Moore v. Tumwater Paper Mills Co.

42 P.2d 29, 181 Wash. 45, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 513
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1935
DocketNo. 25294. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 42 P.2d 29 (Moore v. Tumwater Paper Mills Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Tumwater Paper Mills Co., 42 P.2d 29, 181 Wash. 45, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 513 (Wash. 1935).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

This is an action brought by a bondholder to foreclose a securing trust deed, or mortgage. Subsequent to the filing of an amended complaint, a second bondholder intervened in the action and adopted the amendatory pleading as his own. Demurrers to the complaint and amended complaint having been sustained, the plaintiff and intervener declined to plead further, whereupon the court entered an order dismissing the action. From that order, this appeal was taken. The plaintiff and intervener, occupying the same position in the action, have joined in their briefs. They will hereinafter be referred to as the appellants.

The respondent, a Washington corporation, on May 1, 1929, issued a series of first mortgage bonds in the aggregate amount of four hundred thousand dollars and in denominations of five hundred dollars and one thousand dollars, respectively, of which appellants held bonds in the total amount of five thousand dollars. The bonds bore interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, evidenced by coupons payable on May first and November first of each year, beginning November 1, *47 1929, and ending May 1, 1939, at which time the entire bond issue was to mature. As security for the bonds, respondent executed a trust deed, or mortgage, covering both real and personal property in this state, to Pacific National Bank, of San Francisco, as trustee, and The Security Bank & Trust Company, of Olympia, as co-trustee. Subsequently, The Security Bank & Trust Company became insolvent and resigned its trust, and thereupon Title and Trust Company, of Portland, succeeded it as co-trustee.

The bonds made reference to the trust deed, or mortgage, for a description of the property mortgaged, the nature apd extent of the security and rights of the holders of the bonds, the powers and duties of the trustee and co-trustee, the obligations of the company, and for a complete statement of the terms and conditions under which the bonds were issued. It was specifically recited in the bonds that such reference to the mortgage was made with the same force and effect as if the provisions in the mortgage -were fully set forth in the bonds.

The trust indenture is a lengthy document of twenty-one articles, with many sectional subdivisions, and sets forth in detail the terms and conditions of the mortgage.

Article XII, § 2, provides that, upon default, as defined in the indenture, the trustee may, and upon the written request of the holders of twenty-five per cent in amount of the bonds outstanding shall, declare the principal amount of all such bonds immediately due and payable.

Article XII, § 10, so far as it is material here, reads as follows:

“Every holder of any of the bonds secured hereby accepts the same subject to the express understanding and agreement that every right of action, whether at *48 law or in equity, under this instrument, is vested exclusively in the Trustees, and under no circumstances shall the holder of any bonds or coupons or any number of such holders, have the right to institute any action at law, or any suit or proceeding in equity, or otherwise, under this instrument, or upon any bond or coupon secured hereby for the purpose of enforcing any covenant or remedy herein or in said bonds or coupons contained, or to foreclose this mortgage, except in case of the refusal on the part of the Trustees to comply with any duty imposed on them in respect of any covenant of foreclosure after demand by the holder or holders of 25% in amount of the face value of the bonds then outstanding, and the production of such bonds by the holder or holders thereof to the Trustees and the giving to the Trustees of indemnity satisfactory to them securing them against liability by reason of the action so requested and agreeing to pay all costs and expenses of the Trustees incurred by the Trustees in acting upon such request. The Trustees shall have twenty days after being so requested within which to decide whether or not they will comply with such request. ’ ’

Article XY, § 2, provides that the trustees shall not be required to take notice of any default or to take any action in respect of any default unless notified or requested in writing by the holders of at least twenty-five per cent of the amount of the bonds outstanding’.

The interest coupons maturing on and subsequent to May 1, 1931, have not been paid. Real and personal property taxes for the years 1930 to 1932, inclusive, aggregating approximately twenty thousand dollars, are delinquent and unpaid.

Added to these facts, to which both parties advert in their briefs, are the following allegations made by the appellants in the amended complaint in support, and forming the basis, of their cause of action: (1) That the company is insolvent; (2) that respondent, without the knowledge or consent of the bondholders, *49 wrongfully leased to Columbia River Paper Mills and Oregon Pulp & Paper Company, both of which are foreign corporations, and permitted those corporations to remove from this state certain of the mortgaged personal property, of a value in excess of twenty thousand dollars; (3) that, for more than a year last past, the company had urged the bondholders to consent to vital modifications of the original trust indenture, which would result in the bondholders accepting the promissory notes of the company in lieu of interest coupons and in permitting the company to lease additional machinery and equipment to the two Oregon corporations; that such modifications would be unfair to the company and its bondholders, and are part of a collusive attempt to acquire control of seventy-five per cent of the bonds and thereby prevent the holders of any other bonds from instituting any action upon the bonds or upon the mortgage; and that seventy-five per cent of the bondholders have already accepted the proposal and approved the intended modifications; (4) that the directors and active officers of the company and of the Oregon corporations are practically identical, and are all dominated by one individual; that these corporations and the trustees of the local company have conspired, and are attempting, to persuade the bondholders to agree to such modifications of the trust indenture, with the view of releasing certain of the mortgaged property from the encumbrance of the trust indenture, diverting the assets of the company, and preventing a foreclosure of the mortgage; and that the holders of more than seventy-five per cent of the bonds have responded favorably to such solicitations; and (5) that the provisions of the bonds and mortgage, set forth above, are violative of the fourteenth amendment to the Federal constitution and Art. I, §§ 3 and 12, of the state constitution, in that the company and *50 the bondholders are deprived of the right freely and equally to resort to the courts.

The assignments of error relate to the sustaining of the demurrer and the entering of the order of dismissal.

Appellants present several propositions on which they rely for reversal. Their first proposition is that neither of the present trustees is domesticated in this state, and hence, could not maintain any proceeding for the protection of the bondholders.

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Bluebook (online)
42 P.2d 29, 181 Wash. 45, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-tumwater-paper-mills-co-wash-1935.