A mortgage of a railroad and of lands granted by Congress to aid
in its construction to trustees which directs the trustees to apply
moneys arising from the sale of the lands to the payment of the
coupons attached to the bonds secured by the mortgage also
authorizes them to purchase therewith overdue coupons which have
been cut from those bonds and have been deposited with the trustees
of the mortgage for the purpose of securing scrip issued to the
holders of those coupons with the object of extending the payment
of the amount due on them beyond the time of payment named in
them.
Bill in equity. The case is stated in the opinion of the
Court.
Page 120 U. S. 161
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Little Rock and Fort Smith Railway is a corporation
organized under the laws of Arkansas, and the defendants are
citizens of Massachusetts and trustees under a mortgage or deed of
trust executed to them by the corporation on the 19th of December,
1874. The bill is filed to enforce the performance of certain
trusts devolving upon the defendants under that instrument.
By the Act of Congress of July 28, 1866, a grant of land was
made to the State of Arkansas to aid in the construction of a
railroad from Little Rock to Fort Smith. The grant was of ten
alternate sections of land on each side of the road, with a right
of way over land of the United States to the width of two hundred
feet.
By legislation of Arkansas in 1869, the right to the lands thus
granted by Congress became vested in the Little Rock and Fort Smith
Railway Company. In December following, that corporation executed a
mortgage upon its road, equipment, franchises, and property to
secure its bonds to be issued thereunder to the amount of
$3,500,000, and in June, 1870, it executed a second mortgage upon
the same property to secure its bonds to be issued to the amount of
five millions of dollars. The bonds were issued, but the company
defaulted in their payment, and both mortgages were foreclosed, and
the property was sold under a decree of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
The purchasers at such sale, under a statute of Arkansas,
organized themselves into a corporation and adopted as their
corporate name that of the Little Rock and Fort Smith Railway, and
became vested with all the rights, privileges, powers, and
franchises of the former corporation, together with the lands
granted to that company by the acts of Congress and of the
Legislature of Arkansas.
This new company, the plaintiff herein, in order to provide
means for the completion and equipment of its road and for other
purposes, issued and negotiated a series of bonds, amounting in the
aggregate to three millions of dollars,
Page 120 U. S. 162
payable to bearer at the end of thirty years from January 1,
1874, with interest coupons payable semiannually at the rate of
seven percent per annum, free from any United States tax. The bonds
were issued in denominations of one thousand dollars each, from No.
1 to 2,000, inclusive, and in denominations of five hundred dollars
each, from Nos. 2,001 to 4,000, inclusive. To secure their payment,
principal and interest, the company executed a mortgage or deed of
trust bearing date December 19, 1874, upon its road, franchises,
rights, and lands to the defendants Huntington and Ripley, in
trust, among other things, to apply the moneys arising from the
lands of the company, after deducting the expenses of executing the
trust, as follows:
1st, to the payment of the coupons or interest warrants attached
to the bonds as fast as they shall become due and payable, to the
extent that the net earnings from the business of the road shall be
insufficient for that purpose.
2d, to the purchasing and cancelling of such outstanding bonds
as can be obtained at their market value, not exceeding, however, a
premium of ten percent, and
3d, to the payment of such of the bonds as shall not have been
purchased in accordance with these provisions when the same shall
become due and payable.
All the trust moneys coming to the trustees not applied or used
in accordance with the above provisions were to be invested in
United States securities or lent from time to time in such manner
as by the law of Massachusetts is permitted, to savings banks. The
interest derived from such investments or loans was to be applied
by the trustees to the payment of the bonds or coupons.
The bill alleges that after the execution of this mortgage, the
company completed its railroad from Little Rock to Fort Smith
within the time and in the manner required by the acts of Congress
and of Arkansas, and thereby became the owner of 1,057,000 acres of
land, as certified by the Secretary of the Interior to the state,
all of which, and the proceeds of sales, were subject to the trusts
and charges imposed by the mortgage or deed of trust; that the
corporation has disposed of all
Page 120 U. S. 163
the bonds authorized to be issued under the mortgage, but that
of the lands there still remain unsold 623,000 acres; that during
the years 1877, 1878, and 1879 and the first six months of the year
1880, the net earnings derived from the operation of the road, even
when united with the proceeds of the sales of lands, were
insufficient to meet the coupons or interest warrants attached to
the bonds maturing on January 1, 1878, July 1, 1878, January 1,
1879, July 1, 1879, and January 1, 1880, and thereupon an agreement
was made between the corporation and the holders of the bonds and
coupons payable on those dates by which the holders surrendered to
the defendants, trustees, the coupons, and the corporation issued
to them negotiable scrip or certificates, by which it promised to
pay the trustees, or bearer, the amount of the coupons surrendered,
in ten years from their maturity, with interest at the rate of
seven percent per annum, payable semiannually, the corporation
reserving the right to pay the scrip and interest at any time
previous to its maturity.
