Plast v. Metropolitan Trust Co.

82 N.E.2d 155, 401 Ill. 302, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 417
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1948
DocketNo. 30424. Decree and order affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 82 N.E.2d 155 (Plast v. Metropolitan Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plast v. Metropolitan Trust Co., 82 N.E.2d 155, 401 Ill. 302, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 417 (Ill. 1948).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Simpson

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a decree of the superior court of Cook County dismissing appellants’ amended and supplemental complaints for want of equity, and from an order allowing appellees. damages upon the dissolution of a temporary injunction issued by the court incidental to the proceedings on the complaint for partition.

Saul Plast filed a complaint in chancery on behalf of himself and all other holders of certificates of beneficial interest in the Hotel Maryland Liquidation Trust for partition. Later, thirty others joined as intervenors as additional parties plaintiff. Also other parties intervened as defendants and counterclaimants. No questions are raised on any of the pleadings.

The cause was referred to a master in chancery to take testimony and report the same to the court with conclusions of law and fact. The report of the master was in favor of the appellees and against the appellants and it recommended that a decree be entered dismissing appellants’ complaint for want of equity. The court approved the master’s report and entered a decree dismissing the complaint as amended and supplemented. A freehold being involved, the appeal comes directly to this court.

The real estate involved in this trust is located at goo N. Rush Street in Chicago and is improved with a seventeen-story building, the "Hotel Maryland,” containing 296 furnished hotel rooms and apartment units, dining rooms, taverns and store. It was built in 1926 and was subject to a bond issue of $1,350,000. The bonds were defaulted and the trust deed securing them was foreclosed in 1931. On October 15, 1935, a trust agreement was entered into between a bondholders’ committee and the Metropolitan Trust Company as trustee, creating the “Hotel Maryland Liquidation Trust,” designated as Trust No. 1155, for the benefit of the bondholders. It provided for the liquidation of the assets and the distribution of the net proceeds thereof to the bondholders and, until such liquidation, for the operation and management of the property and distribution of the net income arising therefrom to the bondholders. The property was conveyed to Metropolitan Trust Company as trustee and the latter thereupon took and assumed control of said property subject to the purposes, terms and conditions of said liquidation trust agreement for the benefit of the bondholders who were to turn in their bonds and accept in lieu thereof “Certificates of Interest” under said trust agreement. The certificates of interest provided that • by the acceptance of the certificate, the holder thereof consented and agreed to be bound by all the terms, provisions and conditions contained in said trust agreement and that the holder had no claim or interest, legal or equitable, in any of the property covered by or referred to in said trust agreement, but only an interest in the net income, proceeds and avails thereof. The total number of units of beneficial interest in said trust outstanding when the suit was filed was 10,216}i. The trust agreement was entered into by and between Barnet L. Rosset, Charles J. Young, Earl G. Krumrine, Louis J. Borinstein and A. D. Plamondon, acting as the committee for the protection of the bondholders, and Metropolitan Trust Company, trustee.

This case involves the construction of said trust agreement, the pertinent parts of which are contained in the following articles:

(In article I) “It is the intention and purpose hereof that the Holders of Certificates of Interest shall be trust beneficiaries only; that the Holders of Certificates of Interest, the Committee and its members, and the trustee and the Trust Managers, as herein constituted, shall have no other relationship hereunder; that there shall be no relation of or liabilities hereunder as partners, or any other relation or personal liability whatsoever, legal or equitable, among the Holders of Certificates of Interest, the Committee and its members, and the Trustee and the Trust Managers, or one with the others or any of them, or with other person or persons, corporation or corporations; and that the Holders of Certificates of Interest shall not have or acquire hereunder any title to said Trust Property, legal or equitable, nor any claim of interest therein, but shall have only a beneficial interest in the net income, proceeds and avails which may come into the hands of the Trustee through the operations of the property and through sales, leases,. assignments or other dispositions, conversions or uses of the Trust Property or any part or parts thereof.”
(In article II) “And said Trustee shall have full power to grant options to purchase, to contract to sell and to sell the Trust Property and any parts thereof on any terms, including a sale of the Trust Property or any part or parts thereof to another Trust or to a corporation now or hereafter organized in exchange for stocks, bonds, Certificates of Beneficial Interest, or other securities of such corporation or Trust;”
(In article XI) “The Trust Managers shall have the power by written instrument signed by the Trust Managers and filed with the Trustee, to amend, add to, or alter this Trust Agreement from time to time in all respects except as to the date of termination of this Trust.”
(In article XII) “This trust may be terminated at such time as the Trust Managers in their sole discretion may determine; it being the intention, however, that the Trust Property be sold and liquidated as soon after the institution of this Trust as conditions may permit and that the net proceeds thereof be distributed to the Holders of Certificates of Interest; but if not sooner terminated, then this trust in any event shall terminate within ten (10) years from and after the date hereof.”

The trust agreement by its own terms expired October 15, 1945. In the face of the approaching termination of the trust, active discussions began between the trust managers with respect to the disposition of the property as early as the fall of 1944. In the early part of 1945 the plan was devised for transferring the property to a new corporation and the trust managers agreed to carry out the plan. The plan consisted in organizing a corporation known as 900 N. Rush Hotel Corporation, to take over the trust property in exchange for all the capital stock of the new .corporation and first mortgage income bonds to be secured by the property taken over; to issue one share of stock, without par value, and one bond in the principal sum of $35 in exchange for each unit of beneficial interest in the liquidation trust. Two of the trust managers, Louis J. Borinstein and John A. Sargent became directors of the corporation. The third director was Raymond L. Redheffer who became identified with the corporation as director and president. The three directors of the corporation entered into a voting trust agreement for the stock of the corporation on March 15, 1945, whereby the certificate holders in Trust No. 1155 were to deposit the shares of stock to which they would become entitled in exchange for voting trust certificates, in order that the stock might be voted in such manner as would preserve continuity in the management of the Maryland.Hotel.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.E.2d 155, 401 Ill. 302, 1948 Ill. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plast-v-metropolitan-trust-co-ill-1948.