Smith v. New Hampshire Trust Co.

41 A. 174, 68 N.H. 424
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 A. 174 (Smith v. New Hampshire Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. New Hampshire Trust Co., 41 A. 174, 68 N.H. 424 (N.H. 1895).

Opinion

Chase, J.

Prior to March 14, 1894, the New Hampshire Trust Company had issued and sold debentures to the amount of $8,594,800, which were then outstanding; and had deposited with trustees notes ■ secured by mortgages of western real estate amounting to a sum slightly larger, to be held as security for their payment. In this way they had borrowed money at one rate of interest and loaned it at a higher rate, pledging the loans as security for the payment of the money borrowed. The object was to make a profit from an excess in the money received for interest over that paid for interest and expenses. The agreements creating the pledge provided in substance that the company should have the interest accruing upon the collaterals so long as they promptly paid interest upon the debentures and kept the collaterals equal in value to the amount of debentures outstanding. By this provision, the principal and interest of the collaterals were separated and distributed so long, at least, as an equality was maintained between the value of collaterals and the amount of debentures,— the principal of the collaterals being set apart as security for the principal of the debentures, and the income as security for the interest.

*427 March 15, 1894, the company filed in this court a petition setting forth their inability to meet their obligations as they matured, and alleging that a readjustment of their debenture indebtedness as therein proposed would overcome such inability. They prayed for authority to issue new debentures in a specified form to an amount not exceeding the amount of the old ones, bearing a lower rate of interest, and to withdraw from the trustees the collaterals held by them and repledge the same with other trustees, to be appointed by the court, as security for the payment of the new debentures according to the provisions of an agreement proposed. A decree was made granting the prayer of the petition and appointing the plaintiffs trustees. Under this authority the company have taken up and cancelled nearly all of the old debentures and substituted new ones, and have transferred the collaterals from the former trustees to the plaintiffs. By the new debentures they promised to pay the payees or order the sums named in them on the first day of January, 1904, or sooner if the company saw fit, with interest semi-annually at the rate of four per cent per annum until October 1, 1897, and five per cent per annum after that date. Each debenture sets forth that it is one of a series, all of like tenor and equally and ratably secured by certain properties pledged with the trustees under the agreement with them, which is made a part of the contract; and there is indorsed upon each a certificate of this fact, signed by the trustees, and alleging that the holder is entitled to participate in the benefits secured by the trust agreement. The agreement with the trustees provides that the company shall deposit with them, as security for the payment of debentures certified by them, titles to real estate and notes secured by first mortgages of real estate (being a part of, or all, the securities pledged for the old debentures) and other securities that are satisfactory to the trustees, together equal in appraised value to the amount of debentures certified; and that the trustees shall have full control of these properties, including the collection of principal and interest, but “ shall effect such collections and manage such properties through the medium of the officers, agents, and employees of the company, unless it shall appear that the interests of the trust property require that other agencies be employed.”

There is no controversy concerning the legal effect of these contracts. The debentures are absolute promises of the company to pay specified sums of money, with interest, at specified times. The agreement with the trustees creates a pledge of the property described in it as security for the payment of the debentures. The intervention of trustees and the employment of the company as their agents are provisions for the care and management of the pledge, rendered necessary by the number of debenture holders and the character and location of the property *428 pledged and its incidents. The holders of ¡the debentures are the parties beneficially interested in the pledge,— the equitable pledgees. The property belongs to the company, subject to the pledge, and they will have the benefit of whatever is ultimately realized from it. The company, in executing their agency for the trustees, in fact manage their own property. A promise by the trustees to pay for services rendered under such circumstances does not arise by- implication. In the absence of an express agreement, it would be inferred that such services were induced by selfish interests on the part' of the company rather than by an expectation of payment by the trustees, or from the property in their possession.

But the company claim that the trust agreement authorizes them, to retain from the money coming into their,possession in the course of their agency sufficient sums to reimburse them, not only for interest paid upon debentures, but for taxes paid upon the pledged property and for expenses incurred in administering the trust, including the expenses attending their agency. To support the claim, they rely upon the following provision of section 5 : “ All collections of principal on mortgages, all sums realized on sales of any property then in this trust, all rents, income, and interest in excess of the amount required to pay the interest on the outstanding obligations, under this or former trusts, sums paid as taxes and actual expenses of administering this trust shall be paid over to the trustees from time to time, as the same is received.” It is noticeable that the principal and income are here separately mentioned. This was unnecessary if they were to be treated as one. In such case, a general term covering both would have made the provision briefer and avoided ambiguity. The special mention of both tends to show that they were not to be treated alike. There is further evidence to 'the same effect in the grammatical construction of the sentence. The qualifying clause, beginning with-the words “in excess,” naturally qualifies the words immediately preceding it,— “rents, income, and interest,”- — and not these words jointly with the more remote phrases, “ collections of principal,” and “ sums realized on sales.” To bring the latter under its influence they should have been joined to the former by the copulative “ and,” so that the sentence would read as follows: All collections of principal, all sums realized on sales of property, and all rents, income, and interest, in excess, etc.

But there is more satisfactory evidence of the intent attempted to be expressed by this language. The company, being insolvent, wished to make an arrangement with their creditors, not to close up their business and surrender their property to the creditors, but to render themselves solvent so that they could continue in business. This was to be accomplished by reducing *429 their interest charges from six to four and five per cent, thereby making a saving of over $70,000 a year during the first three years, and over $35,000 a year during the remainder of the time. The property previously pledged to the debenture holders was to he repledged. The pledgees were not to surrender any portion of their security.

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Related

Bank Commissioners v. New Hampshire Trust Co.
44 A. 130 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
41 A. 174, 68 N.H. 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-new-hampshire-trust-co-nh-1895.