The scrip or certificate also provided that the trustees should
hold the coupons surrendered as collateral security for the payment
of the scrip thus issued therefor, and that the coupons should not
be surrendered or cancelled until the scrip should be paid. The
coupons maturing on July 1, 1883, and January 1, 1884, were also
unpaid, and a similar arrangement was made with the holders of
these coupons by the issue of scrip for them, so that the whole
amount of scrip issued for coupons thus unpaid was $636,000.
The bill also alleges that out of the moneys received from the
sale of the lands since the execution of the mortgage the trustees
have bought and cancelled bonds amounting to $536,500, besides
appropriating moneys to aid the corporation in paying the interest
coupons attached to the bonds; that since the year 1881, the
trustees have applied the net proceeds of the sales to the purchase
and cancellation of the bonds, and no part thereof to the purchase
and cancellation of the said scrip, or the coupons held by them as
collateral security for the payment of that scrip; that for several
years, the net earnings of the road have been more than sufficient
to enable the corporation
Page 120 U. S. 164
to pay its current coupons and the interest upon the scrip; that
the corporation has notified the trustees that it was no longer
necessary to retain any portion of the proceeds of sales for the
payment of the interest coupons to mature hereafter; that the net
earnings of the road would in all probability be ample for that
purpose, and, by reason of the increased earnings, will continue to
be more than ample to pay the coupons as they severally become due
and payable, and that the price of the bonds has greatly risen in
value, and the premium thereon has varied the past year from
thirteen to seventeen percent, so that under the mortgage, the
trustees are no longer able to purchase such bonds, being limited
by the mortgage to the payment of ten percent premium. The bill
also alleges that 623,000 acres of the lands of the company remain
unsold; that the trustees hold contracts for lands sold upon which
partial payments have been made, but upon which deeds are not to be
executed until the purchase money and interest are fully paid,
amounting in the aggregate to more than the sum of $428,691, and
that in the ordinary course of business, the trustees and their
successors will have large amounts of money from sales thereof,
which must be applied by them in accordance with the provisions of
the mortgage, and in the order of priority, before the moneys can
be invested as provided therein; that the trustees have refused to
apply any of the said money to the payment of the outstanding
coupons for which the scrip mentioned was given; that such coupons
draw interest at the rate of seven percent, and any investment of
such moneys by the trustees can only be made so as to obtain a much
smaller rate of interest, and that therefore it would be greatly to
the advantage of the corporation and to the bondholders that such
moneys should be applied to taking up the outstanding coupons. The
trustees, in their answer to the demand of the corporation that the
moneys be so applied, have expressed a willingness to so apply
them, but they entertain doubts as to their authority so to do
unless directed by order of the court.
The mortgage, as is seen by its terms, contemplates that the
proceeds of sales of lands shall be applied to the payment
Page 120 U. S. 165
of the interest coupons to the extent that the earnings of the
road are insufficient for that purpose. The contract by which the
time to pay those coupons for which the scrip was issued was
extended for ten years does not release the corporation from its
obligation, provided it is in funds from the earnings of the road
and the sales of its lands. The coupons are not cancelled, but are
still held as collateral security for the scrip issued. The
inability of the company to pay such coupons from the earnings of
the road, combined with the proceeds of the sales of the lands,
which led to the contract for the scrip, no longer exists, and
there is no legal impediment in the way of the trustees taking up
such coupons, notwithstanding the contract deferring their
compulsory payment for ten years. The money received from the sales
of the lands cannot be used in purchasing the bonds of the company
which are now at more than ten percent premium, and the trustees
are restricted in their payment to that premium. Any investment
under the law of Massachusetts would bring them only a moderate
interest, probably not exceeding four percent. The coupons draw
seven percent. There is therefore a manifest propriety and justice
in the demand of the corporation that the surplus money from the
sales of its lands, instead of being thus invested, should be
applied to taking up the outstanding coupons. And it is the plain
duty of the trustees, in the execution of their trust, to make the
proceeds of the sales of lands as available as possible for the
extinction of the indebtedness of the corporation -- first on its
coupons and then upon its bonds -- so long as the same can be
bought at a premium not exceeding ten percent
The decree of the court is therefore reversed, and the cause
remanded, with directions to enter a decree in accordance with this
opinion.