Middendorf v. Baltimore Refrigerating & Heating Co. of Baltimore City

82 A. 1047, 117 Md. 17, 1911 Md. LEXIS 188
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 82 A. 1047 (Middendorf v. Baltimore Refrigerating & Heating Co. of Baltimore City) 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
Middendorf v. Baltimore Refrigerating & Heating Co. of Baltimore City, 82 A. 1047, 117 Md. 17, 1911 Md. LEXIS 188 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A bill was filed on November 3rd, 1910, by Messrs. Mid-dendorf and Heyward, committee, and Robert M. Spedden against the Baltimore Refrigerating and Heating Company *19 of Baltimore City, the Continental Trust Company and others. The plaintiffs sued for themselves as well as for all other holders of the bonds of the Refrigerating and Heating Company who would come in and contribute to the expenses of the suit. That company under date of October 1st, 1902, executed to the Continental Trust Company, as trustee, a mortgage to secure an issue of two thousand bonds of the par value of $1,000 each. The mortgage embraced all of the company’s property, including its good will, its franchises, rights and privileges. The bill alleges that 1300 of the bond's were issued, and of that number nineteen had boon redeemed for the sinking fund, leaving outstanding 12SI, of which four were in the hands of receivers of the company who had been appointed. The interest coupons for five semi-annual payments were overdue when the bill was filed. Two comjnittees for bondholders had been appointed — the plaintiffs being spoken of as the Middendorf-llovward committee and those of the defendants as the Ilomer-Betts committee. The receivers had been appointed in December, 1908, and on January 12, 1909, they were ordered to continue the business of the company until the further order of the Court. They were also made defendants in this ease.

It is alleged in the bill that the three original receivers were by order of Court directed to purchase from Richard I!. 'Fentress certain leasehold property known as the Negro School-house property, subject to an annual rent of $300.00. and that they paid one-third of the purchase money in cash and gave the vendor their obligations as receivers for the payment of the balance, taking from him a bond of conveyance, which obligated him to convey the property to the receivers on the payment of the balance of the purchase money. That was doubtless the reason for making him a defendant, as will be seen by reference to the prayers of the bill. On December 11th, 1909, some bondholders of the company filed a hill against the company and the Continental Trust Company alleging that the latter had cer- *20 tifiecl and issued 600 bonds of the Refrigerating Company without taking proper steps to see to the application of the proceeds of the bonds, and claimed that the Trust Com])any was not a proper party to act as trustee. An answer was filed by the Trust Company in that case alleging that all the bonds were properly issued and that it had faithfully performed its duties. That controversy resulted in the Trust. Company being restrainted until final hearing from taking any steps to foreclose the mortgage.

The bill in this case prayed (1) that an account be taken of all the bonds secured by the mortgage; (2) that the Court decree that the receivers had no title to the Negro School-house property, and that the equitable title was in the Refrigerating Company subject to the lien of the mortgage, and should be conveyed by the receivers to the company, and that Richard B. Fentres§, be directed to convey the legal title to the company on payment of the balance of the purchase money; (3) that the company be required to bring into Court a sum sufficient to pay the total amount of bond's outstanding, and in default thereof that it be barred and foreclosed from all equity of redemption, and (4) for general relief.

On November 12th, 1910, the plaintiff filed a petition for the sale of the property before final decree and on the 7th of December, 1910, an order was passed directing the sale and appointing the Continental Trust Company trustee to make it. It is recited in the decree that parties representing 1187 of the 1277 outstanding bonds were before the Court consenting to the sale. Solicitors for the plaintiffs, the Homer and Betts committee and' for Mr. Fentress approved the form of the order passed.

On February 3rd, 1911, the trustee reported a sale of the property to the Central Securities Company for the sum of $503,000.00. There is nothing in the record to show just what proceedings were taken against the purchaser, but a letter from Messrs. Whitelock and ICeech, addressed to Judge Stocxbrtdge, states that the purchaser would not *21 insist upon an order nisi, if tbe Court would defer action as to resale until March 27th, 1911, and in that event the purchaser would' offer no opposition to the passage of a final order of resale at that time, if it had not in the meantime complied with the terms of sale. On March 27th, the Court passed an order ordering a resale at the cost and risk of the purchaser, and referred to a report of the Continental Trust Company filed on March loth (which is not in the record), and to the fact that the sale had been ratified. It was ordered that the resale should take place at the Neal Estate Exchange on the 17th of April, 1911, “and' shall be made upon the same terms as the sale heretofore made, but subject to and with the right to any and all contracts entered into by the receivers.” A sale was reported on April 26th by the trustee to Messrs. Homer, Beets, Schloss, Winchester and Timanus “constituting a committee of bondholder’s of said Baltimore Refrigerating Company,” at and for the sum of $261,000.

On May 4th an appeal was entered by Richard B. Fen-tress, one of the defendants in the above entitled cause, from the order of this Court, in the above cause, made on March 27th, 1911, directing a resale of the property of the Baltimore Refrigerating and Heating Company, and from the order of this Court in the above cause, made on April 17th, 1911, further directing a sale of said property of the said Baltimore Refrigerating and Heating Company.”

Motions to dismiss the appeal have been filed, which mainly rely on the allegations that Mr. Fentress had no such interest as entitled him to apppeal, and that he is not shown to he prejudiced by the resale. The objection urged to the order of resale hy the appellant is based on tbe provision that it shall he made, “subject bo and with Uie right to any and all conimcts entered into hy the receivers.”

The order of April 17th referred to in the appeal is not in the record and, of course, can not he reviewed by us. It may well he questioned whether the order of March 27th should he reviewed in the absence of the one of April 17th, *22 wbicb is spoken of as “further directing a sale of said property.” It is quite possible that there may be something in that order which would affect the part of the one of March 27th objected to, but, regardless of that, does the appellant show that he has been .in any way injured by that order of March 27th? There is nothing in the record suggesting that anyone has been or could be injured execpt the fact that the property only brought a little over half at the second sale of what it did at the first.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 A. 1047, 117 Md. 17, 1911 Md. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/middendorf-v-baltimore-refrigerating-heating-co-of-baltimore-city-md-1911.