
    (83 Misc. Rep. 609)
    WEST et al. v. GUARANTY TRUST CO. OF NEW YORK et al.
    (Supreme Court, Special Term, New York County.
    January, 1914.)
    1. Pledges (§ 53*)—Forfeiture of Collaterai>-Validity of Agreements. Agreements for the forfeiture of collateral securities are void where only one party has parted with value and takes collateral to secure its payment.
    [Ed. Note.—For other cases, see Pledges, Cent. Dig. §§ 129-132; Dec. Dig. § 53.*]
    2. Injunction (§ 136*)—Injunction Pendente Lite. The action is by the receivers of the F. Railroad Company against the S. Railroad Company and a trust company to enjoin defendants from delivering 9,000 shares of stock of a terminal company deposited by the F. Company with the trust company under a voting trust agreement, or from declaring a forfeiture of such shares. The two railroad companies jointly formed a terminal company and leased its terminal property under an agreement to pay as rental half of the interest on the terminal company’s bonds, and a proportional part of its operating expenses. Under the voting trust agreement, each railroad company delivered to the trust company its one-half of the terminal stock to be held until a default, and such agreement provided that, in the event of a default for three months, “then as a penalty therefor any such default of either of the railroad companies shall operate as a forfeiture of the shares of the capital stock of the terminal company originally deposited with the trustee by the defaulting company and shall vest the same in the other one of the railroad companies not in default,” and thereupon the trustee shall declare such forfeiture and assign to the nondefaulting company all of the terminal stock held by the trustee. The F. Company made default in the payment of $140,000 as its half of the semiannual interest on the terminal bonds, and the S. Company seeks to forfeit all of the F. Company’s interest in the stock of the terminal company. Plaintiffs claimed that the terminal property is worth $6,000,000 above the amount of the bonds, and claim an equity of redemption in the stock. Held, on motion for an injunction pendente lite for the purposes of such motion, that the voting trust agreement was to secure the performance of obligations, the breach of which would create a debt, and that the provision for forfeiture might be declared void and unenforceable upon a trial on the facts, so that an injunction as prayed will be granted pendente lite, and i"t is immaterial that the complaint did not make any tender; the action not being to redeem.
    [Ed. Note.—For other cases, see Injunction, Cent. Dig. §§ 305, 306; Dec. Dig. § 136.*]
    S. ‘Injunction (§ 136*)—Preliminary Injunction—Preservation of Status. A preliminary injunction to preserve the status quo may issue where a more careful consideration of the case than can be given on the hearing of a motion is necessary, or where there is no denial of the act charged, and the injury will not be easily remedied if the injunction is refused, or when the ultimate questions of fact or law are difficult and the injury threatened is immediate and grave, while the injury will be comparatively slight if the injunction is granted.
    [Ed. Note.—For other cases, see Injunction, Cent. Dig. §§ 305, 306; Dec. Dig. § 136.*]
    Suit for injunction by Thomas C. West and others, as receivers of the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad Company, against the Guaranty Trust Company of New York and others. Motion for injunction pendente lite granted.
    Sullivan & Cromwell, of New York City, for plaintiffs.
    Stetson, Jennings & Russell, of New York City, for defendants.
   GAVEGAN, J.

The motion is for an injunction pendente lite. The action is brought by the plaintiffs, as receivers of the St. Louis & 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 Terminal Company, deposited by the St. Louis & 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 19Ó3 the St. Louis & 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 i'ts 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 Companies 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 31, 1903, the Frisco Company and the Southern Company entered into a so-called voting trust agreement, under which each of the com-panics 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 be 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 accordingly.”

From the formation of the Terminal Company in 1903 up to the middle of 1913 the Frisco Company and the Southern Company harmoniously co-operated in the administration and development of the New Orleans Terminal Company, which they had then jointly created and jointly owned. Each company semiannually 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 upwards 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 semiannual interest payment of $280,000 due July 1st 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 & San Francisco Railway Company’s interest in the terminal properties 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 stiff 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 semiannual 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 the 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. So long as the stock is impounded and in the possession of the trustee, the Southern Company must continue to answer for the obligations of the Frisco Company, with slight chance of reimbursement from the Frisco Company in view of its present insolvency. Defendant Southern Railway Company further protests that the stock of the Terminal Company is without value except for the purpose of control of the corporation; that it could be availed of beneficially only by a solvent and congenial railroad company entering New Orleans; that if offered publicly for sale upon foreclosure said stock might be bought in by an individual or corporation which would not assume any of the obligations of the Frisco Company under the lease; and that such purchaser would be in a position to cause irreparable injury to the Southern Company.

The controversy hinges on the legal effect of the voting trust agreement. If it is an instrument to secure the payment of a debt or other obligation or incumbrance, the forfeiture clause is void under the well-settled equitable rule, and an injunction pending the trial should be granted.

While the authorities uniformly hold that agreements for forfeiture of collateral are void, where one side alone has parted with value and takes collateral to secure its repayment, no authority is presented, nor have I been able to find any, which extends the rule to the case of a mutual agreement wherein both parties undertake performanee on equal terms and conditions, and mutually agree that in the event of default by one party the other shall acquire all rights and title under the agreement. The plaintiff receivers contend that the principle of the equitable rule should be applied by extension to the case of the voting trust agreement in controversy as a matter of legal inference.

