Rogers v. New York & Texas Land Co.

32 N.E. 27, 134 N.Y. 197, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 263, 89 Sickels 197, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1509
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 1, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 27 (Rogers v. New York & Texas Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. New York & Texas Land Co., 32 N.E. 27, 134 N.Y. 197, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 263, 89 Sickels 197, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1509 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Vakn, J.

The plaintiffs claim that the land company is the trustee of the scripholders to the extent of three-fourths of the lands and its proceeds, and that it was a breach of trust to make the scrip dividend of $1,125,000 to the stockholders, as it in effect gave away more than 500,000 acres of land through the purchasing power of the scrip thus wrongfully divided. They further claim that the cash dividend of $450,000 was also a breach of the trust, as it amounted to a donation to the stockholders of $337,500 in money that equitably belonged to the scripholders.

The defendants deny that any part of the land was held in trust, and claim that the rights of the scripholders are confined to the privilege of using scrip to purchase land, and that as neither the plaintiffs nor any of the scripholders have been denied that right, they have no cause of action against the company or its directors. In taking this position, the defend *207 ants rely on the scrip certificates as the origin and boundary of the rights of the scripholders, while the plaintiffs, in support of their position, contend that the report of the purchasing committee, setting forth a general plan of operations, including as a part thereof the issue of scrip, is the foundation of the scripholders’ rights.

In order to determine whether the certificates created and defined all the rights of their holders, it is necessary to look into the acts which brought them into existence, and to ascertain the object for which they were issued. The fundamental fact is the debt of the bondholders against the railroad company. They lent their money to that corporation and took its second mortgage bonds as security. The bonds became due and were not paid, and the road, being unable to pay them in money, conveyed land in payment, which was accepted in the place of money, because nothing better could be had. Although then- claim against the railroad was thus satisfied, their debt was not collected, but was converted into land with the expectation of turning the land into money, and in that manner collecting the debt. The best method to accomplish this was a serious problem. Several hundred bondholders, who did not want land, but wanted money, had suddenly and through necessity become the owners of vast tracts of land, amounting to millions of acres, mainly unproductive and even unsurveyed, spread over fifty counties in a distant state. Partition was impracticable for many reasons, but chiefly because they did not want the land, divided or undivided, but wanted all the money that the land would bring when sold to the best advantage. An immediate sale was out of the question, because such an immense body of land could not be thrown upon the market all at once, without depressing prices and causing serious loss. Good management required that competition between owners in selling should be avoided, and that the common interest should be continued. It was necessary to make surveys, plat maps, establish local agencies and proceed by a general and comprehensive plan to dispose of the land gradually, without forcing the market. A central *208 agency was needed, so organized as to avoid conflict of interests, and to possess supreme and irrevocable power to manage and sell. As the bondholders could not, with convenience or advantage, sell their interests or raise money on them, situated as they were, it was desirable that some means should be devised to represent, proportionately, each bondholder’s rights in the common property, and enable him to sell, mortgage or pledge it without expense or sacrifice on his part, and without injury to his associates by the sale of land in competition with them. Such was the situation and the needs of the bondholders when they met to take action with reference to the land, and in the light of which that action must be considered. What did they do \ They first gave general directions to the purchasing committee to prepare and report a plan by which they could, if possible, realize in money the par value of their bonds and coupons ont of the land. Thus they treated their debt as still existing and as the basis of all action, and their primary purpose, as thus declared, was to collect that debt out of the land, the only means then left. They next gave specific directions to the committee to prepare and report a plan for organizing a corporation to which the land should» be conveyed, and in which, in consideration of such conveyance, they should, individually, have interests that should represent, and ultimately, if possible, realize in money the par value of their bonds.

’ These brief instruction show an intelligent comprehension of the situation, and an ingenious adaptation of means to the single end in view, which was to collect their debt by converting the land into money to the best advantage and thereby to “ realize ” in money the amount of -their bonds.

The committee, acting within the lines of their instructions, “ sought to contrive some method by which the land should be so managed and disposed of as to secure to said bondholders, ultimately, the par value of their bonds and coupons, and * * * to that end contrived a scheme for a corporation.” The collection of the debt was uppermost in their minds also, and the formation of the corporation to act as land agent, with *209 the powers and on the grand scale required, was regarded as the best available method of accomplishing that object. Accordingly their report embraced the creation of a corporation to take title to the land, with a capital of $1,500,000 ; ten per cent to be paid in cash, because the law required it, and the remainder in land “ to that amount,” meaning in land worth the amount unpaid upon the stock. It provided for the issue of scrip to the extent of $6,000,000, entitling the stockholders to “an amount of lands” corresponding to the difference between the capital and the ultimate value of all the land, estimated at $7,500,000 on the basis of the selling rate fixed by the state of Texas for its land of similar character. Each holder of a bond 'with all coupons attached, amounting to $1,500, was to receive $300 in stock and $1,200 in scrip. Upon this basis, as the committee reported, the land would “•ultimately be worth the entire amount of the outstanding bonds and coupons,” thus proceeding on the theory, for the purpose of the proposed arrangement, that the bonds were still in existence and unpaid, and that every effort should be in the direction of collecting the debt they represented orrt of the land. The scrip was “ to be receivable in payment of seventy-five per cent of the price of the land at the regular selling rates, with an option to the company to retire the scrip from time to time by the payment of its par value and liberty to purchase it out of the company’s surplus funds under public notice and sealed proposals at the lowest prices at which it may be offered.” The bondholders unanimously adopted the report which thus became their plan for the management and disposition of the land. The defendant corporation was accordingly organized, having, as one of its expressed objects, the purchase and sale of land in the state of Texas, and one-fifth of all the land was conveyed to it in consideration of the capital stock, and four-fifths in consideration of the land scrip.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 27, 134 N.Y. 197, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 263, 89 Sickels 197, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-new-york-texas-land-co-ny-1892.