Morton Trust Co. v. Home Telephone Co.

57 A. 1020, 66 N.J. Eq. 106, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 135
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 2, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 A. 1020 (Morton Trust Co. v. Home Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morton Trust Co. v. Home Telephone Co., 57 A. 1020, 66 N.J. Eq. 106, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 135 (N.J. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Reed, V. C.

A mortgage, dated October 1st, 1896, was executed by the Home Telephone Company upon its property to the State Trust Company, trustee, afterwards merged into the Morton Trust Company, to secure three hundred coupon bonds of the par value of $500 each. The property of the Home Telephone Company was sold pendente lite and the proceeds, amounting to $20,000, paid into court:

The question underlying the exceptions to the master’s report is whether certain coupons have precedence in payment over the bonds, themselves in the distribution of this fund.

The mortgage, in its eighth clause, in substance, provides as follows:

“In ease of default in payment, it shall be lawful for the said trustee to sell the mortgaged property and apply the proceeds as follows: First, to the payment of the costs and expenses of such sale; second, to the payment of the coupons, or interest warrants hereby secured to be paid, and then due and unpaid, pro rata, and without discrimination or preference, except that in case such proceeds shall not be sufficient to pay the same, and also the bonds hereby secured to be paid in full, such payment or upon interest coupons shall be in the order of date of their maturity; third, to the payment of the bonds.”

[108]*108This language confers upon the coupon-holders the right of payment prior to the payment to the holders of the bonds themselves. The master found that, notwithstanding this clause, ■certain coupons presented to him, while good in the hands of those presenting them as proof of a debt against the company, were yet subordinated to the lien of other coupons as well as the lien of the-bondholders. The coupons thus disallowed had been paid for by money which certain stockholders of the company had advanced for the purpose of saving the credit of the corporation.

The ground upon Avhich the master reached this conclusion was that these coupons were, as to the other coupons and bondholders, to be regarded as canceled. The master put his conclusion upon the well-settled doctrine that if third persons, under an arrangement with a corporation, have advanced money to pay the interest upon bonds and as. security for their advance are allowed to take up and retain uncanceled the coupons representing such interest as they are presented by the several bondholders for payment, these coupons will stand as valid securities in the hands of the payers as against the corporation, and the. mortgage by which they are secured may be enforced for their benefit; but as between the payers and the bondholders who presented their coupons for payment and received the amount in ignorance of the fact that they were paid by third parties and transferred to them without being canceled, or who supposed them to have been paid, the latter have prior equities; so that if upon foreclosure of the mortgage covering the bonds and coupons the sum realized is not enough to pay the face of the bonds and the matured coupons, the parties so advancing the money to take up the coupons are not entitled to share in the proceeds of the sale. 5 Thomp. Corp. § 6116. The facts are in substance these: The officers of tire telephone company discovered that they could not pay the coupons maturing October 1st, 1899, out of the earnings of the company. Mr. Atkinson, a director and some time treasurer of the company, rvas so informed by Mr. Risdon, the president. Mr. Atkinson suggested to Mr. Risdon that the passing of this payment was not good judgment and would injure the [109]*109company, and further suggested that he had friends who would come in and assist in raising money to pay the coupons if Mr. Risdon would help in so doing. Mr. Risdon then said that he would endorse a note for $2,500, the proceeds to be used for this purpose, if Mr. Atkinson and his friends would raise $2,000— $4,500 being required to pay the October maturing coupons. Money was SO' raised and deposited in the Broad Street Rational. Bank, of Trenton, in which bank the $2,500 note, endorsed by Mr. Risdon, was discounted. Mr. Atkinson became treasurer' of the telephone company on December 2d, 1899. The preceding October coupons were still unpaid. He notified the bondholders that they could have their coupons paid by presenting them at the Broad Street.Rational Bank, at Trenton.' Most of the bondholders placed their coupons in their local business bank for collection, whence they were forwarded to the-Broad Street bank and there cashed. Mr. Atkinson, after the failure to pay the October coupons when they matured, represented to the bondholders that he would endeavor to bring money into the company and rehabilitate it, and procured from most of the bondholders a paper by which they agreed not to. take any action against the company before January 1st, 1900.

As already observed, before that time, the amount of $4,500-had been raised, deposited in bank and the bondholders notified to present their coupons to the Broad Street Rational Bank-It is to be observed that of the $4,500, $2,000 in cash was advanced by Mr. 'Stillman.

When the coupons, payable on the following April, .were about to mature, the company was short.$2,500 of the amount sufficient to pay them, and Mr. Atkinson procured $2,500 from William J. Davis.

When the succeeding October coupons were about to mature,, he procured an additional $4,500 from Mr. Davis., These maturing coupons were paid at the Broad Street Rational Bank in the-same manner as those of October, 1899, had been paid. This was the last payment of coupons. After the payment of the coupons-by the Broad Street Rational Bank, enough of them were transferred to Mr. Stillman, Mr. Davis and Mr. Risdon, respectively,. [110]*110to equal the amounts of money advanced by them, namely, $11,880. These gentlemen claim priority of payment for this sum out of the fund in court. The question thus propounded is whether, in respect to the bondholders, the transaction was a purchase of the coupons by Mr. Stillman, Mr. Davis and Mr. Risclon, or whether it was a payment of the coupons by and for the company with money which those gentlemen had advanced. There seems to be no doubt that those who advanced the money to pay for the coupons expected to get the rights of the holders of the coupons. The receipt given by Mr. Atkinson to Mr. Stillman was for money to be used to taire up coupons due October 1st, 1899. The money raised by Mr. Atkinson was not deposited to the credit of the company, but to the credit of Mr. Atkinson, as I understand the testimony, and the coupons were received by the bank and charged up to this fund. The solution of the question propounded, however, does not stop with the ascertainment of the intention of those who advanced the money; it involves the further question whether the bondholders understood, or had reason to inquire, whether Mr. Atkinson was buying the coupons. For even if a third person was buying them instead of the company paying them, the bondholders may insist on their mortgage lien free from these purchased coupons. The reason is that it takes two to make a sale and, moreover, the coupon-holders might have preferred to foreclose rather than to sell their coupons. 2 Cook Stock. & Stockh. § 772. The gentlemen whose money paid for these coupons place their right to assert a prior lien on the authority of the case of Ketchum v. Duncan, 96 U. S. 659, decided by a divided court.

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Bluebook (online)
57 A. 1020, 66 N.J. Eq. 106, 1904 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-trust-co-v-home-telephone-co-njch-1904.