Peoples' Trust Co. v. Mount Waldo Granite Works

105 A. 113, 117 Me. 507, 1918 Me. LEXIS 133
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 13, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 105 A. 113 (Peoples' Trust Co. v. Mount Waldo Granite Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples' Trust Co. v. Mount Waldo Granite Works, 105 A. 113, 117 Me. 507, 1918 Me. LEXIS 133 (Me. 1918).

Opinion

Spear, J.

This is a bill in equity, brought for the purpose of foreclosing a mortgage alleged to have been given by the Mt. Waldo Granite Works to the Peoples’ Trust Company, a banking corporation of New York.

The bill alleges the issuance by the Mt. Waldo Granite Works of $150,000 of its negotiable bonds, secured by a mortgage upon its plant and property. At the time the suit was brought the bonds were held by a number of banks in Maine as collateral security for the notes of the Mt. Waldo Granite Works.

The plaintiff claims two defaults in the conditions of the mortgage given to secure the bonds; first, a failure by the Granite Works to pay the coupons on said bonds, and, second, a failure to pay the taxes duly assessed thereon. On July 14, 1901, the Mt. Waldo Granite Company, by its officers, proceeded to execute a deed of trust to the Peoples’ Trust Company to secure the payment of said bonds, ratable and equally, without preference one over another, and also to secure the coupons attached thereto. The indenture of mortgage was recorded in the Registry of Deeds for the County of Waldo, and purported to mortgage the .property, real, personal and mixed, and all fixtures, rights, privileges, franchises and easements, and rights under the lease of all and every kind owned and used by the party of the first part in its business of quarrying and selling granite, as described [509]*509in said mortgage. Among the described real estate are the quarries, quarry-fixtures, railroad, engines and engine-houses, blondin cable, boarding-houses, stables, shops and dwelling-houses of the Mt. "Waldo Granite Works. On another lot of real estate was conveyed the railroad, and blocks with storehouses and derricks thereon belonging to said corporation, the real estate being subject to certain agreements made by the said corporation, duly recorded. The mortgage also covered all the derricks, engines, cars, implements, tools and apparatus of every kind and nature now owned or which may hereafter be owned by said company, used or to be used in quarrying, finishing and shipping granite. The mortgage also provided that whenever any of the property, fixtures or implements described shall have become destroyed or worn out they should be replaced by the mortgagor, so that, at the end of the term the property should be in the same condition that it was at the date of the deed. It was further provided that, upon default of payment of interest upon the aforesaid bonds, or any of them, such default continuing for ninety days thereafter, and payment of said interest having been demanded and refused, all of said bonds should, at the option of the respective owners, become immediately due and payable, principal and interest, and that the Mt. Waldo Granite Works agreed to pay and discharge all taxes, assessments or other charges that are now a lien, or hereafter shall be legally levied, assessed or imposed, become a hen upon the premises or any part thereof. It is agreed that default was made in the payment of coupons attached to said bonds for July, 1909 and all subsequent coupons, and that in January, 1916, formal demand was made for payment of coupons attached to said bonds and payment refused; that the holders of all of said bonds requested the Peoples’ Trust Company to foreclose said mortgage.

The Mt. Waldo Granite Works has been adjudicated a bankrupt in the District Court of the United States for the District of Maine, and said court, on petition therefor, authorized and assented to this suit being brought for the foreclosure of said mortgage in this court, and that this court may take charge and possession of said mortgaged property for the purpose of foreclosure.

The plaintiff filed a supplemental bill alleging, in substance, that the Ingersoll-Sargent Drill Company, a corporation under the laws of the State of New York, claim to have a mortgage for an air compressor, [510]*510which it claims was a part of the fixtures and property included in the description in said mortgage, and asks that said Ingersoll-Sargent. Drill Company be made a defendant. Service was made upon said company, and it appeared and filed an answer, claiming said property by virtue of a mortgage given by the Mt. Waldo Granite Works. The mortgage, of the Mt. Waldo Granite Works as stated above, was recorded in the Registry of Deeds, but was not recorded in the town clerk’s office in the town where the corporation has its home and its property.

Under this state of facts defendants assert three defenses which are entitled to consideration. Many minor questions were raised to which it is not necessary to allude.

' First: The defendant claims that there is not sufficient proof that the mortgage and bonds were duly authorized by the corporation — the Granite Works. It appears that all the records of the corporation have since been destroyed. In the affidavit of Mr. Albert Pierce, clerk and treasurer of the corporation, which the parties agree is to be taken as his testimony, he distinctly states that every necessary vote was passed by the corporation and recorded. Further than that, we have before the court, according to the stipulation of the parties, a copy of the trust deed, and that recites that the maker, the Granite Works, passed the necessary vote.

It is the opinion of the court, therefore, that the foregoing facts furnish sufficient evidence that the trust deed and bonds were'properly authorized by the Granite Works.

Second: The defendants contend that the mortgage cannot be foreclosed by the plaintiff because the bonds are issued as collateral security for the Granite Works’ notes. There is no merit in this defense. The mortgage expressly provides for the proceedings herein pursued. The whole purpose of the trust mortgage was to secure the holders of these bonds. The banks which hold them as collateral are bona fide holders for the purposes of foreclosure, as much as though they had purchased the bonds, instead of loaning money on them. In New Memphis Gas Light Company cases, 105 Tenn., 268; 80 Am. St. Rep., 880, this principle is affirmed as follows: “While it is true the parties taking bonds as collateral security for preexisting debts, under the rule then prevailing in this State, were not holders for value in due course of trade, yet it being clear that the debts they were [511]*511given to secure were honest debts of the company, created by its making the very improvement the bonds were issued to pay for, the creditors receiving them as security were bona fide holders, and as such entitled to full protection save as against such equities as might be inherent in the bonds.”

The property in the mortgage is the real security. The bonds a,re merely issued for the convenience of enabling the mortgagor to obtain money, from time to time, as wanted, from several sources instead of but one. The only possible way in which they can realize anything on the collateral for their respective loans is by enforcing payment of the bonds; and the only way they can enforce payment on the bonds of a bankrupt corporation is by foreclosure of the mortgage and a sale of the mortgage property given to secure the payment of the bonds. The banks which hold all these bonds have requested the trustee to pursue the prescribed course which, it would seem, is not only reasonable but the only effective way they could adopt to realize upon their securities, as the bonds of a concern in bankruptcy can have no market value.

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Bluebook (online)
105 A. 113, 117 Me. 507, 1918 Me. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-trust-co-v-mount-waldo-granite-works-me-1918.