Robinson v. Security Trust Co.

108 A. 665, 94 Conn. 94
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 5, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 108 A. 665 (Robinson v. Security Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Security Trust Co., 108 A. 665, 94 Conn. 94 (Colo. 1919).

Opinion

Gager, J.

This action is in the nature of an action to redeem. The question to be determined is whether the trustee may, as against the receivers, retain all of the securities deposited for a series of bonds for the benefit of the unpaid bondholders of this series, in a case where the Banking Company paid part of the bonds in the regular course of business, but was unable to surrender the bonds so paid for cancellation before default as to the remaining bonds and appointment of receivers, by reason of the fact that the bonds were in a foreign country when paid and the bank through which they were forwarded from London to the Banking Company unlawfully retained possession of the bonds, thus delaying delivery of possession of the bonds until after the receivers were appointed. The answer depends upon the construction of the trust agreement set out in the statement of facts, and particularly the construction of section five.

The agreement itself is not a contract relating to any specific property or any specific debt. No security or property right of any kind is created by the execution and delivery of the instrument. It becomes effective as fixing the terms of a trust in the nature of a mortgage, only when thereafter the Banking Company deposits securities and issues debentures *105 or bonds based thereon in as many series and for such amounts as the Banking Company may determine, and these bonds and securities are brought under the terms of the trust agreement by a simple reference thereto contained in the bond. The one contract, not in itself creating any security, may be applied to any number of groups, of securities and bonds based thereon by reference to the trust deed, and each such group of securities when created becomes a separate trust quite independent of any other series that may be issued under the agreement. A peculiarity of this trust agreement, appearing both in the bond and the agreement, arises from the fact that sterling bonds were proposed to be issued on American securities. It is specifically provided, both in the form of the bond and in the agreement itself, that for each pound sterling of bonds issued in any series, the Banking Company should deposit with the trustee securities payable in gold coin of the United States equal in amount at the exchange rate of $4,867 to a pound sterling of the bonds so issued, as valued at the time of deposit. This was the only fixed unit of security, and the collateral furnishing such security might be changed by substitution, at the pleasure of the Banking Company, and also withdrawn on surrender and cancellation of any bond or bonds, the only requisite of the agreement being that the collateral, at original valuation, should be maintained at the contractual standard of quantity. In this respect the agreement is quite unlike the ordinary mortgage or deed of trust in the nature of a mortgage, in which the entire property or collateral is and will remain pledged for the payment of all and every part of the debt secured until- final payment thereof.

A further peculiarity of the agreement was that whenever any bonds of a series were surrendered by *106 the Banking Company the Company might withdraw, from the collateral deposited to secure the bonds of that series and out of the obligations imposed by the trust agreement, any collateral it chose, on the basis of $4,867 to the pound sterling. Section five giving this right to the Banking Company, reads as follows: “Whenever said Banking Company shall surrender to said Security Company any bond issued under this agreement, said Security Company shall deliver to said Banking Company such collateral as said Banking Company may select from the collateral deposited for the security of the series to which such bond belongs equal in amount, as counted at the time of deposit, to such surrendered bond, and thereupon said bond shall be cancelled by said Security Company and returned to said Banking Company.” It therefore appears that all the securities the bondholders were entitled to, and all the trustee could assert its right over, consisted only of such American securities of the kind described in the agreement as were, when deposited, of the value of $4,867 gold coin for each pound sterling of bonds outstanding. Non-interest bearing securities were valued at the arbitrary rate of eighty-five per cent. Therefore, by the express terms of the contract, the Banking Company could on withdrawal select such securities as it desired, figured on the deposit basis of valuation, and the remaining bonds still had all the security contracted for and the full amount of collateral originally pledged for their payment. The obvious purpose of this provision was that the collateral withdrawn could be at once used as the basis for a new series of bonds under the same or any other trust agreement, or put to any other use the Banking Company desired. The distinguishing feature of this trust agreement is that so long as the trustee held collateral in the given series *107 of the value, when deposited, of $4,867 for each pound sterling outstanding, the terms of the agreement were fully met, and it was as much the duty of the trustee to surrender the collateral on surrender of the bonds, as to hold collateral to meet outstanding bonds. The ratio of values was definitely determined by the agreement. This arrangement, at the option of the Banking Company, automatically kept the collateral for any series down to the ratio of $4,867 to the pound sterling of bonds outstanding in that series.

When, therefore, as appears from the finding, the Banking Company, on November 11th, 1914, paid in London bonds out of the series in question amounting to £1,450 as then due, the Company at once had the privilege of surrendering these bonds to the trustee, and receiving from the trustee such collateral as the Company might select, equal in value to the £1,450 at the rate of $4,867 to the pound, as counted at the time of deposit. The liability attaching to the collateral in that series had been reduced from £18,850 to £17,400. Had the Banking Company been able at once to have taken these bonds to the trustee, the right of the Banking Company to receive, and the duty of the trustee to deliver, under the terms of section five, would have been clear, and in conformity with the previous transactions between the parties under similar circumstances. But the bonds were in fact paid in London and were forwarded through the Hanover National Bank of New York. This bank, on account of a wrongful claim, retained possession of these bonds until April 14th, 1915, some three months after the appointment of the receivers. On November 30th, 1914, the Banking Company suspended payment, thereby making default. Brackett v. Middlesex Banking Co., 89 Conn. 645, 660, 95 Atl. 12. The plaintiffs were appointed receivers January *108 18th, 1915, but, through no fault of their own or of the Banking Company, did not receive the bonds until April 14th, 1915. The trustee was informed of the payment December 20th, 1914, and, for reasons not appearing and which therefore we must deem sufficient, it was not until October 9th, 1915, that Mr. Dower, one of the receivers, offered to surrender these bonds to the trustee and demanded the return of specific collateral named by him under the provisions of section five. On the same date the trustee refused compliance.

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Related

Windsor Trust Co. v. Champigny
136 A. 556 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 A. 665, 94 Conn. 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-security-trust-co-conn-1919.