the same have matured or may mature, until said coupons have been paid in full from such net earnings derived during' the six-months periods to which such coupons, respectively, apply,” — for an account of the earnings for the six months ending February 1, 1891, and payment over of the net earnings, and for further relief.
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Bluebook (online)
84 F. 379, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercantile-trust-co-v-missouri-k-t-ry-co-circtsdny-1898.