Orrick v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.

77 A. 599, 113 Md. 239, 1910 Md. LEXIS 50
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 27, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 A. 599 (Orrick v. Fidelity & Deposit 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
Orrick v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 77 A. 599, 113 Md. 239, 1910 Md. LEXIS 50 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

*242 Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The two appeals before us were taken from the same order and will be considered together. They bring the proceedings in which they were taken before us for the second time. The facts of the ease were fully stated in our opinion on the former appeal which will be reported in 112 Md. 50, but in order to make clearer what we have now to say we again refer to some of the moi’e important of them.

On April 1st, 1904, the Consolidated Gas Company of Baltimore City (hereinafter called the Gas Company) being the owner of certain property and franchises subject to two existing mortgages, one made by that company and the other by its predecessor in title, to secure respective issues of 5 per cent, and 6 per cent, bonds, made an additional mortgage deed of trust thereon to the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland (hereinafter called' the Fidelity Company). This last mortgage was made to secure 15,000 4% per cent, coupon bonds for $1,000 each, to be from time to time executed by the Gas Company and delivered to the Fidelity Company .•as trustee, to be by it certified, and then to be applied to the <extent of 2,515 bonds, to providing for immediate needs and (outstanding certificates of indebtedness of the Gas Oom-pany * * * to the extent of 6,985 bonds, to taking up and retiring the outstanding prior lien bonds secured by the two underlying mortgages and, to the extent of the remaining 5,500 bonds, to the payment of 80 per cent, of the cost of such further property as the Gas Company might desire to thereafter acquire.

'The mortgage contains among other things:

1. A provision that there should be no priority among the bonds to be issued under it but all of them should have the equal benefit of its security without.reference to the date or ■order of their issue.

2. A covenant on the part of the Gas Company to pay or purchase and retire the outstanding prior lien bonds at or before their maturity.

*243 3. A provision requiring the trustee to certify and deliver, to the order of the Gas Company, bonds to be issued under the mortgage in exchange for equal amounts in par value of all prior lien bonds that the Gas Company should acquire and tender to it for that purpose, and to retain such prior lien bonds for cancellation.

4. A provision requiring the performance by officials of the Gas Company of certain conditions precedent to authorize the issue of bonds to be applied to the payment for after-acquired property.

5. A privilege to the holders of bond's to have them registered by the trustee as to the payment of principal.

The mortgage also provides that the_ certification, in accordance with its terms, by the trastee of any bond should be conclusive evidence of the fact that such bond had been duly issued under the mortgage and that its holder was entitled to the benefit of the trusts created by that instrument. It further provides that the bonds to be issued under and secured by it shall be substantially of the tenor and purport of the form set out in the body of the mortgage and shall be executed on behalf of the Gas Company by its president or vice-president and shall bear the seal of the company, and it contains no provision for their execution in any other manner or by other persons.

The mortgage was duly executed by the. Gas Company and also by the Fidelity Company as trustee and placed upon record and the bonds were engraved and printed ready for execution. After the bonds for the immediate use of the Gas Company and those to take up its outstanding certificates of indebtedness had been executed and issued, but before any others of the bonds had been executed or issued the Gas Company entered into a consolidation, under the general laws of Maryland, with the corporation designated in the proceedings in this case as the Power Company forming the Consolidated Gas Electric Light and Power Company of *244 Baltimore City (hereinafter called' the Consolidated Company).

The agreement and' certificate of consolidation, -which are otherwise in the usual form, provide that upon the consolidation the property and franchises of the Gas Company, subject only to such liens thereon as existed prior to the consolidation shall pas's to and vest in the Continental Trust Company as trustee under the two mortgages, .made to it by the Power Company on February 14th and May the 15th, 1905, upon the terms and for the purposes of those instruments.

The Consolidated Company, when formed executed two conveyances purporting to convey -the property and franchises which it had received in the process of consolidation from the Gas Company subject to the existing liens thereon, to the trustee under the Power Company’s mortgages for the uses and purposes thereof. In these conveyances as well as in the articles of consolidation the Consolidated Company asserted and attempted to retain to itself the right to thereafter issue the unissued bonds provided for by the Gas Company’s mortgage.

The original proceedings in the present case were instituted by the filing by the Fidelity Company of an ex pa/rte petition in Circuit Court Ko. 2 of Baltimore City declaring that it entertained doubts as to its rights, duties and obligations as trustee under the Gas Company’s mortgage, especially in reference to the certification of further bonds to be issued thereunder and asking to be permitted to execute its trusts under the direction and supervision of the Court. By an appropriate order the Court assumed jurisdiction of the trusts and their administration as prayed.

By subsequent orders the Court directed the trustee to certify and deliver, as having been duly executed under the mortgage and entitled to the security thereof, certain bonds in the orders mentioned which had been executed by the Consolidated Company as successor of the Gas Company and had *245 been issued to pay for property acquired by the Consolidated Company for use in connection with its gas business.

Another application for a similar order having been made in the case by the Consolidated Company, one Albert Diggs, being the holder of bonds which had been issued by the Gas Company under, its mortgage prior to the consolidation, intervened in the case by petition and objected to the authorization by the Court of the issue of any more bonds, under the Gas Company’s mortgage, by the Consolidated Company, upon the ground among others that it had no power as successor of the Gas Company or otherwise to issue such bonds. The Circuit Court passed an order on that application directing the bonds to be issued as prayed and from that order Diggs took the former appeal.

Upon that apppeal we reversed the order appealed from reviewing at length both the law and the facts of the case in oxir opinion. We there distinguished between the further issue of bonds under the Gas Company’s mortgage for refunding purposes and their issue for the future acquisition of property.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

LeBrun v. Prosise
79 A.2d 543 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1951)
Central Sav. Bank of Balto. v. Post
64 A.2d 275 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1949)
Weiprecht v. Gill
62 A.2d 253 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1948)
Kiser v. Lucas
185 A. 441 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1936)
Estabrook v. Consolidated Gas Electric Light & Power Co.
90 A. 523 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 A. 599, 113 Md. 239, 1910 Md. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orrick-v-fidelity-deposit-co-md-1910.