Philadelphia Const. Co. v. Cramp

138 F. 999, 71 C.C.A. 253, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 3844
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 27, 1905
DocketNo. 12
StatusPublished

This text of 138 F. 999 (Philadelphia Const. Co. v. Cramp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Const. Co. v. Cramp, 138 F. 999, 71 C.C.A. 253, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 3844 (3d Cir. 1905).

Opinion

GRAY, Circuit Judge.

This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Suit was brought in the court below upon a statement of claim, of which the following are the material averments;

The Philadelphia Construction Company, plaintiff in error, is a corporation of the state of New Jersey, which, in 1901, under a contract with ,the Lancaster County Railway & Light Company, for construction of its works, had become possessed of $600,000 of the collateral trust mortgage 50-year, 5 per cent, gold bonds of said last-named company, and of certain shares of preferred and common stock thereof. Being desirous of selling these bonds, the Construction Company entered into an agreement, October 17,1901, with certain persons, called a “syndicate.” The material parts of this agreement, after reciting the foregoing, are as follows:

“1. Each member of the Syndicate for himself only and not for any or either of the other members, hereby agree with the Philadelphia Construction Company and with the other members of the Syndicate to purchase and take and pay for, on April 1, 1903, at ninety-five per cent, of the par value, so much of said $600,000 of said collateral trust mortgage bonds as is set opposite his signature hereto or such proportion thereof as shall not be sold at public or private sale as herein below provided; the Philadelphia Construction Company hereby agreeing to transfer and deliver, as well to or upon the order of each member of the syndicate who shall make payment as herein agreed full paid common stock of the said Lancaster County Railway and Light Company to an amount at par equal to twenty-five per cent, of the par value of said bonds, and also full paid preferred capital stock of said Lancaster County Railway and Light Company to an amount at par equal to twenty per cent, of the par value of said bonds by him agreed to be purchased hereunder.
“2. The members of the syndicate hereby appoint Messrs. Samuel R. Shipley and William B. Given syndicate managers for the purposes and with the powers herein expressed.
“The syndicate managers may at any time on or before April 1, 1903, in their discretion, either personally or through such bank or trust company or banking house as they may elect, offer for sale the said $600,000 of said bonds at not less than their par value and accrued interest, and after deducting from the proceeds of such sale ten per cent, of the amount realized upon the bonds actually sold, which ten per cent, shall be retained by the syndicate managers for the following purposes, to wit:
“(1) For the expenses and commissions paid by the said Syndicate Managers in the sale of said bonds.
“(2) To pay to the Philadelphia Construction Company, or upon its order, any unpaid portion of the purchase price of the bonds subscribed for hereunder by the several members of the syndicate.
“(3) To pay over the balance to the members of the syndicate pro rata in the proportion of their subscription.
“In case the amount of bonds sold as above provided is Insufficient to make payment in full of the subscriptions for bonds hereunder made by the members of the syndicate, the same shall be applied on account of such subscriptions and the several members of the syndicate shall and will in such event make payment, to or upon the order of the Philadelphia Construction Company on demand, on April 1, 1903, of the unpaid balance of their subscriptions hereunder, receiving from the Philadelphia Construction Company the unsold bonds by them subscribed for hereunder and as well the common and preferred stock to which they will then be entitled.
“3. The members of the syndicate hereby severally agree that said $600,000 of bonds subscribed for hereunder may, pending the payment of the subscriptions therefor, be pledged by the Philadelphia Construction Company as col[1001]*1001lateral security for advances to be made; the Philadelphia Construction Company hereby agreeing to repay such advances out of the purchase price of said bonds as and when received from the members of the syndicate or the syndicate managers, or both.”

Afterwards, the following letter was issued by Samuel R. Shipley and William B. Given to the underwriters in said syndicate:

“Philadelphia, Pa., November 1, 1901.
“To The Underwriters of the Bonds of the Lancaster County Railway and
Light Company.
“In the view that the compensation of the Underwriters is not sufficiently set forth in the underwriting agreement, we desire to say that it is the meaning thereof that the said underwriters shall receive the number of shares of Common and Preferred stock set forth in the agreement, and in addition thereto the sum of Five per cent. (5%) of the par value of the bonds subscribed for in cash at the termination of the underwriting agreement.
“If the bonds shall be sold, as is intended, to other persons than the subscribers to the underwriting, they shall be paid five per cent. (5%) out of the ten per cent. (10%) reserved from the proceeds of the sale; and if they shall not be sold and the underwriters be required to take them at 95, the said five per cent. (5%) of the par value of the bonds shall be paid them in a reduction of the amount paid by them.
“Very truly yours, Samuel R. Shipley.
“William B. Given.
“Philadelphia Construction Company,
“By John E. Hess, President.
“Attest: Lewis Starr, Secretary.”

The syndicate members, some 25 in number, subscribed for the full amount of the bonds. Subsequently, in April, 1902, pursuant to the authorization of the above agreement, the defendant below, the Philadelphia Construction Company, borrowed the sum of $570,000 (being the 95 per cent, of the $600,000 which the syndicate members in the aggregate agreed to pay for the bonds), pledging therefor, as collateral, all the bonds and stock, preferred and common, referred to in said syndicate agreement, and further pledging as collateral the subscriptions contained in the above recited agreement.

By the terms of this agreement, the subscriptions thereto were made payable on or about April 1, 1903. This time was subsequently extended to April 1, 1904. The statement of claim concludes as follows:

“Tbe syndicate managers, in the above-recited syndicate agreement mentioned, did not effect the sale of the said bonds at par to persons other than the syndicate, as contemplated in the said written syndicate agreement; and the plaintiffs and their associates in the syndicate were required to pay, and did pay, on or about the first day of April, 1904, the amount of their several subscriptions, and the plaintiffs particularly paid the sum of $95,000, with interest at five per cent, from January 1, 1904, in conformity with the terms of said syndicate agreement, and released the bonds and stocks aforesaid.

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Bluebook (online)
138 F. 999, 71 C.C.A. 253, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 3844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-const-co-v-cramp-ca3-1905.