Though not positively satisfied, I am inclined to the opinion that the voting trust agreement, while not an instrument to secure payment of a debt which existed at the time it was made, was nevertheless an instrument to secure the performance of obligations the breach of which would necessarily create a debt, and that such a debt was within the contemplation of the parties at the time the agreement was made. I think therefore that the provision therein for forfeiture may be declared void and unenforceable upon a trial where all the facts and circumstances may warrant a conclusion which would prevail over the dry words of the agreement. It seems to me that the term “default,” as used in the instrument, is equivalent to and identical in significance with the term “debt,” since the default relates to the payment of interest on a debt for which both parties were jointly and severally liable. Defendants lay stress on the fact that no debt was owing from the Frisco Company to the Southern Company at the time of making the agreement, nor until the latter answered for the former’s default by paying the entire installment of interest due on the bonds July 1, 1913. But the debt was there. The fundamental debt owed by the Terminal Company to its bondholders was there, and it was secured by a mortgage. If both the Frisco Company and-the Southern Company defaulted in payment of interest on the bonds, not even the bondholders could do more than satisfy the debt by foreclosure, were there a forfeiture provision in the mortgage. If there is any reason which would validate a forfeiture clause in the absence of a debt as between the parties at the time of making the voting trust agreement, when equity would declare void a forfeiture clause in a case where a debt did exist at the time of making the instrument, it has not been presented and does not occur to me. On the contrary, the proposition presents itself to my mind thus: If a debt in existence when the agreement was made will not justify a forfeiture, a fortiori, a debt which is only in contemplation at that time will not justify a forfeiture.

A voting trust agreement may suspend control, but that comparatively modern and useful device in corporate management has never yet gone so far as to forfeit title with the sanction of any court of equity. The Southern Company parted with no greater value, nor made any greater concession at the time of assigning their properties to the New Orleans Terminal Company, nor when' making the voting trust agreement, than did the Frisco Company. The penalty insisted upon by the Southern Company, which would seize the property and still assert the debt, is inordinate when compared with the consequences of the default to the Southern Company, and in my opinion it should not receive sanction in equity; the more so when it is remembered that the default was not willful and that the plaintiffs are officers of the court resisting the forfeiture to protect creditors of the Frisco Company-. The plaintiffs’ remedy at law would be adequate, it seems tome, only in case the Southern Company sold the Frisco Company’s half of the Terminal- Company’s stock for the highest price obtainable, or leased the terminal facilities to another railroad, paying rent therefor which would be applied in ratable exoneration of the Frisco Company’s liability for interest on the Terminal Company’s bonds whose maturity is forty years ahead. But with absolute title of all the Terminal Company stock the Southern Company would not be answerable for its disposition. It might sell the Frisco Company’s share thereof for a nominal price to a congenial railroad company entering New Orleans, and still assert the debt against the Frisco Company, or it might prefer to keep the stock for itself, in view of an increase in value of the Terminal Company’s property, and still assert the debt against the Frisco Company.

It is conceded that the interest on the Terminal Company’s bonds was to be paid by the two railroad companies in lieu of rent for terminal facilities; each company paying half thereof. If instead of depositing their stock both companies had deposited an equal sum of money with the Trust Company adequate to secure payment of the interest on the bonds, that is the rent, for a period of years, under an agreement that upon the default of either it should be dispossessed and forfeit to the other its remaining share of the deposit, the agreement would be identical in principle with the one actually adopted, in the sense that there would be no debt in existence as between the parties at the time the agreement was made. Yet I believe the courts of this state would hold such a forfeiture provision void if the party in default was ousted of possession and it appeared, as is claimed by the plaintiffs herein, that the value to be forfeited was out of all proportion to the damages suffered or the probable loss. The Court of Appeals has so held in similar cases between landlord and tenant involving deposits made by tenants to secure faithful performance of covenants in the lease.

While not citing the case of Cæsar v. Rubinson, 174 N. Y. 492, 67 N. E. 58, as an authority exactly in point, I think it lends fairness to the question raised by the plaintiffs herein, for as I read that opinion lack of mutuality was not essential to the decision arrived at. In Schrewsbury & C. R. Co. v. S. & B. R. Co., 1 Simons, N. S. 410, the court, although refusing the injunction on the ground that the injury to the plaintiffs was extremely small in comparison with the injury to the defendants, said that it was entitled to issue an injunction whenever it saw that there was a fair ground for litigation raised by the plaintiff; that the first point on which the court had to be satisfied was not positively that the plaintiff is right, but that he has a fair question to raise, and that when the alternative was interference or probable destruction of the property the court would be ready to lend its immediate assistance, even at considerable risk that it might be encroaching on what might eventually turn out to be a legal right of the defendant.

A preliminary injunction to preserve the status quo may properly issue when the case requires a more careful consideration than can be given on the hearing of a motion (Litchfield v. City of Brooklyn, 10 Misc. Rep. 74, 31 N. Y. Supp. 151), or when there is no denial of the act charged as contemplated and the injury threatened will not be easily remedied if the injunction is refused (United States v. Duluth, 1 Dillon, 474, Fed. Cas. No. 15,001), or when the questions^ of law or fact to be ultimately determined in a suit are grave and difficult, and the injury to the moving party will be immediate, certain and great if it is denied, while the loss or inconvenience to the opposing party will be comparatively small if it is granted (Denver & R. G. R. et al. v. United States, 124 Fed. 156, 59 C. C. A. 579, and cases cited therein). See, also, Harriman et al. v. Northern Securities Co. et al. (C. C.) 132 Fed. 464.

With regard to the damage suffered by the Southern Company through the Frisco Company’s default there are legal remedies, of which it is doubtless advised, the enforcement of which would secure to the Southern Company such relief as it is entitled to.

The plaintiffs’ failure to make any tender or any reference to a tender in their complaint is not important, as it seems to me, since the action is not brought to redeem the stock.

The motion for an injunction pendente lite is granted on condition that plaintiffs give a sufficient undertaking, the amount of which will be determined on the settlement of the order on notice after oral argument.  