Mt. Vernon-Woodberry Cotton Duck Co. v. Continental Trust Co.

88 A. 103, 121 Md. 163, 1913 Md. LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 25, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 88 A. 103 (Mt. Vernon-Woodberry Cotton Duck Co. v. Continental Trust Co.) 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
Mt. Vernon-Woodberry Cotton Duck Co. v. Continental Trust Co., 88 A. 103, 121 Md. 163, 1913 Md. LEXIS 35 (Md. 1913).

Opinion

*165 Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Mt. Vernon Woodberry Cotton Duck Company was incoi'porated in the month of June, 1899, with a capital stock of $9,500,000.

On the 30 th August, in the same year, it executed two mortgages, one to secure an issue of first mortgage 5 per cent, bonds of $8,000,000, and the other to secure an issue of first income bonds of $6,000,000. It thus began business with an aggregate capitalization of $23,500,000, of which $1,000 apparently was cash. The balance of the stock, and possibly some of the bonds were held to acquire certain cotton mills located in Maryland, Connecticut, Alabama and South Carolina, in most cases by means of securing all or the majority of the capital stock of the companies theretofore operating such mills. In some manner, just how or for what consideration is not clear, substantially all of the stock and income bonds of a face value of $5,776,000 out of the total of $6,000,000, passed into the hands of the Consolidated Cotton Duck Company, and this latter corporation in turn was under the control of the International Cotton Mills through the ownership of a majority of the stock. The property included in the two mortgages of August 30th was 237 acres occupied by the plant of the Laurel Mills, 115 acres occupied by the plant of the Eranklinville Mills, and large amounts of the capital stock of the corporations owning the other mills controlled through such stock ownership by the Mt. Vernon-Woodberry Company.

Among the provisions contained in the mortgage was the following in Article IV, Section 9:

“The machinery, tools, furniture, equipment, supplies and other like chattels conveyed, or intended to be conveyed by or pursuant to this indenture, shall be real estate for all the purposes of this indenture, and shall be held and taken to be fixtures and appurtenances of the said mill properties in or about which they are in use or intended for use respectively and *166 part thereof, and are to he used and sold therewith and not separate therefrom, except as herein otherwise provided.”

Notwithstanding this definite, positive provision in the mortgage, in or about the year 1903 the Greenwoods Mill, in Connecticut, was completely dismantled and all the machinery taken out, a portion of it was shipped to Tallassee to help supply a mill that was new and had never been fully equipped, and what was done with the balance does not appear from the record. Thereafter the Greenwoods Mill lay idle till December, 1911, when it was sold for $300,000 to a corporation known as the Draycott Mills, the trustees releasing the mortgages in compliance with a provision of the mortgages, which will be alluded to later, and the promissory note given for the purchase money was turned over to the trustees.

In the summer before this sale was consummated, those engaged in the management of the Mt. Vernon-Woodberry Company’s properties, finding that a number of the mills were standing idle, and the others not being operated at a profit, and as the result of a careful examination of the conditions, came to the conclusion that an important and the most important cause lay in the fact that much of the machinery in use, was defective as the result of long years of use, or unadapted for economical production in comparison with more modern machinery, such as was in use by their competitors, and that this worn or old fashioned machinery must be replaced with adequate, up-to-date machinery. Accordingly an arrangement was made between the Mt. VernonWoodberry Company and the Consolidated Cotton Duck Company by which the latter was to purchase the desired machinery, have it installed in the Mt. Vernon-Woodberry Company Mills, upon a rental basis of six per cent, interest upon cost plus a proper allowance for depreciation, and with the right to the Mt. Vernon-Woodberry Company to purchase it, and a correlative right in the Consolidated Com *167 pany to remove, if the conditions of the agreement were not complied with. Just what was the total value of the machinery so purchased and installed does not clearly appear, hut it is apparent that some and probably a considerable portion of it had been installed before the sale of the Green-woods Mill had been consummated, as the final approval of the arrangement by the directors of the Mt. Vernon-Wood-berry Company on February 26th, 1912, deals with it as an accomplished fact. None of this new machinery was paid for either in whole or in part, but was all included under the rental or conditional sale agreement, and all of it was tagged as the property of the Consolidated Cotton Duck Company.

After the consummation of the sale of the Greenwoods Mill, the Mt. Vernon-Woodberry Company applied to the trustees under the two mortgages to have turned over to it the $300,000 note of the Draycott Mills, in order that it might in turn pass the same to the Consolidated Company in payment to that extent for the machinery installed in certain mills to take the place of that which had become worn out or obsolete. This request was refused, and thereupon the present hill was filed to require the trustees to comply with this demand. In both the oral argument and the briefs filed the greatest stress was placed upon the question whether the new machinery did or did not upon installation become fixtures, so that the lien of the mortgages attached ahead of any claim of the lessor or conditional vendor, or whether it was covered or could be covered by the after-acquired property clause of the mortgages, without additional, independent conveyances thereof.

These are questions upon which there is a wide diversity of decision in the various Courts, and any attempt to harmonize the various decisions would he absolutely futile. The doctrine in this State will be found clearly laid down in such cases as Dudley v. Hurst, 67 Md. 44; Central Trust Co. v. Arctic Ice Company, 77 Md. 202, and Warren Mfg. Co. v. M. & C. C. of Balto., 119 Md. 188.

*168 The Circuit Court of Baltimore City, in which this case was tried, did not deem the determination of that question as the controlling factor in this case, nor does this Court. The rights of the mortgagor company and the duties of the trustees are alike dependent upon the provisions contained in the mortgages. These are to he found in Sections 1 and 2 of Article 7 of the mortgages, and are as follows:

“Section 1. Upon the written request of the mortgagor Company, approved by resolution of its board of directors or executive committee, the Trustee, from time to time, while the mortgagor company is in possession of the mortgaged premises, but subject to the conditions and limitations in this section prescribed, and not otherwise, shall release from the lien and operation of this indenture any real estate or leasehold, part of the mortgaged premises then subject thereto, provided, that no part of the mortgaged real estate or leasehold property shall be released thereunder, unless at the time of such release it shall no longer be necessary or expedient to retain the same for use in the business of the Mortgagor Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A. 103, 121 Md. 163, 1913 Md. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mt-vernon-woodberry-cotton-duck-co-v-continental-trust-co-md-1913.