Rogers v. New York & Texas Land Co.

10 Misc. 614, 32 N.Y.S. 209, 65 N.Y. St. Rep. 332
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Misc. 614 (Rogers v. New York & Texas Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court 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., 10 Misc. 614, 32 N.Y.S. 209, 65 N.Y. St. Rep. 332 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.

In view of the fact that this case has received such a thorough discussion by Mr. Justice Barrett, before whom it was first tried, and by the Court of Appeals when the appeal from Mr. Justice Barrett’s judgment was before it, but a short statement of the facts will be necessary to the determination of the question that I have to decide. Counsel for the defendants strenuously insist that this case now before the court is a new case, and that I should not be governed by the decision of the Court of Appeals on the reversal of the former judgment; and various expressions in the opinion of the court are cited to show that the court misconceived the question before it, and that certain controlling facts which were assumed by the Court of Appeals to exist have been proved on this trial to have no existence.

The interests of the parties to this action in the lands of the defendant the New York & Texas Land Company depend upon the fact of the conveyance of the land by the railroad company to the trustees in satisfaction of the bonds of the railroad company, and to the construction to be given to the subsequent report, and resolution adopting that report, under which the lands were conveyed to the land company; and all this was before the Court of Appeals, and it was the construction given to these instruments, and the acts of the parties under them, that determined the question decided by the Court of Appeals. To that decision, with all of its logical consequences, I am bound to give full force and effect, and I can see nothing proved upon this trial that would seriously affect the conclusion at which that court arrived.

Prior to the 1st day of November, 1879, there existed in the state of Texas a railroad company known as the International & Great Northern Railroad Company. That company was the owner of certain lands in Texas, which had been granted by the state of Texas to two railroad companies that had been consolidated, the consolidated company being the [616]*616said International & Great Northern Eailroad Company. That company was also the owner of certain stock in a corporation, organized under the laws of the state of New York, and known as the Texas Land Company. The railroad company had issued and sold certain bonds secured by a mortgage upon its property known as the second mortgage bonds; and on November 1, 1819,- there were outstanding of these bonds $4,959,000. Some time prior to this 1st day of November, 1819, said railroad company, having been unable to pay the interest upon its bonds, had become insolvent, and its property had been placed in the hands of receivers. Upon a reorganization of that company, it was proposed to convey, for the benefit of the holders of these second mortgage bonds, the lands owned by the said railroad company, together with its stock in the Texas Land Company; and the facts in regard to that transfer are alleged in the complaint and admitted by the answer, as follows: In pursuance of said reorganization all right, title and interest of said International Eailroad Company and said International & Great Northern Eailroad Company in and to the lands, land grants, land certificates, situated in the State’ of Texas, owned by said companies, or by any of them, were conveyed, and the said eighty-six per centum of the capital stock of the said Texas Land Company, owned by the said International & Great Northern Eailroad Company, and all city and county bonds owned by said companies, or by any of them, were transferred by said companies to John S. Kennedy, Samuel Thorne and William Walter Phelps, as trustees for the owners and holders of the said second mortgage and convertible bonds; that said land so conveyed and stock and bonds so transferred were accepted by said bondholders in full payment and satisfaction of all claims against said companies, and against any of them.” These lands and this stock, thus having become the property of these second mortgage bondholders, received in satisfaction of the obligation of the railroad company to pay the bonds, the question as to how they were to* be made available to the bondholders was presented.

[617]*617These second mortgage bondholders had, prior to this time, appointed a committee of their own number, known as the purchasing committee, to rejiresent them upon the reorganization of the railroad company; and the bondholders authorized and directed this purchasing committee to prepare and report to them a plan by which this land and stock could be made available to the bondholders. In pursuance of such authority this purchasing committee did prepare and report to the bondholders a plan under which the defendant, the Bew York & Texas Land Company, was incorporated, and all of the property held for the bondholders was conveyed to it; and from the report made to these bondholders, and the resolution of the bondholders adopting that report, and the form of the scrip certificate issued by that corporation to the bondholders, the Court of Appeals has deduced certain legal propositions which it is now my duty to carry into effect.

The situation of the parties at this time must not be lost sight of. The bondholders were creditors of this corporation, and in payment of their debt had received certain specific real and personal property. The property was of a character that rendered an immediate sale of it, at anything like a fair price, impossible. It was clearly impossible to partition these lands among the various bondholders, and the only way that they could be made available, and the bondholders ultimately receive any substantial sum, was to hold the lands, sell them as they became salable and divide the proceeds among the bondholders according to their several interests. This was clearly the intent of the framers of this plan. Every word of the report shows it. And while it is clear that the committee and all interested realized that the value of these lands, if. forced for immediate sale for cash, was much less than the amount due on the bonds, yet the committee were satisfied that their future value was great and would ultimately realize sufficient to pay these bonds and interest in full.

Entertaining these views, it was entirely reasonable to suggest that in the plan adopted there should be a total capitalization equal to the amount due upon the bonds, and the inter[618]*618est which would mature upon the bonds up to the time that they became due. There could be no fraud upon any one. The lands were to be' the capital of the proposed corporation,, and the obligations and the stock of the company represented such capital. I think this was accomplished by the plan proposed and adopted. A short analysis of the report of the committee will make this clear. The report, after reciting conveyances of the land and stock to the committee of the bondholders, which were to be accepted in payment of their’ bonds, states that the committee had concluded that it was expedient for the second mortgage bondholders to organize a corporation under the laws of the state of New York,, and that they had accordingly taken the preliminary steps-for that purpose. The corporation was to have a capital stock of $1,500,000; ten per cent of this capital to be paid in bash,, and the remainder to be paid by conveyance to the company of the lands and stock to that amount, namely, $1,350,000. The report then proceeds as follows: “ But as the property of the new company will, in fact, greatly exceed in value the amount of nominal capital-, it-has been deemed advisable that the corporation thus formed should issue scrip to its stockholders pro

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Related

Rogers v. New York & T. Land Co.
33 N.Y.S. 840 (New York Supreme Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Misc. 614, 32 N.Y.S. 209, 65 N.Y. St. Rep. 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-new-york-texas-land-co-nysupct-1894.