P. W. Brooks & Co. v. North Carolina Public Service Co.

37 F.2d 220, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2518
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 1930
Docket2896
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 F.2d 220 (P. W. Brooks & Co. v. North Carolina Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P. W. Brooks & Co. v. North Carolina Public Service Co., 37 F.2d 220, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2518 (4th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

PARKER, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal in an action at law instituted by P. W. Brooks & Co., a corporation, as plaintiff, against the North Carolina Public Service Company, as defendant, to recover damages on .account of the latter company’s refusal to convert certain mortgage bonds which it had elected to redeem. A jury trial was waived by written stipulation, and the facts were found by the District Judge. Prom a judgment thereon in favor of defendant, plaintiff has appealed.

There is no dispute as to the facts. The bonds in question were issued in the year 1919 by the Piedmont Power & light Company, whose property was subsequently taken over and whose obligations were assumed by the defendant. They bore 6 per cent, interest and matured May 1, 1934. Article III, section 1, of the mortgage securing them made provision that the company at its option, on any interest date thereafter, might redeem them, or any part of them, at 105 per cent., by giving notice of intention to redeem by publication at least once a week for four successive weeks immediately preceding the date fixed for redemption in a newspaper published in New York and Philadelphia, and by depositing with the trustee sufficient funds for paying the. principal and interest on the bonds to be redeemed before the first publication of the notice. The funds so deposited were to be held by the trustee and paid to the holders of the bonds upon their presentation and surrender.

Due to a stringency in the money market, the company experienced difficulty in marketing the bonds, and in March, 1921, to render them more readily salable, it executed what is referred to as an “Additional Interest Indenture,” wherein it agreed to pay 7 per cent, interest on those which had not been sold. This instrument provided that any or all of the bonds sold on the 7 per cent, basis might, at the option of the company, be called for redemption at 103 per cent., and accrued interest on the 1st day of May, 1923, or any interest date thereafter before maturity The original mortgage, after making provision for a sinking fund, had provided that the trustee should use same in purchasing outstanding bonds, and, if unable to purchase them at the rate fixed for redemption, should call for redemption sufficient bonds for that purpose, selecting same by lot. The Additional Interest Indenture provided that none of the 7 per cent, bonds should be called for redemption prior to 1923, but that thereafter no distinction should be made between the bonds in drawing same for redemption, except that those bearing 7 per cent, should be redeemable at 103 and those bearing 6 per cent, at 105.

This additional interest'indenture contained, also, a provision as to conversion, which is as follows:

“Section 2. It is covenanted and agreed . by the company that the holders of any or all of said first mortgage bonds issued on a 7% basis, pursuant to the terms hereof, may, at any time, prior to maturity, convert said first mortgage bonds issued on a 7% basis into first mortgage bonds of the same issue and maturity issued on a 6% basis, said bonds issued on a 7% basis to be received by the company for said purpose at par and accrued interest, and the said bonds issued on a 6% basis to be issued and delivered by the company for said purpose at 92 and accrued interest, any fractional difference to be paid in cash by the company, or to be ap *222 plied on the purchase of an additional one hundred dollar ($100) first mortgage bond at 92 and accrued interest, at the option of the holder making said conversion, which option shall be stated in the original notice hereinafter set forth.”

On July 30, 1926, defendant decided to exercise the option reserved to it in the Additional Interest Indenture and to redeem on November 1, 1926, all of the bonds secured by the mortgage. For that purpose it deposited with the trustee a sufficient amount to redeem the outstanding 6 per cent, bonds at 105 and the outstanding 7 per cent, bonds at 103. On July 31st, it published in newspapers in New York and Philadelphia notice of the redemption, together with a notice that from and after the date of publication the privilege to convert from 7 per cent, to 6 per cent, bonds was terminated.

Plaintiff is a brokerage company of New York. At the time of the publication of the notice it held 7 per cent, bonds in the amount of $4,200. It at once presented these to the trustee and demanded that they be converted into 6 per cent, bonds at the rate of exchange provided in the Additional Interest Indenture. The trustee, however, having been notified by the defendant that no. further conversions should be made, refused to proceed in the matter. Plaintiff thereupon acquired other 7 per cent, bonds totaling, with those originally held, the sum of $87,-000, .and demanded that all of them be converted. Defendant refused to recognize the right of conversion, and deposited no additional funds with the trustee for that purpose. Shortly before November 1st, plaint-tiff delivered all of the bonds to the trustee for redemption and accepted payment therefor at the rate of 103 per cent, and interest. One lot of the bonds was accompanied by a letter in which plaintiff said: “We are delivering these bonds for redemption without prejudice to our previous demand for conversion and without waiving our rights by reason of the company’s refusal to carry out the conversion to which we were entitled. Kindly let us have proceeds of the redemption as soon as convenient.” It is admitted that the amount received by plaintiff was less by $9,667.17 than it would have been, if the 7 per cent, bonds had been converted into 6 per cent, bonds at the rate of exchange provided by the Additional Interest Indenture, and these 6 per cent, bonds had then been redeemed at 105.

The contention of plaintiff is that under the terms of the Additional Interest Indenture it had the right to convert its bonds at any time before maturity; that it demanded conversion before maturity, even if maturity be construed as the date fixed for redemption; and that, conversion having been refused, it is entitled to recover as damages the difference between what it received from the trustee and what it would have received if conversion had been allowed and the converted 6 per cent.- bonds redeemed. We think, however, that this contention rests upon an erroneous interpretation of the conversion clause of the Additional Interest Indenture. Plaintiff says that it is prepared to concede, “in violation of the well established principle that instruments are to be construed most strongly against the party which prepared the instrument,” that the word “maturity,” as used in-the conversion clause, may be construed to mean May 1, 1934, -or any earlier maturity date as fixed by a redemption of the bonds; but we do not think that this conceded construction is by any means the proper one when the conversion clause is construed, as it must be, in connection with the provisions of the redemption elause.

The indenture reserved to the issuing corporation the option of redeeming any of the bonds issued. It gave to any holder of a 7 per cent, bond the option of converting same, “at any time prior to maturity,” into a 6 per cent, bond at a certain rate of exchange.

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Bluebook (online)
37 F.2d 220, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-w-brooks-co-v-north-carolina-public-service-co-ca4-1930.