Thompson-Starrett Co. v. E. B. Ellis Granite Co.

84 A. 1017, 86 Vt. 282, 1912 Vt. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 11, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 84 A. 1017 (Thompson-Starrett Co. v. E. B. Ellis Granite Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson-Starrett Co. v. E. B. Ellis Granite Co., 84 A. 1017, 86 Vt. 282, 1912 Vt. LEXIS 183 (Vt. 1912).

Opinion

Powers, J.

This was a statutory petition in common form for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage dated July 24, 1905, and conditioned for the payment of $200,000 in two years from that date. The defendant filed an answer, therein alleging that at the time of the execution and delivery of this mortgage, and as a part of the consideration therefor, the petitioner executed and delivered to the defendant a written contract wherein it was provided, among other things, that the petitioner should not demand payment of any part of the debt secured by said mortgage, nor foreclose the same until the completion of certain contracts then in force between said parties and such other contracts for furnishing granite as might thereafter be entered into between them. And the defendant alleged that, at the time the petition was brought and served, there was such a contract in force between the parties which was not fully completed. And that for this reason the suit was premature. Thereupon, the petitioner amended his petition by inserting therein copies of certain sections of said contract numbered I, III, V, VI and VII, and alleging full performance, on its part, of all the requirements of this contract. The amendments also showed that the unfinished contract referred to in the defendant’s answer was one for six monolithic statues which were to be placed on the Union Station at Washington, the price of which was fixed at $40,000. It was also alleged that these had not been delivered on account of the defendant’s unwarranted delays, and that the defendant had received the full contract price therefor. The amendments further alleged that the defendant had broken the contract and deprived the petitioner of the benefit thereof by repudiating the voting trust arrangement provided for in section VI thereof.

The defendant again answered, and alleged that certain sections of the contract were omitted from the amended petition, and making the whole contract a part of the answer by reference.

The petitioner filed a replication and the cause was referred to a special master to find and report the facts bearing upon the question whether the suit was prematurely brought. A report was filed, from which -it appears that the contract for the six statues was not then completed; that this was through no fault of the defendant; and that the petitioner had, before suit, credited the defendant with the full contract price thereof. The master, also reported that the defendant refused to allow the [286]*286trustee referred to in see. VI of the contract to vote the stock at a meeting of the stockholders, that there was no fraud practiced on the defendant in the selection of the trustee, and that it was the purpose of the petitioner in creating the voting trust to control, if necessary, the selection of officers and the management of the defendant corporation, to the end that the money loaned to it should be secured; and that this provision was one of the essential provisions of the contract.

Both parties filed exceptions to this report and on hearing the chancellor, after expressing his views on some of the questions submitted but without making any further order, recommitted the cause to the master for a full hearing on all questions, — reserving to the defendant the right to raise the question whether the petition was prematurely brought at the final hearing.

A full hearing was then had, and another report was filed by the master. The defendant filed a motion to recommit this report, and also filed exceptions thereto. Both the motion and the exceptions were overruled, and a decree was entered for the petitioner with a short day of redemption. The defendant appealed.

If the rights of these parties depended wholly on sec. I of the contract, the suit was plainly premature; for it is therein expressly provided that the mortgage shall not be foreclosed until all contracts for furnishing granite are completed, and it is expressly found that one of such contracts was not then completed. The petitioner does not avoid the effect of this provision when it asserts that the credit given the defendant for the full contract price is tantamount to a completion of the contract. This is not what the parties stipulated for, — either in terms or effect. If we were to say that this is what they meant, we should largely eliminate the advantage which this provision afforded the defendant; for it would then lie in the power of the petitioner .to fix at its pleasux'e the time when its mortgage should be ripe for foreclosure. All it would have to do would be to place the amount of the contract price to the credit of the defendant, and proceed. This might leave the defendant wholly unable to complete, not only this, but his other contracts. While if the petitioner waited for the event specified in the contract, — the completion of the statues, — the defendant would have a con[287]*287siderable time, a year probably, in wbicb to meet the requirements of its contract with the petitioner and to enjoy the beneficial use of its property.

But the petitioner says its right to foreclose is established by see. II of the contract, which, while not set forth in the petition, is made a part of the pleading by the answer. This section provides that if the mortgage should 'be foreclosed prior to the completion of such contracts, the petitioner should fully reimburse and indemnify the defendant for any damage suffered thereby. We are not called upon to determine the effect of this provision, for the petitioner is not in a position to take advantage of it even if its efféct is what is claimed for it. An orator must stand" or fall upon the case made by his bill, and any fact admitted or shown by the answer cannot avail him unless that fact is alleged in the bill. The reason is that the court “pronounces its decree secundum allegata et probata.” This rule is fully-established not only here, — Thomas v. Warner, 15 Vt. 110, Nye v. Stewart, 83 Vt. 521, 77 Atl. 340, — but elsewhere. 16 Cyc. 311; 1 Dan. Ch. 335, n. 4; Story Eq. Pl., §257; James v. M’Kernon, 6 Johns. 543; Jackson v. Ashton, 11 Pet. 229, 9 L. ed. 698.

The petitioner also claims that his right to foreclose is restored by the defendant’s breach of the provisions of secs. Y and YI of the contract. It appears from the report that by previous arrangements the petitioner had become the owner of a large number of the shares of the capital stock of the defendant company, and that it had acquired a larger number of shares of this stock as collateral security. By sec. Y it was provided that all of such stock then held by the orator as collateral should be released and surrendered; and by sec. YI it w;as provided that the petitioner, E. B. Ellis, G-oldwin Starrett and Roger Sherman should transfer all their stock in the defendant company to the Title Guaranty & Trust Co. of New York, as trustee, and take its certificates therefor; that the trustee should hold the stock and vote it as the certificate holders directed, so long as they agreed; that if the certificate holders disagreed, the trustee should vote the stock as it deemed proper.

It is alleged in the petition that this provision was an essential and necessary feature of the contract, and that the defendant wilfully violated the same and deprived the petitioner of the [288]

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Bluebook (online)
84 A. 1017, 86 Vt. 282, 1912 Vt. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-starrett-co-v-e-b-ellis-granite-co-vt-1912.