This controversy comes before us by submission, upon an agreed case, from which it appears that on June 1, 1904, plaintiff executed and delivered to defendant, as trustee, a mortgage of plaintiff’s real property to secure an issue of $3,000,000 of plaintiff’s bonds; that said mortgage as to certain of such property was made subject to a prior mortgage of plaintiff’s grantor, the Chest Creek Land and Improvement Company, also made to defendant as trustee, securing an issue then outstanding of $252,000 of the bonds of such improvement company’s mortgage; $12,000 of its bonds were required to be redeemed at par and interest on the 1st day of October, 1900, and annually on each October first'thereafter; that of the $3,000,000 bonds of plaintiff, $2,748,000 were, under the mortgage securing them, provided to be forthwith certified and delivered to plaintiff, and the remaining $252,000 were provided to be retained by the trustee, to be certified and delivered only for the purpose of taking up and retiring at par $252,000 of the underlying bonds of said improvement company; .that the bonds of plaintiff themselves set forth the fact that their lien was subject to the $252,000 of improvement company bonds, and that provision for the retirement of such improvement company bonds by means of the bonds of plaintiff had been made in plaintiff’s said mortgage ; that on October 1,1904, and on each October first thereafter, plaintiff paid off and redeemed $12,000 of the underlying improvement company bonds, in accord*542anee with the provisions of the mortgage securing them; that at the time of each of said redemptions plaintiff’s bonds to a like amount with the improvement company bonds thus redeemed were certified and delivered to plaintiff, except on October 1,1907, when defendant refused to certify and deliver $12,000 of plaintiff’s bonds as against $12,000 improvement company bonds redeemed by plaintiff on such date.
It appears quite clearly that the purpose and intent of the parties . was that the whole $3,000^000 of bonds should be ultimately issued, but that as to the $252,000 thereof, they should be issued only in substitution for the bonds under the earliér mortgage as these should be paid off and canceled. The mortgage executed by plaintiff recited that “ Two hundred and fifty-two (252) of the bonds secured hereby,. aggregating two hundred and. fifty-two thousand dollars ($252,000) of principal, to wit, bonds numbered from two thousand seven hundred and fprty-nine to three thousand, both numbers inclusive, shall be retained by the trustee, and be certified and delivered to or upon the order of the Coal Company, only for the purpose of taking up and retiring, at par, two hundred and fifty-two thousand dollars ($252,000) of bonds of the Chest Creek Land and Improvement Company *■ * *. No delivery of any óf said last-named ' two hundred and fifty-two' (252) bonds of the issue hereby secured shall be made by the trustee hereunder, after certification thereof, until" an equal amount of said bonds of said Chest Creek Land and Improvement Company shall be delivered to the trustee hereunder for cancellation by it.” And each of the bonds, issued under the $3,000,000 mortgage contains the statement that it is secured by a mortgage upon certain properties, u subject, however, to an existing mortgage debt aggregating two hundred and fifty-two thousand dollars ($252,000), now a lien upon certain of said property, provision for- the retirement of which by means of bonds of this issue is made in said mortgage or deed of trust.” Nothing can be clearer, therefore, than that the intention and agreement was that the reserved $252,000 of bonds were to be issued as fast as bonds under the earlier mortgage were' presented for cancellation, so that in the end there should be none of the latter bonds outstanding, but all of the bonds under the later mortgage should have been issued.. How the coal company procured the bonds *543of the earlier issue which it presented for cancellation was no concern of the holders of bonds under the later mortgage, nor of the trustees under that mortgage. It was and is immaterial whether the coal company purchased the bonds by means of the sinking fund, or by the use of its surplus earnings, or by the sale of bonds to be issued under the later and larger mortgage. All that the holders of these latter bonds were concerned with was that there should not be. outstanding at any time more than $3,000,000 of . bonds including those issued under the earlier as well as those issued under the later mortgage. With the sinking fund agreed to be created for the redemption of the $252,000 of bonds, the holders of the $3,000,000 of bonds had nothing to do. The agreement to create such a sinking fund was not made with them nor for their benefit, and did not enter, as a factor, into the agreement under which the larger issue was made. It follows, therefore, that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment; that it is entitled to receive and the defendant should certify and deliver bonds of the plaintiff to an amount not exceeding in all $204,000 par value thereof, in exchange for bonds of the same par value and amount of the Chest Creek Land and Improvement Company, now outstanding and which shall have heen or may be redeemed under the sinking fund provision contained in the mortgage of the Chest Creek Land and Improvement Company, with costs. Settle form of judgment on notice.
Ingraham, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred; Houghton, J., dissented.