Title Guarantee Loan & Trust Co. v. Alabama By-Products Corp.

108 So. 353, 214 Ala. 486, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 29, 1926
Docket6 Div. 672.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 108 So. 353 (Title Guarantee Loan & Trust Co. v. Alabama By-Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Title Guarantee Loan & Trust Co. v. Alabama By-Products Corp., 108 So. 353, 214 Ala. 486, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 67 (Ala. 1926).

Opinion

MILLER, J.

This is a bill of complaint by the Alabama By-Products Corporation, a corporation, against the Title Guarantee Loan & Trust Company, a corporation, in which it avers it has contracted to sell the mineral rights in some 4,200 acres and surface of some 200 acres of its lands, particularly described, at the price of $1,200,000, on which the defendant, as trustee, holds a mortgage or lien to secure an issue of first mortgage bonds, aggregating the principal sum of $5,000,000; and complainant seeks to have this trustee release this property from the operation of the mortgage upon the payment to it of the entire purchase price thereof, to be used by it “as a part of the sinking fund provided for in said mortgage or deed of trust and used for the redemption and sale of said bonds as provided therein.”

The defendant demurred to the bill, the demurrer was overruled by the court, and this appeal is prosecuted by the defendant from that decree, and it is the error assigned.

This mortgage was made on April 1, 1905, by the Pratt Consolidated Coal Company, a corporation, organized under the laws of the state of Delaware, to the Central Trust Company of New York, a corporation, as trustee. This trustee resigned the said trust prior to January 1, 1925, and the defendant was duly and regularly appointed and qualified as successor to the office of trustee in this mortgage.

The complainant was duly organized as a corporation under the general laws of the state of Delaware on February 7, 1920. The mortgagor, the Pratt Consolidated Coal Company, a corporation, was in January, 1925, merge'd into and consolidated with the complainant by agreement, and under the laws of Delaware, and contemporaneously therewith, the Pratt Consolidated Coal Company, the mortgagor, conveyed to the merged corporation, complainant, all of its lands and interests in lands, including all property herein described, subject to the lien of this mortgage.

The complainant on January 15, 1926, entered into a contract with Walter Moore for the sale to him of the land and interest in lands mentioned in the bill for the sum of $1,200,000. This property is subject to the mortgage. This land and this interest in lands contracted to be sold to Moore are outlying lands or- interest in lands, and not within the main body or tracts of its lands; and it is not being used by complainant, and is producing no income.

This mortgage contains this provision as to a sale of any of this land by the mortgagor :

“The party of the first part shall have the right to sell any of its outlying land or interest in land [that is land not within the main body of the main tracts of land covered by the lien of (his deed of trust], whenever the board of -directors of the party of the first part shall pass a resolution authorizing such sale, stating the *488 price to be paid for the land sold, and as often as a sale is made by the party of the first part, the trustee shall release the land sold from the lien of this mortgage or deed of trust,, provided, however, that before making such release a certified copy of the resolution passed by the board of directors of the party of the first part and the statement under oath made by the president and treasurer of the party of the first part shall be furnished and filed with the trustee. The said statement under oath shall set forth that said lands are outlying lands, and that the pi'ice at which said lands are proposed to be sold is a fair and reasonable market value of such lands, and that it is to the interest of the company and of the bondholders of the company that such sale shall be made, and, before the release of the trustee is delivered, the purchase price of the land sold shall be delivered to the trustee, and any such release shall be without liability as against the trustee; the trustee having the right to rely upon the resolution of the directors and the statement of the officers under oath filed with it as herein required. The funds so deposited with the trustee on any s_ale of lauds made' under the provisions of this paragraph may be used by the party of the first part in purchasing additional lands or interest in land, and such funds shall be paid by the trustee to the party of the first part for this purpose.”

The mortgage also provides:

“In the event money comes into the hands of the trustee under the provisions of this para- ■ graph on a sale of lands, and t-he same is not applied for by the company to pay for other lands purchased within one year from the time the money comes into the hands of the trustee, or if the party of the first party gives written notice to the trustee that it will not desire to use said money in purchasing other lands, then said money shall be placed by the trustee with the sinking fund and used as is provided for the use of the sinking fund under the provisions of paragraph 11 hereof.”

The complainant alleges it does not need this-money in its business, and desires that it be placed in the sinking fund by the trustee and used for the redemption of the bonds mentioned. It clearly appears that the directors, president, and treasurer of the complainant have each fully complied with the requirements of the mortgage to effectuate a sale of these outlying lands and to secure a release of them from the operation of the mortgage. And the respondent, trustee in the mortgage, refused and declined to release said lands from the lien of said mortgage solely for the reason and on the ground only that:

“The board of directors of the Pratt Consolidated Coal Company were entitled to request such release, alleging that it had no authority under the terms of the said mortgage or deed of trust to release any of the lands conveyed thereby, except upon the request of the board of directors of the Pratt Consolidated Coal Company and upon the furnishing and filing with said trustee a certified copy of such resolution passed by the board of directors of the Pratt Consolidated Coal Company, and the required affidavit of the president and treasurer thereof.”

There is only one question, as we see it, presented by the record: Has the complainant, the Alabama By-Products Corporation, the same right to sell and convey the lands mentioned and to have them released from the lien of the mortgage as the Pratt Consolidated Coal Company, the mortgagor, would -have had under the same circumstances?

The complainant and the mortgagor, the Pratt Consolidated Coal Company, are both corporations organized under the statutes of the state of Delaware, and the latter was merged into and consolidated with the former in that state under the statute therein (Rev. Code 1915, § 1974) which provides, as set out in the bill, as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 353, 214 Ala. 486, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/title-guarantee-loan-trust-co-v-alabama-by-products-corp-ala-1926.