Reichert v. Metropolitan Trust Co.

247 N.W. 128, 262 Mich. 123, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 843
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1933
DocketCalendar 36,758
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 247 N.W. 128 (Reichert v. Metropolitan Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reichert v. Metropolitan Trust Co., 247 N.W. 128, 262 Mich. 123, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 843 (Mich. 1933).

Opinions

*124 Potter, J.

This case having come on to be heard in the circuit court upon more than 70 petitions objecting to the allowance • of several claims as common claims instead of as preferred claims and to the disallowance of claims on guaranteed bonds, was not passed upon or decided by the trial court, but questions were certified to this court under Court Rule No. 78 (1931), as follows:

Question No. 1:

Facts.

The Metropolitan Trust Company was incorporated on April 22, 1925, under the Trust Company Act No. 108, Pub. Acts 1889, as set forth in 2 Comp. Laws 1915, §§ 8044-8077. Article 3, of the articles of association, of the trust company, reads as follows :

“The purpose of the incorporation is in and by its corporate name, to take, receive and hold and repay and reconvey and dispose of any effects and property, both real and personal, which may be granted,' committed, transferred, or conveyed to it with its consent, upon any terms, or upon any trust or trusts whatsoever, at any time or times, by any person or persons, including married women and minors, body or bodies corporate, or by any court, including the Federal courts in the State of Michigan, to administer, fulfill, and discharge the duties of such trust or trusts, for such remuneration as may be agreed on, to act as general agents or attorneys for the transaction of business, the management of estates, the collection of rents, interest, dividends, mortgages, bonds, bills, notes, and securities, for moneys; to act as agent for the purpose of issuing, negotiating, registering, transferring or countersigning the certificates of stock, bonds, or other obligations of any corporation, association, or mu *125 nicipality, and to manage any sinking fund therefor on such terms as may be agreed upon, to accept and to execute the offices of executor, administrator, trustee, receiver, or assignee or guardian of any minor, incompetent person, lunatic, or any person subject to guardianship; to loan money upon real estate and collateral security, and execute and issue its notes and debentures, payable at a future date and to pledge its mortgages on real estate and other securities as security therefor; to take and receive from any individual or corporation on deposit for safekeeping and storage gold and silver plate, jewelry, money, stocks, securities and other valuable and personal property and to rent out the use of safes or other receptacles upon its premises upon such terms and for such compensation as may be agreed upon; to become sureties for administrators, guardians, or other trustees, or persons in cases where, by law or otherwise, one or more sureties are required; to guarantee or insure to grantees the validity of titles in real estate transfers, at a rate of compensation and upon such terms as may be agreed upon; to lease, purchase, hold and convey all such personal estate as may be necessary to carry on its business as well as such personal estate as it may deem necessary to acquire in the enforcement or settlement of any claims or demands arising out of its business transactions and to execute and issue in the transaction of its business all necessary receipts, certificates and contracts which shall be signed by such person or persons as may be designated by the by-laws of the corporation; to invest its capital stock in the manner provided by law; to lease, hold, purchase and convey real estate for the purposes and in the manner provided by section 10 of said act and to accept real and personal estate in trust, as in said section provided, and to do all other acts and things authorized by the said chapter, to be done by corporations organized under its pro *126 visions, and all acts supplementary thereto or amendatory thereof. ’

hlhe trust company loaned its general funds out to the public. Among the securities accepted under these loans were many mortgages upon real estate. Certain of these mortgages were sold by Metropolitan Trust Company, as an individual, to the Metropolitan Trust Company, as trustee, accepting in payment therefor from the said trustee certificates of participation in trust form issued by such trustee, and bearing the title “Metropolitan Trust Company guaranteed first mortgage six per cent, collateral bonds. ’ ’ The trust company then guaranteed the payment of and proceeded to sell these certificates of participation to the public. Four series of these guaranteed certificates, totaling $600,000 face value, were sold; series A, bearing six per cent, interest, being dated September 1, 1926, series B, bearing six per cent, interest, being dated May 1, 1927, series C, bearing five and one-half per cent, interest, being dated February 1,1928, and series D, bearing five per cent, interest, being dated May 1, 1928, copies of these certificates are attached hereto and marked Exhibits A, B, C, and D, for further reference. Such “guaranteed first mortgage collateral bonds” were outstanding upon date of suspension of the trust company in the amount of $410,300. No payment under the guaranties was to be made until within 18 months after the respective due dates. The 18 months have not yet expired.

Validation certificates were obtained from the Michigan securities commission permitting the sale of these bonds.

There were five additional series of bonds issued, which were not guaranteed by the trust company.

Metropolitan Trust Company suspended business June 18, 1931; on June 20, 1931, a temporary receiver was appointed, and on July 16, 1931, permanent receivers were appointed.

*127 No default of any kind had occurred on any of the guaranteed issues aforesaid prior to the appointment of permanent receivers. After the appointment of permanent receivers, Highland Park Trust Company was appointed successor-trustee to Metropolitan Trust Company and -all of the mortgages securing said guaranteed participation issues were assigned to the successor-trustee, who has since administered the trust.

On August 4, 1931, an order was entered requiring claimants to prove their claims within four months from the date of said order and providing that no claims would be received after December 4, 1931. This time was subsequently further extended by a court order to January 4, 1932.

Holders of guaranteed bonds filed their proofs of claim for the full par value of their bonds. No default occurred on the -part of the trust company in turning over all funds collected on the mortgages, but defaults have since occurred in the payment of the interest on such bonds and, in some instances, in the payment of the principal.

During the time that the company acted as trustee for these bond issues, it loaned or advanced out of its general funds, or commingled general and trust funds, $5,800.25 to itself as trustee for u,se in retiring $5,137.50 in principal of bonds and paying $662.75 in interest due on coupons. The retired bonds have been canceled and are in the possession of the receivers.

Subsequent to the appointment of the receivers, and before the appointment of a successor-trustee, they collected some funds from the underlying security of the bonds and offset this amount against the indebtedness of the trustee to the company.

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Bluebook (online)
247 N.W. 128, 262 Mich. 123, 1933 Mich. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reichert-v-metropolitan-trust-co-mich-1933.