Rose v. Merchants' Trust Co.

96 N.Y.S. 946
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 96 N.Y.S. 946 (Rose v. Merchants' Trust 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
Rose v. Merchants' Trust Co., 96 N.Y.S. 946 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

CLARKE, J.

Prior to 1901 there were in existence in Rutland, Vt., certain corporations, to wit, the Rutland Street Railway Company, the Chittenden Power Company, organized to acquire lands and build dams storage reservoirs, pipe lines, power stations, etc., for the manufacture and sale of electric power, and the People’s Gaslight Company, with the right to furnish light and power, both by gas and electricity. An improvement of these properties had been attempted and engineered by one Burgett, who had organized the Vermont Electric Securities Company. Upon the securities of these companies, and especially the bonds of the Rutland Street Railway Company, the Merchants’ Trust Company had advanced by way of loans very considerable sums of money. It had sent as its agent to Rutland almost continuously throughout 1901 one Paul M. Mowry, who was and had been regularly employed by it on a salary as electrical expert and adviser on such enterprises as [948]*948it was loaning money to, to inform it as to the properties and'to see that the moneys loaned by the defendant were used for the purposes advanced, to wit, the improvement of these properties. By the spring of 1902 the Merchants’ Trust Company had advanced to this enterprise not far from $600,000. Among other collateral security it held, upon the usual form of collateral stock notes, $418,000 of the bonds of the Rutland Street Railway. The Burgett scheme of a holding company proved a failure. As was testified, it was put an end to before the courts took a hand. A new corporation, known as the Chittenden Development Company, was organized under the laws of the state of New York, with an authorized capital of $100,000, to take over these properties, their obligations and contracts. As testified to by Mr. Tuttle, one of its incorporators:

“The Chittenden Development Company was organized really to take the place of the Vermont Electric Securities Company. It was a kind of a holding company. When it was organized, agreements were entered into whereby the Chittenden Development Company purchased from the Vermont Securities Company all right, title, and interest in and to the bonds and stocks which that company held of the three Rutland companies. The Merchants’ Trust Company consented to the change of ownership, that the Chittenden Development Company might step into the shoes of the Vermont Electric Securities Company and be the debtor.”

, The certificate of incorporation of the Chittenden Development Company was filed April 7, 1902, and the first meeting of incorporators for organization was on May 12, 1902. The incorporators were Paul M. Mowry, the employé of the defendant hereinbefore alluded to, Ezra A'.- Tuttle, and his law partner, Charles N. Flint, the attorneys of the defendant. The new corporation was given office room in the law office of said attorneys. At the first meeting of the board of directors Mowry was elected president, Flint secretary, and John B. Grant, the secretary of the Merchants’ Trust Company, treasurer. At the same meeting $800 was paid in by Mowry for the eight shares of stock issued to him, and $100 each by Flint and Tuttle for one share issued to each of them, which sums made up the $1,000 required by the certificate of incorporation to enable the company to commence business, and immediately the bill of Mowry for $1,085, for incorporating expenses, was approved and ordered paid. At the same meeting the board authorized contracts with the Vermont Electric Securities Company in relation to stock and bonds of the Rutland Street Railway Company, and to stock and bonds of the Chittenden Power Company, assuming the liabilities and agreeing to carry on the contracts of said companies. It also agreed to purchase from one Morhaus $100,000 of the bonds of the People’s Gaslight Company for $99,000 shares of the capital stock of the Chittenden Development Company, being its entire capital stock, less the 10 shares required to qualify directors. The certificate for said 990 shares was on May 12, 1902, issued to K. C. Morhaus. It was by him indorsed to Ronald K. Brown, the brother-in-law of Mr. Eangdon, the president of the Merchants’ Trust Company. Mr. Brown was one. of the attorneys of the trust company. He succeeded Mowry as president of the Chittenden Development Company. He testified that he paid nothing for the 990 shares of his company’s stock, that Mr. Langdon asked him to have the stock put in his name, and that he did not know whom, as [949]*949owner of record, he represented, or who was the real owner of the stock. At this same meeting the board resolved for $30,000 shares of the capital stock of the People’s Gaslight Company to take up the note of the Vermont Electric Securities Company to the Merchants’ Trust Company, dated June 25, 1901, for $24,000, with interest. At the next meeting of the board on June 17, 1902, it was resolved that the company make its note to the Merchants’ Trust Company for $547,379.59, for principal and interest, to take up the promissory notes given by Henry W. Burgett, the Vermont Securities Company, and the Chittenden Development Company at various times heretofore on the following collateral: $300,000 Chittenden Power Company bonds, $970,000 Chittenden Power Company stock, $418,000 Rutland Street Railway Company bonds, $577,800 Rutland Street Railway Company stock, $100,000 People’s Gaslight Company bonds, $70,000 People’s Gaslight Company stock, and also its promissory note to the Merchants’ Trust Company for $24,572 to take up the note of the Vermont Electric Securities Company for $24,000 and interest on same collateral. Thus the indebtedness was turned over and the new company became debtor to the Merchants’ Trust Company in the sum of $571,951.59, secured by the same collateral which was already in the possession of the Merchants’ Trust Company. At this same meeting Brown became president instead of Mowry, and Charles' J. Theuner, an employé of the Central National Bank, of which Mr. Eangdon was also president, became treasurer, instead of Grant. Subsequently the mortgage on the Rutland Street' Railway Company, by consent of all parties, was increased from $500,-000 to $1,000,000, $500,000 of the bonds being deposited in lieu of the $118,000 held by the defendant, and the railway company agreed to give $158,000 of the new bonds and $500,000 of its stock as additional compensation to the Chittenden Development Company for building an extension to its road. This $158,000 of bonds were also pledged as collateral with the Merchants’ Trust Company, making the total of $658,000 held by it as collateral security to notes given by the Chittenden Development Company at the time of the events which are the subject-matter of this suit. By the end of September, 1902, the Chittenden Development Company was indebted to the Merchants’ Trust Company in about $800,000. The capital of the Merchants’ Trust Company was $500,000, its surplus $300,000. It had two other loans outstanding, aggregating about $800,000 each—one to the Richmond enterprise and the other to the Hudson Valley enterprise. The plaintiffs are attorneys at law in this city, and kept deposit accounts and had other business relations with the defendant, which is a trust company. Mr. Dutzel had a personal acquaintance with Mr. Eangdon, its president, who introduced Mr. Mowry to him, and told him that Mowry was there to take charge of getting business for the company in the way of securing corporate enterprises which they were to float or handle, and get them to become trustees on trust mortgages, and all business of that character usually done by a trust company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 N.Y.S. 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-v-merchants-trust-co-nysupct-1905.