Von Boston v. United Rys. Co. of St. Louis

8 F.2d 826, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3376
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 28, 1925
DocketNo. 6814
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 F.2d 826 (Von Boston v. United Rys. Co. of St. Louis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Von Boston v. United Rys. Co. of St. Louis, 8 F.2d 826, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3376 (8th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

SCOTT, District Judge.

This is an appeal by plaintiff Von Boston from rulings of the District Court sustaining separate motions of the several defendants to dismiss plaintiff’s bill. Plaintiff, Yon Boston, is the holder of four bonds, of the par value of $4,000, of an issue of $45,000,000, referred to in the record as “Railways 4’s,” secured by what is referred to as a first general mortgage on the system of street railways in St. Louis. Plaintiff filed his original bill on October 2, 1923, without leave of court, and on November 26, 1923, with leave filed an amended and substituted bill, which is tho bill dealt with’on this appeal. The plaintiff, Milton Yon Boston, is a citizen and resident of the state of Colorado. The defendants a.re the United Railways Company of St. Louis, a Missouri corporation, herein for brevity referred to as “Railways,” Rolla Wells, receiver of said corporation, a citizen and resident of Missouri, and St. Louis Union Trust Company, a Missouri corporation, trustee under said first general mortgage, a citizen and resident of Missouri.

The material facts, concisely stated, axe that defendant “Railways” was organized and incorporated about the beginning of the year 1899, for tho purpose of acquiring all of the street railways in the city of St. Louis, and consolidating the same into a single 'general system. During that year “Railways” acquired all of the independent lines of railway in the city of St. Louis, some 13 in number, with the exception of 2, which it acquired a few years later, thus consolidating all of the street railway lines in the city of St. Louis into a single system. At the time of the acquisition of these independent lines, each line carried bonded indebtedness secured by separate mortgage of the original constituent company. On September 20, 1899, following the acquisition and consolidation of these independent lines, “Railways” executed a deed of trust securing an authorized issue of $45,000,000 4 per cent, bonds. This deed of trust was by its provisions to be a first lien on all property owned or thereafter acquired by “Railways,” subject only to the pre-existing bonds outstanding against the several constituent lines, in the record and hereinafter referred to as “divisional” bonds. At the time of the execution of this trust deed it was contemplated, and the deed of trust recites, the desire of “Railways” to make provision for purchasing, retiring or exchanging the outstanding bonds of the several constituent lines acquired, and enumerates and describes these several outstanding issues of “divisional” bonds. A large portion of the “divisional” bonds were taken up and retired through the issue of the “Railways 4’s,” others were acquired and held by “Railways” pending certain events, and certain others are still outstanding. By tho terms of tho trust deed $14,000,000 in “Railways 4’s” were reserved and set aside for the acquisition by purchase or exchange, or for tho redemption and payment of “divisional” bonds on the independent lines originally acquired, to be certified and delivered from time to time, when authorized by resolution of “Railways” board of directors, upon conditions in said trust deed named. $3,000,000 of said bonds were reserved and set aside for retirement and acquisition, through payment or exchange, of the bonds of the St. Louis & Suburban Railway Company and of the St. Louis & Meramec River Railroad Company, should the stocks or properties of said companies be acquired. These were the 2 remaining lines not originally acquired, but in contemplation of acquirement at the time of the organization of “Railways” and tho issuance of the $45,000,000 of “Railways 4’s,” and actually acquired about the year 1906.

Following the consolidation of these independent lines, and the issuance of “Railways 4’s,” “Railways” leased the consolidated linos to St. Louis Transit Company, which operated them for some years. In 1904 “Railways” canceled this lease and undertook the operation of tho system, which continued until the appointment of the receiver April 12, [828]*8281919. In connection with this transaction St. Louis Transit Company issued $10,000,000 in bonds which were guaranteed by “Railways” and secured by a deed of trust executed by “Railways” on all of its property owned or to be acquired, subject to the several deeds of trust securing existing “divisional” bonds and subject to the deed of trust securing “Railways 4’s.”

Early in January, 1918, “Railways” was experiencing financial difficulties and embarrassing litigation pended. A stockholder’s bill was filed, referred to as the Seaman bill, which sought receivership, marshaling of assets, etc. Issue was joined on this bill, and it was being contested, and the matter was referred to a special master. While this bill was pending, and on April 11, 1919, a creditor’s bill was filed by one Adler, holder of certain of the $10,000,000 issue of St. Louis Transit Company bonds. Defendants appeared to this bill, answered, admitting the allegations of the bill, and consented to the appointment of a receiver, and defendant Rolla Wells was appointed receiver on April 12,1919. At the time of the appointment of the receiver the following bonded indebtedness was outstanding against “Railways”:

Name. Rate. Date o£ Maturity. Amt.

Union Depot Railroad Company . ...........6 % June 1, 1918. $2,300,000

St. Louis Railroad Company . ...........4y2%-■May 1, 1920. 1,900,000

St. Louis & Suburban Railway Company (consolidated) .......5 % Feb. 1, 1921. 2,000,000

Lindell Railway Company ...... ...........4%% Aug. 1, 1921. 1,474,000

Cass Avenue & Fair Grounds Railway Company . ...........4%% July 1, 1921. 1,640,000

St. Louis & Suburban Railway Company (general) . ........... 5 % April 1,' 1923. 4,500,000

Compton Heights, Union Depot & Merchants' Terminal Railroad Company.. 5 % July 1, 1923. - 986,000

St. Louis Transit Company .................5 % Oct. 1, 1924. 9,790,000

United Railways Company o£ St. Louis general mortgage.... 4 % July 1, 1934. 30,300,000

In the “Railways 4’s” trust deed, “Railways” covenants that it “will well and truly pay and discharge, or will acquire and deliver to ‘trustee’ for cancellation, or will extend or cause to be extended, on or before the date of their maturity, all existing bonds of the divisions of railways owned by ‘Railways Company’ above mentioned, and punctually pay, or cause to be paid, the interest on all such existing obligations, until the same shall either mature or be acquired by ‘Railways Company.’” It will be noted that the first item of the foregoing list indicates that'$2,-300.000 in bonds of the Union Depot Railroad Company had already matured at the date of the appointment of the receiver and were in default. It will be further noted that said list includes, in addition to seven remnants of issues of “divisional” bonds, $9,-790.000 balance of the $10,000,000 issue of Transit Company bonds, and $30,300,000 “Railways 4’s,” which had been issued and delivered out of the $45,000,000 for acquisition of lines and payment of “divisional” bonds.

Plaintiff’s bill alleges in substance that the “divisional” lines, upon which bonded indebtedness still remained, were of much greater value than their bonded indebtedness, and that they were particularly of great additional value as a part of the consolidated system. The bill particularly alleges, with respect to the St. Louis & Suburban Railway Company line, “that said St.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F.2d 826, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-boston-v-united-rys-co-of-st-louis-ca8-1925.