South St. Louis Railway Co. v. Plate

92 Mo. 614
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 92 Mo. 614 (South St. Louis Railway Co. v. Plate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South St. Louis Railway Co. v. Plate, 92 Mo. 614 (Mo. 1887).

Opinion

Brace, J.

After a careful consideration of the views urged by counsel for plaintiff in error, in this cause, for a reversal of the judgment of the court of appeals, affirming the judgment of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, dismissing plaintiff’s bill, we have reached the same conclusion arrived at by those courts; the judgment of the court of appeals is, therefore, affirmed, and the opinion of said court herein ordered reported; to which we deem it only necessary to add, • by way of suggestion, that an analysis of the contract, styled in the opinion a “tripartite agreement,” having regard to substance, and not mere form of expression, will disclose the fact that the bondholders, by that agreement, not only did not agree with plaintiff to extend the time for payment of interest on the bonded indebtedness secured by the deed of trust, but did not enter into any covenant with plaintiff, in regard to that or any other subject; in fact, these parties did not contract with each other at all. Together, they contracted [617]*617with Theodore Plate ; there are covenants in the contract between him and the plaintiff; there are covenants between Plate and the bondholders, but there are none between plaintiff and'the bondholders. In this contract the plaintiff and the bondholders are parties of the one part, and Plate is the party of the other part; if they had been so designated in the instrument, their real contractual relations would have been more apparent; whatever promises of the bondholders the instrument contains are promises to Plate; whatever consideration they received, if any, they received from Plate; whatever obligations they incurred, whether express or implied, were obligations to Plate. They promised plaintiff nothing, they received nothing from it, their action in the premises deprived it of nothing, but conferred a benefit on both plaintiff and Plate.

When the contract was executed, it left the relations previously existing between plaintiff and the bondholders in exactly the same condition as before ; their rights and obligations inter sese unchanged; so the parties understood their contract with Plate, from the time it was entered into until after the sale under the deed of trust; so we regard it. There was nothing in the contract from which a promise by the bondholders, to extend the time of payment of interest, in favor of plaintiff, could be implied; the relation of obligor and obligee did not exist between them. The execution of the contract deprived plaintiff of no resources applicable to the payment of that interest, or in any manner rendered them less able to meet their obligations. All plaintiff’s income before, as after, the execution of the contract, was absorbed by current running expenses, and its application to the payment of interest maturing was no more impracticable after, than it was before, the execution of the contract; the only effect the contract could have had upon its affairs, was to enhance its credit, and thereby the better enable it to raise money [618]*618to meet its obligations, and no promise of extension on the part of the bondholders ought to be implied from the nature of the transaction.

All concur.

OPINION OP THE ST. LOUIS COURT OP APPEALS.

Thompson, J.

This is a suit in equity, the general object of which is to set aside a trustee’s sale of the property of the South St. Louis Railway Company. The facts appear to be that the street railroad in controversy had formerly been owned by a corporation called the Carondelet Railroad Company; that this corporation had given a mortgage of the property to secure certain bonds, of the amount of $185,000 ; that default having been made in the payment of the interest and principal of these bonds, the road was sold under the mortgage; that Ira C. Terry, Esq.-, as the representative of the bondholders, was the purchaser at the sale ; that, subsequently, the corporation was formed to which Mr. Terry -conveyed the property so purchased by him, known as the South St. Louis Railway Company, this plaintiff ; that, in consideration of such conveyance, the South St. Louis Railway Company issued to the holders of the $185,000 of bonds paid-up stock of the South St. Louis Railway Company of the nominal value of $185,000, and also paid $10,175 in cash. In pursuance of this scheme, it was resolved at a directors’ meeting of the plaintiff corporation, that an assessment of five and one-half per cent, be made on all stock, and that said assessment, together with the bonds of the Carondelet Railway Company, be a full and final payment of the stock of the company; that such assessment be paid over to Ira C. Terry at once, according to the agreement made with him, together with the bonds paid in by the stockholders on his subscription. Under this scheme, the plaintiff corporation issued $200,000 of capital stock, and called it paid-up stock, the payment for the same [619]*619being made in the way already stated. This was in April, 1876.

In October, 1876, the plaintiff corporation gave a mortgage deed of trust to the defendant, William O. Lange, as trustee, of its franchises and all its property then existing, or thereafter to be acquired, to secure payment of one hundred and sixty bonds, of five hundred dollars each, payable in ten years, with interest payable semi-annually upon coupons attached, at the rate of eight per cent, per annum. This mortgage does not seem to differ in its principal features from the railway mortgage deeds of trust which have become common in the United States. It allowed the trustee to sell upon default of payment of any installment of interest as well as upon default of payment of the principal. It empowered the trustee to petition any competent tribunal for the appointment of a receiver, in certain contingencies, and contained certain provisions for the disposition of the-moneys raised by the negotiation of the bonds, which need not be stated.

The moneys thus raised did not help ’ the plaintiff corporation out of its difficulties. Its operating expenses exceeded its income. It made two or three payments of interest, under this mortgage, by moneys raised by selling some of the mortgage bonds, which had hitherto remained unsold. On the first of December, 1881, it was in arrears in payment of the interest to the amount of $12,800, and it had also a miscellaneous indebtedness amounting to nearly twelve thousand dollars, in the shape of wages due to laborers, feed-bills, taxes, etc. It is said, in the plaintiff’s statement, that this floating indebtedness either was, or by suitable proceedings could have been, converted into liens upon the company’s property which would have a priority over the bonds. This may be true as to the taxes, but no law has been pointed out to us, under which the general indebtedness of a street railway company in Missouri can take [620]*620precedence of a.previously-existing recorded mortgage of the company’s property.

Such being the state of the affairs of the plaintiff corporation, on the fifth of December, 1881, an agreement was entered into between the plaintiff, as the party of the’ first part, Mr. Lange, as trustee and agent of the mortgage bondholders, of the second part, and Theodore Plate, of the third part, in the following language:

“The said South St. Louis Railway Company has executed and delivered its first-mortgage bonds to the said W. C.

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Bluebook (online)
92 Mo. 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-st-louis-railway-co-v-plate-mo-1887.