New York Elevated Railroad v. Manhattan Railway Co.

63 How. Pr. 14
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 63 How. Pr. 14 (New York Elevated Railroad v. Manhattan Railway Co.) 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
New York Elevated Railroad v. Manhattan Railway Co., 63 How. Pr. 14 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1881).

Opinion

Westbrook, J.

On the 13th day of July, 1881, John F. Dillon and Amos L. Hopkins were appointed receivers of the Manhattan Railway Company, which was and is still a corporation formed under chapter 606 of the Laws of 1875.

The appointment was made in an action commenced by the attorney-general, entitled, “The People of the State of New York, plaintiffs, agt. The Mamihatta/n Pailway Company, defendants,” which sought to dissolve and extinguish the corporate life of the defendant, upon the ground, as stated in the complaint, that it is and for more than one year last past has been insolvent.”

The action in which such appointment was made has not proceeded to final judgment, but is now at issue by the service of an answer, verified by the oath of the president of the defendant, which among other averments and denials, contains the following:

Third. It denies that it is, and for more than one year-last past has been insolvent. It further denies that it has remained insolvent for one year.”

The receivers are temporary and holding their positions under the power conferred upon the court by section 1788 of the Code.

Among the property which such receivers now hold, are the elevated railroads owned by the Hew York Elevated Railroad Company, and the personal property belonging and appurtenant thereto, which were leased to the Manhattan Railway Company by a written and sealed instrument bearing date May 20, 1879.

The present application, which is on behalf of the Hew York Elevated Railway Company, is by petition to this court, which appointed the receivers, to restore to it its railroads and property held by the receivers as the property of the Manhattan Railway Company under said lease.

Having stated some of the prominent facts involved in this motion and its object, it will be necessary also to mention some others somewhat in detail, that the questions involved may be understood and intelligently discussed.

[18]*18The Manhattan Railway Company built for itself and owns no railroad whatever. Its original subscribed capital was $2,000,000, of which sum only five per cent ($100,000) has ever been paid. The roads which it operated were leased from the Mew York Elevated Railroad Company, and the Metropolitan Elevated Railroad Company, two separate and distinct corporations, each one of which owned and were at the time of the leasing, operating certain elevated railroads in the city of Mew York, and were each also then engaged in extending their structures.

On the 20th day of May, 1879, as preliminary to the leases which were executed on the same day, the Mew York Elevated Railroad Company, as the party of the first part, the Metropolitan Elevated Railway Company as the party of the second part, and the Manhattan Railway Company as the party of the third part, entered into a written agreement by which it was agreed that each of the parties of the first and second part should execute to the party of the third part, “ leases of their respective railways, and other property, rights and franchises of every description, including patent rights, substantially in the form hereto annexed.”

The object of the agreement is, by a recital therein contained, declared to be for the purpose of avoiding the danger of crossing elevated railway tracks upon the same level, and otherwise securing to the people of Mew York the advantages of safer and more rapid transit through the action of one directing body.”

The instrument also, among other things, provided for the completion by the owners of certain portions of the railway structures of the Metropolitan Elevated Railway Company, and of the Mew York Elevated Railroad Company, and ■for the building of certain other parts at the joint expense of ¡the two, and prescribed (as already stated) the form of the lease to be executed 'by the said two companies to the Manihattan Railway Company, and the amount of the rent.

The Manhattan Company, in addition to assuming pay[19]*19ment of the principal and interest of the first mortgage bonds of the New York and Metropolitan Companies,” as provided in said agreement, “ and the payment of cash rental and guaranteed dividend as provided in the lease,” also agreed “ to issue and deliver to the New York and Metropolitan Companies its two bonds, each for six millions five hundred thousand dollars, payable on demand, one to John A. Cowing, as trustee for the stockholders of the New York Company, and the other to John Baird, as trustee for the stockholders of the Metropolitan Company, with authority to the trustees respectively to use the same, if they see fit, in payment for stock of the Manhattan Company at par.”

Under the clause just stated, the bonds provided for were executed, which were exchanged for stock in the Manhattan Bailway Company, whereby the New York and Metropolitan Companies, or their stockholders, became the owners of the entire capital stock of the Manhattan Company, then amounting to $13,000,000.

It was further agreed that whenever, in any fiscal year, the Manhattan Company shall elect to declare a dividend of more than ten per cent, on its capital, stock,” the said Manhattan Company “ shall pay to the New York and Metropolitan Companies a sum sufficient to enable them to pay as large a dividend in excess of ten per cent on the stock of the New York Company and Metropolitan Company as shall be declared on the stock of the Manhattan Company.”

The leases, as has been before stated, bear- the same date with the t/ri-parte agreement—May 20, 1879 — and were both in the same form and upon the same terms. That from the New York Company contained recitals as follows: That both it and the Metropolitan owned lines of elevated railway in the city of New York, part finished and other portions in process of construction, which on account of their crossing each other at various points could not be run with dispatch and safety to the public under two different managements, and that the system of roads, both for the public convenience [20]*20and safety, should be placed under one management; that the Manhattan Company was “ by law authorized to construct and operate elevated railroads in the city of Mew York, whether owned or leased by it,” and was willing to accept and take leases from the Mew York Company and the Metropolitan Company of their respective railways and properties, which said companies had agreed to execute; and that the Manhattan Company had agreed to pay the principal and interest due and to grow due upon $8,500,000 of first mortgage bonds of the Mew York Company, and also the principal and interest upon any further and additional bonds which the Mew York Company might issue at the request of the Manhattan Company “ for the purposes of constructing and equipping extensions of the line of the Mew York Company,” and a dividend of ten per cent upon the “ par value of six millions five hundred thousand dollars ” of the capital stock of the said Mew York Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 How. Pr. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-elevated-railroad-v-manhattan-railway-co-nysupct-1881.