Rhawn v. Edge Hill Furnace Co.

51 A. 360, 201 Pa. 637, 1902 Pa. LEXIS 902
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 3, 1902
DocketAppeal, No. 188
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 51 A. 360 (Rhawn v. Edge Hill Furnace Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhawn v. Edge Hill Furnace Co., 51 A. 360, 201 Pa. 637, 1902 Pa. LEXIS 902 (Pa. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Mestbezat,

In January and February, 1888, Charles Richardson conveyed to the Edge Hill Furnace Company, incorporated under the laws of Pennsylvania, certain real estate situate in Montgomery county. The consideration for this conveyance was the delivery to Mr. Richardson of 200 coupon bonds of the corporation, each of the par value of $1,000, secured by a first mortgage on the premises. There was also issued to Mr. Richardson, with the exception of a few shares, all the capital stock of the corporation amounting to $200,000. The mortgage was dated February 1, 1888. The bonds were due on February 1, 1898, and they and the interest coupons were negotiable and were payable at the National Bank of the Republic of Philadelphia. The president of this bank was one of the trustees named in the mortgage. It was provided in the mortgage that the purchase money arising from the sale of the premises under foreclosure proceedings should be appropriated to the payment, “ First, of the interest due on, and, secondly, of the principal of all the aforesaid bonds then outstanding, if the said proceeds be sufficient, but if not, then pro rata.”

Between October 9, 1888 and December 14, 1896, the National Bank of the Republic came into possession of $170,000 of [640]*640these bonds and held them as collateral security for the payment of an indebtedness of Richardson to the bank. On February 23, 1898, the bank sold the 170 bonds at auction and purchased them for $850, being $5.00 per bond. Default having been made in the payment of the bonds and the interest coupons, the trustees, pursuant to a request of the National Bank of the Republic and a decree of the court of common pleas No. 2 of Philadelphia county, sold the mortgaged premises July 19, 1898, and the bank became the purchaser. The proceeds of the sale amounted to $40,345.80, and the amount for distribution among creditors, as shown by the trustees’ account, was $38,701.52. This-was insufficient to pay the interest on the bonds, represented by the outstanding coupons, and hence there was nothing applicable to the principal. There were six claimants for this fund before the auditor; five of them, including the National Bank of the Republic, presented bonds with the coupons attached. The other claimant, Heller, Hirsh & Company, the appellants, presented 674 interest coupons of which 639 were detached by Richardson from the bonds held by the National Bank of the Republic as collateral for his indebtedness to it, before he delivered the bonds to the bank, and thirty-five were likewise detached by him from bonds delivered as collateral by him to other parties. These coupons were for interest from August 1,1888, to August 1, 1890, and were placed in the hands of the appellants in December, 1898, by Richardson with instructions to collect them if possible and with the proceeds to pay the indebtedness due them from Richardson and also other debts due by bim to other creditors. The coupons held by appellants were past due when the bonds from which they were detached were delivered as collateral to the creditors of Richardson. The auditor found that “ the testimony is silent concerning any representations one way or the other made by Mr. Richardson, at the time he handed or transferred them (the coupons) to the bank, as to whether the coupons which had been detached had been paid, canceled, destroyed or held by him as a prior lien on the mortgaged property to the bonds which he was then assigning or transferring as collateral security.” -

The learned auditor and the court below refused to allow the coupons held by appellants to participate in the fund for distribution. The following extract from his report shows the [641]*641reasons for the auditor’s conclusion: “ Under the circumstances attending the pledging of these bonds by Mr. Richardson to the bank, the auditor reports that in his opinion, a presumption arises that the bonds were complete, and that the coupons which had been detached by Mr. Richardson and which were payable to Mr. Richardson by Mr. Richardson- who was in effect the Edge Hill Furnace Company, were to be presumed to be canceled or destroyed and treated as paid. The bonds in their then condition were handed to the bank as complete and no notice was given to the bank to the effect that the detached coupons would be claimed by Mr. Richardson, who was practically owner of all of the stock of the company as well as of all its bonds. He cannot now, in the auditor’s opinion, come and ask payment of the then past due detached coupons out of a fund arising from the foreclosure of the mortgage. The coupons which he himself had detached when they were payable to himself must be presumed to have been canceled or treated as paid. The presumption in such a case is that the owner of the bonds and coupons, cutting off all of the back coupons which were payable to himself by himself practically means to represent to the purchaser or pledgee of the bonds that the past due coupons have been canceled or paid, and he will not be permitted afterwards to resuscitate these past due coupons for the purpose of claiming their value as a prior lien on the fund arising from the foreclosure of the mortgage which is insufficient to pay the bonds pledged by him as security or the debt secured thereby.”

It therefore appears that the auditor excluded the appellants’ coupons from participating in the distribution of the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged premises on the ground that there is a presumption that the bonds were complete at the time they were delivered to the bank as collateral and that the detached coupons were presumed “ to be canceled or destroyed and treated as paid.” This presumption, as we under-, stand the learned auditor, is aided partly by what he regards as a fact, namely, that Richardson was the Edge Hill Furnace Company.

These bonds were not sold to the bank but were pledged as collateral for a loan. Some of them went indirectly to the bank through other parties from whom the bank received them. [642]*642When deposited with the bank the coupons had been detached. Hence the bonds and the attached coupons became the pledge accepted by the bank for the security of its loan. Presumably it was satisfied with the collateral tendered by Richardson or the security would not have been accepted. On presenting the bonds, he made no false representations and concealed nothing from the pledgee concerning them or the detached coupons. He misled the bank in no way in regard to the security he gave it or the overdue detached coupons. The matured coupons had been detached and the bank was cognizant of this fact. Richardson did nothing by act or word, to mislead or defraud the bank as to the ownership or validity as an existing indebtedness of the detached coupons at the time he pledged the bonds. The auditor’ finds that “ the testimony is silent concerning any representations one way or the other made by Mr. Richardson at the time he handed or transferred them to the bank.” It is apparent that the bank was satisfied with its security, regardless of the cancelation or payment of the detached coupons. It made no inquiry concerning them and received no information from Richardson that misled it.

Under the facts of the case, we are unable to see that there arose any presumption of payment or cancelation of the detached coupons when Richardson pledged the bonds from which the coupons held by the appellants were detached. It is solely upon this ground that the auditor refused to allow the appellants any part of the fund for distribution.

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Bluebook (online)
51 A. 360, 201 Pa. 637, 1902 Pa. LEXIS 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhawn-v-edge-hill-furnace-co-pa-1902.