West v. Guaranty Trust Co.

83 Misc. 609, 145 N.Y.S. 634
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 83 Misc. 609 (West v. Guaranty Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. Guaranty Trust Co., 83 Misc. 609, 145 N.Y.S. 634 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Gavegan, J.

The motion is for an injunction pendente lite. The action is brought by the plaintiffs as receivers of the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad Company against the Southern Railway Company and the Guaranty Trust Company of New York, to enjoin them from making or accepting any delivery of certificates for 9,985 shares of stock of the New Orleans [612]*612Terminal Company, deposited by the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad Company with the trust company under a voting trust agreement, or from declaring any forfeiture in respect thereof, or from executing any assignment or conveyance thereof. The controversy arises out of the following facts: In 1903 the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad Company and the Southern Railway Company, hereinafter referred to as the Frisco Company ” and the “ Southern Company,” united in a plan to form a great terminal company in New Orleans; it called for the conveyance by the Frisco Company and the Southern Company of their respective New Orleans terminals to a new corporation, of which each should own one-half the stock. The stock of the New Orleans Terminal Company was to be $2,000,000, and it was to have an authorized bond issue of $15,000,000. A joint lease of the property of the new company was to be made to the Frisco Company and the Southern Company, each of which was to pay by way of rental one-half of the interest on the Terminal Company’s bonds, and its proportion of the Terminal Company’s operating expenses. The Frisco Company and the Southern Company were each to choose three of the six directors of the Terminal Company. Under this plan the New Orleans Terminal Company was formed, and the Frisco Company acquired their half interest in its stock, which the Southern Company now seeks to forfeit. The Terminal Company made a joint lease with the Frisco and Southern Company under date of July 1, 1903. The lease called for the payment by each of the companies as rental of one-half of the interest to accrue upon the bonds of the Terminal Company. In order to facilitate the sale thereof the Frisco Company and the Southern Company jointly and severally guaranteed the bonds of the Terminal Company. On December [613]*61331, 1903, the Frisco Company and the Southern Company entered into a so-called voting trust agreement, under which each of the companies delivered to the Standard Trust Company of New York, since merged with the Guaranty Trust Company, its one-half of the stock of the Terminal Company, to secure their mutual protection in the premises and also the fulfillment of the purposes and intent of all the provisions of the original joint lease of July 1, 1903. After deducting directors’ qualifying shares, the Frisco Company and the Southern Company each delivered 9,985 shares of the stock of the Terminal Company to the trustee, who is to vote the stock as they jointly direct, distribute to them dividends as received upon the stock and he a mere depository of the stock until the happening of a default by either company in paying its one-half of the obligations to the Terminal Company. Article 6 of said agreement provides that in the event of a default by either of the railway companies in the payment of the one-half of the guaranteed interest'rental, and the continuance of such default for three months after notice by the trustee, “ then as a penalty therefor any such default of" either of the railway companies shall operate as a forfeiture of the shares of the capital stock of the Terminal Company originally deposited with the trustee by such defaulting railway company and shall vest the same in the other one of the railway companies, its successors or assigns, not in default, and thereupon the trustee shall and will execute all proper instruments declaring such forfeiture, which shall be conclusive evidence of the facts therein set forth, and shall and will also assign unto that one of the railway companies not in default, or upon its order, all of the shares of. the capital stock of the Terminal Company then held by the trustee, and shall and will deliver the certificates of said stock [614]*614accordingly.” From the formation of the Terminal Company in 1903 up to the middle of 1913 the Frisco Company and the Southern Company harmoniously cooperated in the administration and development of the New Orleans Terminal Company, which they had then jointly created and jointly owned. Bach company semi-annually and punctually paid its one-half of the interest of the bonds of the Terminal Company resting upon the property which they jointly owned through their ownership of the stock of the Terminal Company. It appears that the payments made by the Frisco Company.by way of interest on these bonds alone amounted during these ten years to upward of $1,000,000. On June 15, 1913, the Frisco Company, which had been placed in the hands of the plaintiffs as receivers of the federal court on May 27, 1913, failed to meet its half of the obligation resting upon the common property and made, default on account of the receivership in the payment of $140,000 as its one-half contribution to the semi-annual interest payment of $280,000 due July first on $14,000,000 of the Terminal Company’s bonds. The Southern Railway Company thereupon set out to effectuate the absolute forfeiture to its own use of the entire stock interest of the Frisco Company in the New Orleans properties, at the same time asserting the debt, together with the Frisco Company’s liability for future interest on the Terminal Company’s bonds, and the plaintiffs, as receivers of the Frisco Company, obtained a temporary restraining order from this court, which they now seek to have continued pending the trial of the action. The plaintiffs contend that the provisions for forfeiture in the trust agreement are void, and they protest against the attempt of the Southern Railway Company to forfeit absolutely the St. Louis and San Francisco Railway Company’s interest in the terminal [615]*615properties while leaving upon them half the burdens of ownership, that is, the burden of paying half the interest charges on the New Orleans Terminal' Company’s property for the next forty years. The plaintiffs allege that the property of the New Orleans Terminal Company is worth $6,000,000 over the amount of the bonds thereon, and claim that they still have the equity of redemption in the New Orleans Terminal stock, which is of such unique kind and value that it cannot be replaced nor its loss be measured by money damages. In short, the plaintiffs contend that the voting trust agreement above referred to was an instrument for security for the payment of obligations in the form of semi-annual interest on the bonds, and that therefore the provision for the forfeiture contained therein' is void under the equitable principle of once a mortgage always a mortgage.” The defendant Southern Railway Company, on the other hand, contends that the voting trust agreement is an instrument not for security, but one “ defining and qualifying the conditional character of the title of the railway companies to the stock.” Attention is called to the fact that there was no debt whatever owing from the Frisco Company to the Southern Company until the latter answered for the former’s default by paying the entire installment of interest due on the bonds July 1,1913. The obligation of the Frisco Company to pay one-half the interest on the bonds is by way of rental for its use of the terminal, and whether or not the Southern Company can obtain another railroad company willing to assume the entire amount of such rental obligations of the Frisco Company cannot yet be determined.

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Bluebook (online)
83 Misc. 609, 145 N.Y.S. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-guaranty-trust-co-nysupct-1914.