Moss v. Geddes

28 Misc. 291, 59 N.Y.S. 867
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 Misc. 291 (Moss v. Geddes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moss v. Geddes, 28 Misc. 291, 59 N.Y.S. 867 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

Stover, J.

The plaintiff sues in behalf of himself and all others, as creditors and holders of the bonds and coupons of the South [292]*292Carolina Railway, secured by a deed of trust. Generally, the allegations are that the plaintiff is a banker and broker, doing business in the city of New York; that on the 1st day of November, 1881, the South Carolina Railway, being a corporation organized under the laws of South Carolina, pmchased from certain persons, trustees, not parties to this action, a railway in the state of South Carolina, being all the railway at that time known and operated as the South Carolina Railway, and its branches, its certain franchises, privileges, etc., and, for the payment of the purchase price thereof, authorized the borrowing of $5,000,000 and the issuing and disposing of bonds, bearing date November 1, 1881, and due and payable October 1, 1920; and, at the same time, that said trustees executed and delivered to Samuel Sloan and John S. Barnes, as trustees, ai deed in trust, and that said Sloan and Barnes accepted the trust, and entered upon the discharge of their duties; that the plaintiff became the holder of a bond secured by said mortgage, on or about the 26th day of October, 1882, and still is the owner and holder of said bond; that, on the 1st of October, 1889, the railway made default in the payment of the interest upon the saidhonds, and the said trustees, under the provisions of the mortgage, elected that the principal of 'all of said bonds should become due and payable immediately; that thereafter an action was commenced by one Frederick W. Bound, of the state of New Jersey, in the District Court of South Carolina, for the foreclosure of said mortgage against said South Carolina Railway, and against other persons; that said action proceeded to judgment, and that said mortgaged premises were ordered to be sold as an entirety for cash, at public auction, in the city of Charleston, April 11, 1893, hy a special master therein named, in satisfaction of said mortgage; that the judgment of sale provided that said special master should receive no bid at such sale of less than $1,000,000, and, if he deemed it proper, he should receive no hid from any one offering to bid who should not first deposit with him, as a pledge that such bidder would make good his bid in case of its acceptance, the sum of $100,000 in money or certified check. And the further provision that purchasers might turn in to the special master, in lieu of cash, any bonds or other claims adjudged to be payable out of the proceeds of the mortgaged premises, which should be received and credited as cash on account of the purchase. Further, that said special master should file a bond in the penal sum of $100,000, with the condition for the faithful performance of the duties therein imposed on him as such spe[293]*293cial master. That it was provided by the fourth clause of said mortgage that the said trustees might, in their discretion, and should, upon the written request of the holders of at least one-half of the amount of the bonds thereby secured, then unpaid and outstanding, cause the said premises so mortgaged to be sold as they should deem necessary and proper, having due regard to the interest of all parties, subject to the lien of said first mortgage, at public auction in the city of Charleston, to the highest bidder.

And by another clause it was provided that upon any sale of the said premises, whether by the trustees or under judicial process, the holders of the bonds thereby secured, or any of them, or the said! trustees, on behalf of all the bondholders, should have the right to purchase, upon equal terms with other persons, and it was made the duty of the said trustees, if so required, in writing, before such sale, by the holders of one-half in amount of the outstanding bonds secured thereby, to make such purchase on behalf of all the bondholders at a reasonable price, etc. And by another clause it was provided that in case of the purchase of the said property or any part thereof by the said trustees, the same should be held for the benefit of all bondholders in proportion to their respective interests in the bonds, and that the property should be conveyed to such persons or corporation as might be designated at a meeting to be held. It further alleged that on or about the 30th day of January, 1894, the defendants, in co-operation with those bondholders they represented, who with themselves owned and controlled more than a majority of said bonds, arbitrarily and wrongfully formed themselves into a self-constituted committee for said bondholders for the purpose, and with the intent to control the purchase of said mortgaged property at foreclosure sale, which was soon to take place, for their own purposes, as will more fully hereinafter appear. That in furtherance of said arbitrary and wrongful co-operation and scheme of the defendants, they caused to be prepared, issued and circulated, a paper writing called Bondholders’ Agreement, South Carolina Jtailway 1st Consolidated Mortgage Six per cent. Gold Bonds.’

“ That said bondholders’ agreement, among other things, gave to said committee full power and authority to do and perform every act and thing requisite to be done in and about the premises, and under and pursuant to the terms of said bonds and of the mortgage securing said bonds, either by way of request to the trustees to purchase said mortgaged premises at foreclosure sale or otherwise; and

[294]*294“ Also, said committee was authorized and empowered to purchase said premises for the benefit of all of said bondholders at such price (not, however, exceeding the aggregate of the principal and interest at the time being due and unpaid upon), as said committee may consider expedient. All the bonds secured by said mortgage or deed of trust, and all sums payable out of the purchase money in priority to said bonds as said committee may consider expedient, and for such purpose to incur such expenses as said committee may consider judicious, to use said bonds and coupons held by those who> sign said agreement respectively, for the purpose of paying for the mortgaged premises; or said committee may request the trustees to purchase as in said mortgage provided.”

Said complaint also alleged that said committee was authorized to deposit said bonds with the Hew York Guaranty & Indemnity Company at the time of signing said agreement, subject to the order of said committee for the purpose of enabling said committee to carry out said agreement, and that at the time of such deposit, transferable certificates for such bonds and coupons, showing the right and title thereto of the depositor, should be delivered to the depositors respectively. . Said certificates to be engraved so as to comply with the Hew York Stock Exchange rules.

Further, that if the said committee should purchase said mortgaged premises, the same might be conveyed to them or to such person or persons as said committee' might designate; and such purchasers might take possession of the said mortgaged premises for the account and benefit of the holders of said certificate holders respectively. Said committee might, at any time, adopt a plan of reorganization, and thereupon call a general meeting of the said certificate holders for the purpose of action thereon. “'If such or other plan of reorganization be approved at any such meeting by a majority in interest of said certificate holders, or such of them as shall attend such meeting, or be represented at the same by proxy,, the plan adopted shall be binding upon all the said certificate-holders.”

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Related

Village of Port Chester v. State
48 Misc. 2d 690 (New York State Court of Claims, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
28 Misc. 291, 59 N.Y.S. 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-v-geddes-nysupct-1899.