New York Trust Co. v. Continental & Commercial Trust & Sav. Bank

26 F.2d 872, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3795
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 1928
Docket7802, 7855
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 872 (New York Trust Co. v. Continental & Commercial Trust & Sav. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Trust Co. v. Continental & Commercial Trust & Sav. Bank, 26 F.2d 872, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3795 (8th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, District Judge.

These are appeals from an order confirming a mortgage foreclosure sale in the case of Kansas City Refining Company v. Kansas City Railways Company, a receivership suit.

The appellants in 7802 are trustees for the holders of second mortgage bonds of the Railways Company. The appellants in 7855 are certain holders of preferred participating certificates representing beneficial interests in the preferred stock of the Railways Company.

The receivership suit was instituted September 9, 1920, by the Refining Company, a general creditor. The Railways Company answered the bill and admitted the claim of the Refining Company and the allegations of the bill. A temporary receiver was appointed September 9, 1920, and shortly thereafter permanent receivers were appointed.

In addition to first mortgage bond and note holders and second mortgage bondholders, there were also certain so-called tort claimants, whose claims were based upon unpaid judgments recovered against the Railways Company for personal injuries or property damages aggregating $2,106,072.50.

On October 21, 1920, the trustees under the first mortgage filed their intervening petition and bill in the receivership suit to foreclose the first mortgage, which secured certain first mortgage bonds and certain additional first mortgage bonds pledged to secure promissory notes of the Railways Company.

The trustees under the second mortgage later filed an answer and counterclaim. In *873 this pleading they admitted the priority of the first mortgage and the validity of the bonds issued thereunder, but attacked the validity of the pledge of bonds to secure certain of such notes.

The tort claimants also appeared in the receivership suit and attacked the validity of the first and second mortgage liens, on the ground that the bonds issued were in excess of the amount authorized by the laws of the state of Missouri, and also on the ground that, under the provisions of the franchise granted to the Railways Company, claims and judgments for personal injuries were to be paid as a special operating expense prior to the claim of any trustee or bondholder under any mortgage on the property of the Railways Company, and for these reasons asserted that the claims of the tort claimants were prior and superior to the liens of the first and second mortgages.

Early in 1924, the appellants in 7855, Gibson and others, filed an intervening petition and answer in the receivership suit, in which they attacked the validity of the mortgages, bonds, and notes, and also set up substantially the same averments as the tort claimants.

Prior to the receivership suit, a protective committee representing all classes of securities had been formed. This committee was dissolved in 1922, and was succeeded by three independent committees, one of which represented the holders of first mortgage bonds sold outright, another represented the holders'of notes secured by pledge of first mortgage bonds, and another the holders of second mortgage bonds.

In October, 1923, the protective committees, representing the first mortgage bonds and notes, appointed a so-called reorganization committee.

On November 22, 1923, the reorganization committee, representing the first mortgage security holders, entered into an agreement with the tort claimants. The substance of this agreement was that the parties would collaborate in an effort to obtain an equitable adjustment of the matters in controversy and a prompt reorganization and refinancing of the Railways Company; 'that the tort claimants should receive 50 per cent, of their claims in cash from funds in the hands of the court, as and when the court should by order allow and direct such payments, and that the remaining 50 per cent, of the tort claims should be paid in bonds of the new company. Following this, negotiations were instituted with other creditors, and offers made to them. The committee’s offer to the second mortgage bondholders was 2% shares of new preferred and 2% shares of new eommon stock for each $1,000 second mortgage bond. The reorganization committee failed in its efforts to reach an agreement with the second mortgage bondholders.

On April 4, 1924, the reorganization committee entered into an agreement with the tort claimants, modifying the previous November agreement. The principal modifications were that the tort claimants should withdraw the allegations of their pleadings attacking the validity and priority of the first mortgage securities; that the tort claimants would consent to a decree establishing the validity and priority of the first mortgage, the validity of the bonds secured thereby, and the validity of the pledge of such bonds to secure notes of the Railways Company; that the first mortgage security holders would make the 50 per cent, cash payment on the tort claims out of the cash applicable to their securities, should no cash payment be made from funds in the hands of the court because of objection made by any party; that, upon taking over the property, the first mortgage security holders would pay the remaining 50 per cent, in bonds of the reorganized company, but, if they should be unable to deliver such bonds or should not acquire the property, they would pay the balance due on the tort claims in cash.

Following this, the reorganization committee, which represented 96.6 per cent, in amount of the first mortgage securities, demanded a foreclosure find sale under the first mortgage. After a contested trial, the court on May 16, 1925, entered its final decree in foreclosure. The decree sustained the validity of the first mortgage and the securities issued thereunder. It adjudged that there were validly outstanding, and held by bona fide purchasers, first mortgage securities aggregating the principal amount of $25,067,400, which, with due and unpaid interest to the date of the decree, amounted to $33,505,703.-26. It also adjudged that there had been validly issued, and were outstanding, notes secured by secondary pledges of first mortgage bonds in the principal amount of $1,-797,000, which, with interest to the date of the decree, amounted to $2,421,261.31.

The amount due on the first mortgage securities, after deducting the cash in the hands of the receivers available for payment thereon, was $31,292,126.78.

• The decree also sustained the validity of the second mortgage lien and the bonds secured thereby, subject to the prior lien of *874 the first mortgage, and determined that there was due thereon for principal and interest to the date of the decree $6,600,167.10. It dismissed the petition of appellants Gibson and others. . It ordered .that the Railways Company pay the amount of the first mortgage debt decreed to be due, and provided that, in default thereof, the property covered by the first mortgage lien should be sold in satisfaction of such debt. It contained the other usual foreclosure decree provisions.

John T. Harding, the special master appointed by the decree to make the sale of the mortgaged property, duly advertised the same to be sold on December 15, 1925. The sale was adjourned from the last-mentioned date to January 4, 1926. On the latter date, Powell C. Groner, representing the reorganization committee, made a bid of $8,000,-000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 872, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-trust-co-v-continental-commercial-trust-sav-bank-ca8-1928.