Metropolitan Loan & Trust Co. v. Schafer

44 App. D.C. 356, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2609
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 7, 1916
DocketNo. 2808
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 App. D.C. 356 (Metropolitan Loan & Trust Co. v. Schafer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Loan & Trust Co. v. Schafer, 44 App. D.C. 356, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2609 (D.C. Cir. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Van Orsdee

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This appeal is from a decree of the supreme court of the District of Columbia confirming a report of the auditor relating to the distribution of a fund derived from the sale of real estate under a deed of trust. The trust was executed by the District Concrete Company, a corporation, to the United States Trust Company, as trustee, to secure the issue of bonds aggregating $50,000, represented by one hundred coupon bonds of the par value of $500 each, due December 1, 1919, with interest at 6 per cent, payable semiannually. Default was made in the payment of the interest, and this action for foreclosure was brought by oilo Phillips, a bondholder.

It was prayed in the bill that a trustee be appointed, a day fixed for the payment of the bonds, in default of which sale should be made, the priorities of the bondholders ascertained and the proceeds distributed accordingly under order of the court, and for a deficiency judgment against the concrete com[360]*360pany in case the amount recovered should be found insufficient to pay the bondholders. A decree pro confesso was taken against the concrete company and the Capitol Brick Company, which was alleged to be chargeable with some of the obligations of the concrete company. The United States Trust Company, trustee, answered, averring that its sole interest was as trustee, and that it submitted its rights to the court.

Appellant Metropolitan Loan & Trust Company filed an intervening petition, in which it alleged that in course of business it had purchased, for value, $27,000 of the bond issue, and that it believed that a foreclosure of the deed of trust would not at that time be for the best interest of the bondholders, but that if sale were made it prayed that it might share pro rata, in the proceeds thereof.

Upon sale and ratification pf the report of the trustee, the court referred the matter to the auditor, with instructions “to ascertain and determine and state the validity of all bonds and interest coupons secured by deed of trust in the foreclosure of which the said sale was ordered and made, and to ascertain and state the holders thereof and what priorities between themselves, if any, should be accorded to the holders of such bonds and interest coupons; * * * and also to state the account of the trustee, and direct the distribution of the fund in the trustees’ hands.”

More than a year after the auditor began taking testimony under the reference, appellee Gittings intervened by petition, in which, as assignee of one Sutcliffe N. Widdup, he claimed title to forty of the bonds held by the Metropolitan Loan & Trust Company. By the terms of the assignment, Widdup conveyed to Gittings all his right, title, and interest in certain securities, among which were sixty-nine bonds of the District Concrete Company of the par value of $34,500; two real estate notes made by one Hicks, one for $10,000, and one for $10,096; a deed of trust for $2,400, and other notes. By the assignment it was agreed “that said Gittings, after collecting the value of said bonds and the said notes, or whatever may be due to me after the payment of said indebtedness, which they are pledged [361]*361to secure, to apply the proceeds thereof to the payment of all fees for professional services which he has or may have against me in any manner whatsoever, and after fully indemnifying himself for such services the amount thereof, to be hereafter ascertained, to return the balance of said moneys over to me.”

Petitioner sets up certain transactions in respect of the flicks note for $10,096 by which the note came into possession of one Harry Lamson, who was, it is alleged, “associated with Kinnear & Masters and the Metropolitan Loan & Trust Company.” Masters was an officer of the trust company, and Kinnear was its treasurer and also an officer of the appellant Modern Workmen of the World. Petitioner alleged that Kinnear & Masters and the Metropolitan Loan & Trust Company, on demand made by him for the delivery of the Hicks notes, answered that Widdup was indebted to them in the sum of $33,000. He also alleged that in March, 1912, Kinnear & Masters foreclosed the trust given to secure the Hicks notes, and one of them became the purchaser for the sum of $20,100, and delivered to the trustee in payment therefor the two Hicks notes. He also alleges that upon proper accounting between Widdup and Kinnear & Masters and the Metropolitan Loan & Trust Company, it would appear that Kinnear & Masters and the trust company had no title to the bonds, as the entire obligation due from Widdup had been paid.

Appellant Metropolitan Loan & Trust Company answered, setting up the facts relating to the issue of the bonds, and alleged, among other things, that “S. N. Widdup, who was the secretary of the said District Concrete Company, hád, with the full authority and consent of the said District Concrete Company, and in pursuance of a resolution to that effect, pledged the said bonds for the purpose of raising money for satisfying the company’s obligations. That in due course, the said forty bonds came into the hands of this respondent for value, and were by this respondent redeemed from Arms & Drury, with whom the said Widdup had pledged them as collateral. That the said bonds were obtained by this respondent as collateral to secure the promissory notes of the said Widdup, amounting [362]*362to about nine (9) thousand dollars, and, default being made in payment of the said notes, were sold as collateral and purchased and held by this respondent.” The right of Gittings to intervene is challenged oh the ground that, so far as this proceeding is concerned, it only contemplates a distribution of the net proceeds of the sales between the holders of the bonds; that it is immaterial whether it holds the bonds as collateral or owns them, it is entitled to 4%oo of the'net proceeds of the sale, and that if Widdup, or Gittings as his assignee, wishes an accounting between Widdup and his creditors, it should be in a separate proceeding.

Notwithstanding this objection, the court enlarged the order of reference to the auditor, and provided, in respect of the bonds, that it be amended to read as follows: “And to ascertain and state the legal and equitable owners and holders thereof, and what priorities between themselves, if any, should be accorded the owners and holders of such bonds and interest coupons.”

The claim of appellant Modern Workmen of the World to a pro ■rata distribution of the proceeds of the sale to the extent of eight bonds deposited with it as collateral for a loan of $2,000, and subsequently purchased by it on sale of the bonds as collateral, was duly presented and considered in the auditor’s report.

The auditor filed a report in which, among other things, he held: “It is clear from the testimony of all the parties in interest that Lamson, in all the transactions by which he raised money for Widdup, was acting as Widdup’s agent; and that the various parties with whom Lamson dealt knew that Lam-son was acting for Widdup. Kinnear so specifically admitted (test. p. 93). This being so, Widdup and his assignee have the right to the benefit of the reduction of Widdup’s debt by reason of the usury on the various transactions.

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Bluebook (online)
44 App. D.C. 356, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-loan-trust-co-v-schafer-cadc-1916.