North Carolina R. R. v. Wilson

81 N.C. 223
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 81 N.C. 223 (North Carolina R. R. v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Carolina R. R. v. Wilson, 81 N.C. 223 (N.C. 1879).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

On the 29th of February, 1868, the North Carolina railroad company, to secure and give credit to a series of bonds proposed to be issued for its benefit, conveyed to William A. Graham, trustee, its entire property of every kind upon the trusts that are therein particularly declared, and among other things in the seventh article provided as follows : “ On the first of January, 1869, and on the first of January in each succeeding year thereafter, the said party of the first part (the N. O. R. R. Co.), its successors and assigns for the further security and ultimate redemption of the bonds intended to be secured thereby, for the creation of a sinking fund for that purpose, shall pay to the trustee for the time being, such a sum of money as at the periods when the three classes of bonds above mentioned have respectively matured and become payable, shall, in the judgment of the trustee, furnish a fund sufficient wholly to pay off and discharge such bonds, and the trustee shall deposit the sum so paid over to him in the United States trust company in the city of New York or some other depositary ■which shall be in his judgment safe; and the said moneys, together with all accumulations of interest thereon, if any, which may actualh come into the hands or within the disposal of the trustee, shall be laid out and invested by him in the purchase of bonds secured by these presents, upon the most favorable terms on which they can be purchased. The bonds so purchased with the coupons thereto annexed shall be immediately canceled by the trustee, and a certificate of the numbers and amounts of said bonds shall be immediately furnished under his hand by the said trustee to the president of the North Carolina railroad company. In case bonds secured by these presents cannot be purchased upon *225 favorable terms, then the said trustee may in his discretion invest the said sinking fund moneys in such securities as may from time to time be recommended to him by the president of the said North Carolina railroad company for the time being, or by the board of directors of said company.”

In article ten it is declared “ that in case at any time-hereafter the said trustee, or any trustee hereafter appointed, shall die or resign, or become incapable or unfit to act in the said trust, a successor to such trustee shall be appointed by said company, and the trustee so appointed shall thereupon become vested with all and singular the powers, authorities and estates granted to and conferred upon the party of the second part (said William A. Graham) by these presents, and all the rights and interests requisite to enable him to execute the purposes of this trust without any further assurance or conveyance, so far as such effect maybe lawful; and upon the death, resignation, or removal by any court of' competent jurisdiction of any trustee, or an appointment in’ .his place in'pursuance of these presents, all his powers and authorities by virtue hereof shall cease.”

The trustee entered upon and continued in the discharge of his duties until his death in August, 1875, when the board of directors appointed the defendant in his stead. Shortly thereafter, on the 14th of September, 1875, the executor of. the deceased trustee came to a settlement with the defendant and delivered over the trust funds to him, taking hisreceipt therefor. It appears from the receipt that the fund consisted of three individual bonds for $13,000, two of the second series of secured bonds due in 1877, twelve of the last series due in 1888, and of deposits in the state national bank of Raleigh and in three other banks of Charlotte, in the-aggregate sum of $73,072.07, the total paid being one hundred thousand one hundred and eleven dollars and a few cents; and with which the defendant charges himself in his-first annual account rendered in May, 1876. This account *226 shows a balance in the bands of the defendant of $96,285.26, constituted of the twelve bonds of the series due in 1888, the individual bonds received from the executor, deposits remaining in two of the Charlotte banks $30,000,and deposits in the banking house of Wilson & Shober, of which the ■defendant is senior partner, $40,477.27. Of these latter, it .appears from the certificates of deposit filed, that $25,000 'were deposited .October 16th, 1875; $22,000 November 6th, 1875 ; and the residue was a general deposit; while during ■the interval the defendant had withdrawn from the banks ■a little over $43,000.

During the succeeding year, as appears from the second account, the defendant received from the treasurer of the company, and in interest, $93,740.44, and paid out about .$1,000, leaving in his hands May 2nd, 1877, $191,019.70, the items of which are given in detail. The fund was then ■constituted of the individual notes and the twelve bonds originally received, the deposit of $47,000 with Wilson & ■Shober, other personal loans, ten U. S. six p>er cent bonds, cash deposits in bank $13,907.63, and of bonds and debt of -the Atlantic, Tennessee and Ohio Railroad Co. $73,670.57. This last mentioned investment was made under the direc■tion of the board of directors.

The last account rendered in May, 1878, shows that besides the sum already in hand, the defendant collected from dividends of the road and from other sources $32,380.72, and disbursed in the redemption of secured bonds, including loss in resale of the U. S. bonds and a small sum for express charges $87,740.42, leaving the sum of $135,660; and this consisting- of the original individual bonds $7,000, the investment in debts of the A. T. & O. R. R. Co. $73,670.57, deposits remaining with Wilson & Shober $41,311.50, the individual loans to others mentioned in preceding returns, and a small sum on general deposit with Wilson & Shober .and.in state national bank, of $677.93.

*227 The twelve bonds of the company of the last series which had been redeemed by the first trustee and were delivered over to his successor uncanceled, as well as the U. S. bonds, were during the fiscal year sold and the proceeds disposed of as is represented in the accompanying statement of the condition of the fund.

These accounts were submitted, and full and detailed explanations of the collaterals and other securities then held made by the trustee to the board of directors, and embodied in their reports to the annual meetings of stockholders without any express intimation of disapproval of his management until June 19th, 1877. At the meeting of this date the report of the finance committee charged with the duty of examination and made to the stockholders, indicates an expectation that the bonds to fall due in November ($165,000) would “ be provided for by the trustee out of the sinking fund,” and suggests to him the exercise of great caution on the part of the trustee in making loans “to individuals on collaterals or mortgages,” assigning as a reason therefor “the fluctuating character of collaterals and the very great difficulty of realizing under forced sales of real estate in times like the present.”

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81 N.C. 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-carolina-r-r-v-wilson-nc-1879.