Trust Co. of America v. City of Rhinelander

182 F. 64, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5625
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 4, 1910
DocketNo. 22
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 182 F. 64 (Trust Co. of America v. City of Rhinelander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trust Co. of America v. City of Rhinelander, 182 F. 64, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5625 (circtwdwi 1910).

Opinion

SANBORN, District Judge.

■ The complainant, a New York corporation, on the 11th day of July, 1908, filed its bill of complaint against the defendant, a Wisconsin municipal corporation, for the foreclosure of a trust deed given by Rhinelander Water Company on September 1, 1890, to Holland Trust Company, a New York corporation, and the predecessor in trust of the complainant, which trust deed secured the payment of an authorized issue of $100,000 of the. bonds of the water company, of which $83,000 have been in fact issued and are outstanding. The defendant seasonably filed its answer, in which it sets up numerous alleged defenses to the validity of the bonds, and also denies its obligation for the payment of the hydrant rentals, and asserts that the trust deed does not cover any extensions or improvements made by the defendant city, though the answer admits that the city, as a condition of retaining the property, should be required to pay the reasonable value of so much of the plant as was installed by the water company, and the answer in express terms states:

“That in no event will defendant permit an enforced sale of said plant, but will before sale pay such amount as the court determines it legally or equitably ought to pay to redeem from said trust deed.”

On June 23, 1890, the town of Pelican, out of which the defendant city was afterward carved, adopted an ordinance, attached to the bill as Exhibit A, which ordinance was duly accepted by the grantees on June 25, 1890, and authorized the grantees, Moffet, Hodgkins & Clarke, their representatives and assigns, to construct, maintain, and operate waterworks in and adjacent to the village of Rhinelander in said town of Pelican. This ordinance contained a contract by the town to pay rentals for the use of the hydrants originally installed, and also for those subsequently added, at certain prescribed rates, for a period of 30 years from the. time of installation. Following the adoption of this ordinance, and on August 19, 1890, Rhinelander Water Company was organized with an authorized capital stock of $100,000, nearly all of such stock being subscribed for by Moffett, Plodgkins & Clarke. Thereupon, at a meeting of the stockholders and directors held on September 1,1890, the ordinance was transferred to the lyater company for the sum of $50,000, payable in the stock of the company. Af the same meeting Moffett, Hodgkins & Clarke made a proposition to the water company for the construction of the. waterworks according to the ordinance, and to certain plans and specifications then presented, they to receive for .such construction $65,000 of the first-mortgage 6 [66]*66per cent.' bonds of .the company and $50j000, or the remaining par, of the capital stock of the company. And on the same day á contract was entered into for the construction of the works upon this basis.. Thereupon the stockholders authorized the bonds and trust deed here in question, and the same were accordingly made and executed by the water company under" date of September 1, 1890, though not delivered until about September 15, 1890, on which date the trust deed was recorded. On September 16, 1890, the trustee released to the water company $65,000 of the bonds, pursuant to the provisions of the trust deed. The waterworks were completed in all respects in accordance with the ordinance and plans and specifications, and were duly accepted by the 'town "ÓT Pélici'an''ón'Janííafy 13, 1891. On October 13; 1891, the trustee released $10,000 of the extension bonds which had been reserved pursuant to the trust deed. On November 33, 1891, it released $5,000 more of the extension bonds, and on March 38, 1893, it released $3,-000 more of the extension'bonds, so that, in addition to the original issue of $65,000, there have been issued $18,000 of the extension or improvement bonds, making the total outstanding issue $83,000. The bonds are now in the hands of some 43 different owners, in comparatively small amounts, all of whom are bona fide purchasers for value; they having paid approximately par for their bonds. The hydrant rentals provided for in the ordinance were assigned to^ the trustee by the terms of the trust deed, and later, and on January 19, 1891, a separate assignment thereof was made to the trustee. Moffett, Hodgkins & Clarke transferred their stock in the water company to Mr. Calkins, who had previously been the superintendent of the works,_ and to Judge Barnes, Mr. Rewis, Mr. Chafee, and Messrs. A. W. and E. O. Brown, and thereafter Moffett, Hodgkins & Clarke Company, which succeeded the firm, had no interest in the corporation, excepting that for a time they owned some of its bonds. The consideration paid by the Rhine-lander parties for the stock was $5,000. On September 9, 1893, in consideration of $5,000, the water company quitclaimed its rights in the waterworks, franchises, and revenues, “excepting assigned rentals,” to the town of Pelican. On March 30, 1894, the defendant city was organized under the general charter law of the state, out of the territory of the town, and a settlement was had between the town and the city, whereby the city received the waterworks plant at the price of . $5,000, the terms of the settlement being shown in the proof, and hereafter referred to. Following the acquisition of the property by the town, and later by the city, they, respectively, paid the interest on the . bonds, the same being usually paid in the form of hydrant rentals, pursuant to the terms of the trust deed, and the assignment of such rentals to the trustee, such interest being paid up to the 1st of September, . .1¾06,- Since which time neither interest nor hydrant rentals have been 'paid; the hydrant rental payments only extending up to and including those which became due July 1, 1906. The water company in or about the month of March, 1907, having failed to comply with the provisions of section 1774a, Wis. St:, was pursuant to that law declared to be dissolved. During all the period following the acquisition of the property by the city in 1894, and up to the time it defaulted in the payment of interest or hydrant rentals, the city, not only by the payment of the [67]*67hydrant rentals, but by repeated action of its common council and officers, recognized the existence and validity of the bonds to the full amount of $83,000.

The important and difficult question presented is whether extensions and improvements to the water plant made by the city wherein the mortgagor never had any interest shall be taken to pay the bonds. From May 1, 1894, when the city bought the plant, it has laid over seven miles of pipes, which have cost, with hydrants and other improvements, about $49,000. Counsel for the city contending that the mortgage debt was illegal and fraudulent urges that the city may equitably claim to retain what it has installed and paid for against the bondholders. It never became liable for the debt, the utmost extent of its obligation being to pay hydrant rentals on such hydrants as had been put in when it became owner. Further it is urged, even if the bonds be found fully valid, in respect to the effect of the after-acquired property clause upon the extensions: (1) If the clause is valid, it could only include property acquired by the mortgagor. (2) By the law of Wisconsin it is not valid. (3) In terms it covers only property acquired by the mortgagor. (4) Extensions by the city are not subject to the mortgage by accession, because the waterworks franchise is personal property, as well as the mains and hydrants. The right to use the streets for mains, hydrants, and service pipes is at most an easement appurtenant to the ownership of the land on which is located the pumping station.

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Bluebook (online)
182 F. 64, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trust-co-of-america-v-city-of-rhinelander-circtwdwi-1910.