Zimmermann v. . Timmermann

86 N.E. 540, 193 N.Y. 486
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 86 N.E. 540 (Zimmermann v. . Timmermann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zimmermann v. . Timmermann, 86 N.E. 540, 193 N.Y. 486 (N.Y. 1908).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.

In this action the plaintiffs, constituting the firm of Zimmermann and Forshay, bankers and *488 brokers in the city of Flew York, seek to recover of the defendants, who are also bankers and brokers in the same city, under the firm name of Timmermann, Dahlgren & Co., damages for the breach of contracts in writing whereby the defendants agreed to sell, and the plaintiffs agreed to buy, certain bonds of a California corporation, known as the United Railroads of San Francisco.

The following is a copy of one of the contracts, the others being like it in form :

“ Yew York, March 17, 1902.
“ 100 Bonds at 89 and int. W. I.
“We have sold to Zimmermann & Forshay one hundred thousand dollars par value of the Flew 4% Bonds of tlié United Railroads of San Francisco at 89 per cent payable and deliverable when, as and if issued, with accrued interest at the rate of four per cent per annum, either party having the right to call for deposits according to the requirements of Article XXX of the Constitution of the FT. Y. Stock Exchange, and on the failure of the party called upon to comply with the call for deposits, which contract shall mature, with the right and authority to the party not in default to close the contract in accordancé with the rules of the Flew York Stock Exchange.
“ Due when issued.
“ TIMMERMANN, DAHLGREN & GO.”

The plaintiffs in each instance executed a corresponding obligation to purchase the bonds on the terms and conditions thus specified. On the 21st day of June, 1902, the plaintiffs, claiming that the bonds had been issued, demanded the delivery thereof from the defendants. The defendants refused to comply with the demand, on the ground that it was premature. They wrote to the plaintiffs: “We have been notified by Messrs. Brown Brothers & Co., who are the parties to issue the bonds, that said bonds have not been so issued, and hence that they are not entitled to be delivered under the agreement of sale made with you.” The learned judge before whom the case was tried fa jury having- been waived) found *489 that the bonds had been issued by the United Railroads of San Francisco at the time when the demand was made, and rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for $12,837.90, measuring their damages with reference to the market rate for the bonds in San Francisco at the date of the breach of the contract. The Appellate Division has reversed this judgment because only $3,500,000 of the $20,000,000 issue of bonds contemplated by the United Railroads of San Francisco had actually been issued when thé plaintiffs demanded of the defendants the delivery of their bonds under the contract. In the opinion of that learned court no right accrued to the plaintiffs to call for a delivery of any of the bonds until the issue of the $20,000,000 was complete. The disposition of this appeal depends upon the correctness of that view.

The bonds in question were the outcome of a syndicate plan for the acquisition of a controlling interest in the principal independent street surface railroads in the city of San Francisco and the consolidation of their lines into a. single corporate organization to be known as the United Railroads of San Francisco. The agreement for effectuating this scheme provided among other things for the creation and issue by this new corporation in payment for the properties of the constituent companies of $40,000,000 of stock, common and preferred, and $20,000,000 of bonds. The bonds were to be secured by a mortgage upon the properties and franchises of the constituent companies. The stock of these companies was acquired through the agency of Brown Brothers & Co., to whom the bonds were to be delivered under an agreement which gave them the right to offer such bonds for sale at any time prior to February 1, 1903, at the best price obtainable, being not less than 90% of their face value with accrued interest. On or before June 16th, 1902, bonds to the amount of $3,500,000, duly certified by the trustee under the mortgage, were delivered by the trustee, pursuant to directions from Brown Brothers & Go. to a San Francisco syndicate, by which they had been purchased and by which large amounts of them were immediately resold. It is this delivery of *490 $3,500,000 which the plaintiffs insist was an issue of the bonds under the “ when, as and if issued ” clause of the contract between the parties to this action. The defendants, on the other hand, contend (and in this they have been sustained by the Appellate Division) that the words “ when, as and if issued ” relate only to the total issue of bonds contemplated by the scheme for the union of the San Francisco street railways, and that the plaintiffs could not rightfully demand performance of the contracts in controversy here until substantially the whole $20,000,000 of bonds had been issued. The fact that the plaintiffs may have had no knowledge of the terms of the plan under which the bonds were to be issued, was held by the court below to be entirely immaterial.

In order clearly to understand the position of the contending parties on this appeal, it is necessary to state somewhat more fully the facts concerning the formation of the syndicate for the purchase of the $20,000,000 of bonds of the United Railroads of San Francisco. The syndicate agreement was executed on February 17, 1902, between the United Railways Investment Company of San Francisco of the first part, Brown Brothers & Co., as syndicate managers, of the second part, and such persons and corporations as should actually sign the agreement or accept participation thereunder or become holders of subscription receipts issued by the managers, parties of the third part. These parties of the third part were described in the agreement as “Participants.” The agreement provided that the Investment Company would cause a corporation to be organized to be known as the United Railroads of San Francisco, to which it would sell the stock of certain specified railroad companies in San Francisco, “ it being intended that said corporation, when formed, shall also acquire the railroad lines, .properties and franchises of such companies.” The United Railroads corporation was then to deliver to the Investment Company, in payment for these shares, $17,408,000 (subsequently increased to $20,000,000) of its bonds, and $40,000,000 of its stock, common and preferred. The Investment Company was thereafter to delivei *491 to Brown Brothers & Co. as the representatives of the shareholders in the constituent railroads these bonds and this stock. The participants in the agreement were to receive for each $1,000 paid by them $758.29 of the bonds, or the proceeds of as many as might be sold prior to February 1, 1903, and the balance in preferred and common stock. The participants covenanted and agreed that Brown Brothers &

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 N.E. 540, 193 N.Y. 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmermann-v-timmermann-ny-1908.