People Ex Rel. Delaware & Hudson Co. v. Stevens

90 N.E. 60, 197 N.Y. 1, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 735
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 90 N.E. 60 (People Ex Rel. Delaware & Hudson Co. v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Delaware & Hudson Co. v. Stevens, 90 N.E. 60, 197 N.Y. 1, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 735 (N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

Haight, J.

The Delaware and Hudson Company, a domestic railroad corporation, in June, 1908, applied to the public service commission for its consent to mortgage its railroad property, rights and franchises pursuant to subdivision ten of section four of the Bailroad Law, to secure an issue of $50,000,000 of its first and refunding mortgage.gold bonds maturing the first day of May, 1943, and that the company may be permitted to then issue $26,500,000 of its four per cent bonds secured by such mortgage for the purpose of refunding or paying $19,132,500 of its outstanding note obligations and to execute and reserve $6,500,000 of such bonds to pay an equal amount of prior lien bonds secured upon its *5 railroad properties. The commission, after hearing had, on the 7tli day of July, 1908, made an order authorizing the company to execute its mortgage and to set aside $6,500,000 of its four per cent bonds secured by the mortgage for the purpose of retiring an equal amount of its bonds secured by prior liens upon the mortgaged property and that it might issue and sell $13,309,000 of its bonds to be used in paying off outstanding note obligations of the company maturing within twelve months from the date thereof; and that no further issue of bonds be made except upon the consent of the commission upon further application. Thereupon the mortgage was executed and the bonds authorized by the order were issued thereunder and subsequently a further application was made by the company for leave to issue the remaining amount of the bonds asked for in its former petition for the purpose of paying the notes of the company issued for the purchase of the properties of the Troy and Hew England Company and Hudson Valley Company and a tract of coal lands in Pennsylvania. The hearing upon this application resulted in the commission’s granting a permit to issue bonds to pay the Troy and Hew England Company notes, but it refused the application of the company to issue bonds for the purpose of paying the Hudson Valley notes and the coal land notes. Thereupon the relator, upon its application, was allowed a writ of certiorari, which brings up for review the proceedings of the commission in rejecting the application of the relator for leave to issue bonds to pay the outstanding obligations of the company upon the acquisition of those properties. The facts with reference to them are substantially as follows:

The Delaware and Hudson Company advanced to the Hortliern Hew York Development Company the sum of $4,665,295.85, with which that company purchased the stock, bonds and debentures outstanding of the Hudson Valley Railway Company, an electric railroad. This stock and securities were transferred by it to the United Traction Company, which operates electric lines in Albany, Troy, Cohoes and other places, at a fixed price therefor of $7,500,000. In making *6 this sale the development company agreed to secure certain other securities of the Hudson Valley Eailway Company, which was assumed would bring the cost of the Hudson Valley securities up to the sum of $5,000,000. Previous to this the Delaware and Hudson Company purchased fifty thousand shares, the total capital stock of the United Traction Company, and paid therefor $150 per share, which was $50 per share above par. It was then determined by the Delaware and Hudson Company that this premium amounting to $2,500,000 should be repaid to it in new United Traction Company stock and that the United Traction Company should also issue $5,000,000 of stock on account of the Hudson Valley purchase from the development company. To do this it became necessary for the United Traction Company to apply to the board of railroad commissioners for consent to increase its capital stock by the amount of seventy-five thousand shares and from $5,000,000 to $12,500,000 face value. Such application was accordingly made and granted by the board of railroad commissioners, and thereupon the United Traction Company transferred the stock so increased to the Delaware and Hudson Company. The effect of this increase of stock of the traction company was to place the stock which the Delaware and Hudson Company had purchased at $150 per share on a par with that purchased by the development company of the Hudson Valley Company, thus making the stock of the traction company and of the Hudson Valley Company acquired by this transaction $100 per share, that being the amount that had been actually paid therefor by the Delaware and Hudson Company. At that time the Delaware and Hudson Company was the owner of all of the stock of the Horthern Hew York Development Company and of the United Traction Company with the exception of a few shares which had been transferred to individuals in order to qualify them to act as directors. The Delaware and Hudson Company, however, has not as yet paid out the sum of $5,000,000. It has only paid the sum of $1,665,295.85. The balance, so far as the record shows, is still retained by it pre *7 snmably for the payment of the remaining outstanding securities of the Hudson Valley Railway Company which it, through the development company, has undertaken to acquire and pay for. The payment, so far as made, was by the issuing of its notes for not exceeding twelve months and the renewal thereof at the expiration of the year at five and six per cent interest. It is these notes now outstanding which the company seeks to have discharged by the issuing of the bonds prayed for in the application.

The Delaware and Hudson Company was originally incorporated under the name of the President, Managers and Company of The Delaware and Hudson Canal Company by an act of the legislature passed in 1823, for the purpose of transporting to market coal from the region in which it was found in the state of Pennsylvania. It was authorized by a statute of Pennsylvania to purchase and to own coal lands, to mine coal and transport the same to market. It thereupon constructed a canal from the Delaware river to the Hudson river and operated the same until it was discontinued by act of the legislature of Hew York in 1899. By chapter 841 of the Laws of 1867 it was authorized to construct, lease, own and operate railroads, and all the rights, powers and privileges of railroad corporations were conferred upon it, and like authority was given to it in the state of Pennsylvania. Under the authority thus granted it has constructed and acquired and operated a railroad system from Wilkesbarre, in the state of Pennsylvania, to Rouse’s Point, in the northern border of the state of Hew York.

Upon its original incorporation it acquired a large tract of coal lands in the northern part of the anthracite coal regions of the state of Pennsylvania and the mining and transporting of coal to the markets for many years was its chief source of income, and up to the present time has continued to be one of its important industries and sources of revenue. In 1905 the company, believing that coal in the lands owned by it would within another generation become exhausted, purchased another tract of land, which, upon such information as was *8 then obtainable, contained upwards of four hundred million tons of coal, upon paying the sum of $5,687,260.53. The money to make such purchase was obtained by the Delaware and Hudson Company by borrowing upon its notes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 N.E. 60, 197 N.Y. 1, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-delaware-hudson-co-v-stevens-ny-1909.