Monticello Building Corp. v. Monticello Investment Co.

52 S.W.2d 545, 330 Mo. 1128, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 503
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 5, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 52 S.W.2d 545 (Monticello Building Corp. v. Monticello Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monticello Building Corp. v. Monticello Investment Co., 52 S.W.2d 545, 330 Mo. 1128, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 503 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

This case, as originally commenced, was a suit for an injunction. In 1925 the Monticello Building Corporation, one of the plaintiffs herein, negotiated a loan of $350,000 through Straus Brothers Company. There was evidence that this company was later reorganized as Straus Brothers Investment Company, which is one of the defendants herein. The purpose of securing this loan was to construct an apartment building, to be known as the Monticello apartments, in the city of St. Louis. To secure this loan the Monticello Building Corporation executed a deed of trust on the apartment building to Herman S. Strauss, trustee, and J.E. Lehman, co-trustee. The deed of trust provided for the appointment of a successor co-trustee upon application to a proper court. It also conveyed to these trustees the fittings and fixtures of the apartment building, provided for a chattel mortgage on furniture, and covered "all the rents, issues and profits of the above described land, property and estates, which are hereby specifically assigned." The loan of $350,000, secured by the deed of trust, was represented by 635 bonds of denominations of $100, $500 and $1,000. The first of these bonds became due July 1, 1927, and matured in increasing amounts each year thereafter until July 1, 1935, when all of the remainder became due. The mortgage provided that one-sixth of the amount of the semi-annual interest should be deposited with a selected depository each month and that one-twelfth of the annual principal payments should be likewise deposited. It further provided for the mortgagor to pay all taxes and the United States Government income tax on the bonds.

In case the mortgagor defaulted in any payments or failed to perform any condition of the deed of trust, it was provided that the mortgagor should, without any notice whatever, forthwith, upon demand of the trustees, surrender possession to them. The trustees were authorized in their discretion without action of any bondholder to take and maintain possession, hold, manage and operate the property and collect the rents therefrom and lease the same "for not exceeding one year in any one instance." The application to be made of revenue derived from so operating the property was specifically set out. The mortgage also authorized the trustees, before having the entire debt declared due and before entry of any decree for foreclosure, to restore the property to the mortgagor upon certain payments and conditions. The mortgage further provided when any default continued for more than "thirty days after written notice thereof to the mortgagor by the trustee or to the mortgagor *Page 1131 and the trustees by the holders of not less than twenty per cent in amount of bonds, hereby secured and then outstanding, specifying wherein such default consists," the trustees might in their discretion without any action of the bondholders, and upon written request of the holders of twenty per cent of the outstanding bonds, should declare the principal of all outstanding bonds immediately due and payable. It also provided that in case of failure or refusal of the trustees to so act, within thirty days after such request of the holders of twenty per cent of the outstanding bonds, that such holders might declare the principal due. Either of such declarations operated to mature all bonds. The mortgage further provided that in case of such default for thirty days after written notice, the trustees might, without the action of any bondholder and without declaring the bonds due, and upon the written request of the holders of 20 per cent of the outstanding bonds, should institute suits in equity or at law deemed proper to enforce the rights of the bondholders and to foreclose. It further provided that in case any authorized legal proceedings be instituted either by the trustees or by the holders of twenty per cent of the outstanding bonds "the court, to which application is made or wherein the same is pending, shall on application of and nomination by the complainant, as a matter of strict right and without regard to the then value of the premises and without regard to the solvency of the mortgagor or the then owner of the premises, appoint a receiver of said mortgaged premises and the rents, issues and profits thereof." The mortgage (Article IX) further provided as follows:

"Section 6. Whenever under the provisions hereinabove contained it shall have become the duty of the trustee to institute legal proceedings upon the written request of the requisite number of bondholders, and upon the deposit or tender of deposit of the requisite number of bonds with the trustees, and upon tender of proper indemnity, and the trustees shall have wrongfully or unreasonably refused or failed to act within thirty (30) days after such request and tender of the requisite number of bonds and proper indemnity, then and in any such case, but under no other provisions hereof have the right to demand action by the trustees, may jointly institute such proceedings in law or in equity as it was the duty of the trustees to institute, but for the benefit of all holders of the bonds and coupons then outstanding. Every holder of any of the bonds hereby secured (including pledgees) accepts action, whether at law or in equity, upon or under this Indenture, is vested exclusively in the trustees, and under no circumstances shall the holder of any bond or coupon, or any number of combination of such holders, have any right to institute any action at law upon any bond or bonds or any coupon or coupons, or otherwise, or any suit proceeding in *Page 1132 equity or otherwise, except in case of refusal on the part of the trustees to perform any duty imposed upon them by this Indenture after request in writing by the holder or holders of at least twenty per cent (20%) in amount of said bonds as aforesaid. No action at law or in equity shall be brought by, or in behalf of, the holder or holders of any bonds or coupons, whether or not the same be past due, except by the trustees or by the requisite number of bondholders acting in concert under the provisions of this section for the benefit of all bondholders. In the event that pursuant to the terms hereof twenty per cent (20%) or more of the bondholders shall have joined in exercising the right to act in lieu of the trustees, the remainder of the bondholders shall have no right to institute any legal proceedings of the same or a similar character for the same default of the Mortgagor."

Another provision of the mortgage was that in all actions "the trustees shall be deemed the representative of the bondholders and in no case shall it be necessary to notify any bondholder or to make any bondholder a party to any action, suit or proceeding for the purpose of binding or concluding such bondholder."

Plaintiff, John T. Craven was the president of the Monticello Building Corporation and plaintiff Berry P. Craven was its treasurer. They executed a personal guaranty of all the bonds secured by the mortgage on the Monticello apartments. In 1928 the Monticello Building Corporation conveyed the apartment building to the Monticello Investment Company, a separate corporation. The Monticello Investment Company executed and delivered to the Monticello Building Corporation a second deed of trust on the property securing the payment of $40,000 and also executed and delivered to it a third deed of trust securing $162,586. Both of these obligations were payable in monthly installments, of both principal and interest, which added a total charge of about $26,000 per year against the income of the building. The revenue could not bear this burden and in 1930 defaults were made on these second and third mortgage payments. Use of the income of the building to make these payments hastened the default on the first mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.W.2d 545, 330 Mo. 1128, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monticello-building-corp-v-monticello-investment-co-mo-1932.