1. When it is within the discretion of the court below to grant
or to refuse leave to file a cross-bill, the refusal to grant such
leave is no ground of appeal.
2. The Court will not review an alleged error respecting the
proof in a railroad foreclosure suit and the allowance of amounts
due to holders of mortgage
Page 109 U. S. 169
bonds if the evidence presented before the master is not before
it, and if no objection to the proof was taken below.
3. When mortgage creditors take no appeal from a decree of
foreclosure, the Court will not, in an appeal by the debtor,
inquire whether the creditor should not have had more.
The facts appear in the opinion of the Court. The points
presented in the briefs were mainly on the facts.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are appeals from the final decree in a suit brought by the
Liverpool, London & Globe Insurance Company to foreclose a
mortgage given by the Indiana Southern Railroad Company to William
H. Swift and Samuel J. Tilden, trustees, to secure an issue of
bonds, 1,500 of which, amounting in the aggregate to $1,500,000,
are held by the insurance company.
The suit was begun in a state court on the 13th of June, 1868,
but on the 24th of November, 1871, it was removed to the Circuit
Court of the United States for the District of Indiana. Among the
defendants when the removal was made were the Ohio &
Mississippi Railway Company and the Fort Wayne, Muncie &
Cincinnati Railroad Company.
The Indiana Southern Company acquired its title to the mortgaged
property in January, 1866, by purchase at a foreclosure sale of the
property of the Fort Wayne & Southern Railroad Company. When
this purchase was mad, the railroad was in an unfinished condition,
and the Indiana Southern Company itself abandoned all work upon it
early in 1867. A part only of the line was graded by these
companies, and no ties or rails were ever laid by either of them.
The Indiana Southern Company is confessedly insolvent. After the
proceedings for the foreclosure of the mortgage of the Fort Wayne
& Southern Company had been finished, after the mortgage by the
Indiana Southern Company to Swift and Tilden had been executed, and
after the commencement of this suit for its foreclosure, the Ohio
& Mississippi Company, and the
Page 109 U. S. 170
Fort Wayne, Muncie & Cincinnati Company each purchased from
the Fort Wayne & Southern Company a part of the line of that
company, the purchasing companies intending to use the property
purchased in the construction of their respective roads. They
claimed that the proceedings for the foreclosure of the mortgage of
the Fort Wayne & Southern Company were invalid, and that their
title by purchased from that company was superior to the title of
the Indiana Southern Company and its mortgagees. Upon their
purchase, they each entered into the possession of their respective
portions of the old line and proceeded to construct and finish
their several roads thereon.
On the 12th of September, 1872, Swift and Tilden, the trustees
of the Indiana Southern mortgage filed a cross-bill in the cause,
the object and purpose of which was to foreclose the mortgage for
the benefit of all bondholders and to quiet their title as against
the adverse claims of the Ohio & Mississippi, and Fort Wayne,
Muncie & Cincinnati Companies. The Indiana Southern Company has
never answered either the bill or the cross-bill, and on the 24th
of September, 1872, an order was entered in due form that the bill
and cross-bill be taken as confessed by that company. On the 14th
of November, 1873, a reference to a master was ordered to ascertain
and report the amounts due to bondholders on the Indiana Southern
mortgage. On the 18th of December, 1873, the Ohio & Mississippi
and Fort Wayne, Muncie & Cincinnati Companies each filed
answers to the bill and cross-bill setting up their respective
titles and what they had done pending the suit in the construction
of their roads upon and over a part of the original right of way
and grading of the Fort Wayne & Southern Company. Before this
time, an agreement of compromise had been entered into between the
insurance company and the two purchasing railroad companies, to
take effect if all the other parties in interest should give their
assent. This assent does not appear to have been obtained.
On the 21st of April, 1877, the master made a report stating the
amounts due the several bondholders who had proven their claims
before him, and on the 17th of May, the Indiana Southern Company
filed exceptions to all his allowances. On
Page 109 U. S. 171
the 2d of January, 1878, the same company appeared and moved to
set aside the order referring the case to the master, and also for
leave to file a cross-bill, the prayer of which was 1, that the
insurance company be required to take issue on the answers of the
two railroad companies; 2, that the Indiana Southern Company might
have leave to do the same thing, and 3, that a receiver be
appointed to take the possession of the property from the two
companies and hold it pending the suit. Leave to file this
cross-bill was refused, but no action was taken directly on the
motion to set aside the order of reference.
On the 2d of July, 1879, William H. Guion, claiming to have an
interest in the bonds held by the insurance company, filed a
petition to be admitted as a party to the suit for his own
protection. This petition was denied.
On the 28th of January, 1880, both the trustees and the
insurance company filed replications to the answers of the two
railroad companies, and the cause was thereupon submitted to the
court, by all the parties who had appeared and pleaded, on the
original and cross-bills, the answers thereto, the replications and
proofs, and on consideration a decree was entered, finding due to
the insurance company the full amount of the bonds held by it,
principal and interest, being more than $2,000,000, and to the
other parties who had presented their claims the sums reported in
their favor respectively by the master. It then ordered a sale of
the mortgaged property subject
"to the right of the Ohio & Mississippi Railway Company and
the Fort Wayne, Muncie & Cincinnati Railroad Company to remove
from said right of way or real estate any ties, rails, and other
structures by them respectively placed thereon, or, by proceedings
under their power of eminent domain, to appropriate such portions
of said right of way used and possessed by them respectively, on
making compensation therefor in accordance with law."
From this decree the Indiana Southern Company took an appeal,
giving security for costs only. Guion was also allowed an appeal on
giving bond and security for costs, but the transcript does not
show that he ever gave the bond.
Page 109 U. S. 172
The objections made to the decree by the Indiana Southern
Company are:
1. Because leave was refused the company to file its
cross-bill;
2. Because the amounts found due the respective bondholders were
not supported by sufficient evidence, and
3. Because of the reservations in favor of the Ohio &
Mississippi and Fort Wayne, Muncie & Cincinnati Companies.
The objection of Guion is that he was refused leave to become a
party to the suit.
As to the first objection of the railroad company, it is
sufficient to say that it was, under the circumstances, clearly
within the discretion of the court to refuse leave to file the
cross-bill. The object of the railroad company a was to get
replications to the answers of the two intervening, or, as they are
called in the argument, intruding railroad companies, and the
appointment of a receiver. The replications were afterwards filed
by the insurance company and the trustees, and the case was clearly
not one in which the appointment of a receiver would have been
proper. If it had been, no cross-bill was necessary to get the
appointment. The Indiana Southern Company was a party to the suit,
and could move in that particular as well without as with the
cross-bill.
As to the second objection, while this point is made in the
assignment of errors, it was not mentioned in the argument. The
evidence presented to the master in support of the claims of the
several appearing bondholders has not been set up. The master says
they each presented sworn statements of their title, and also
presented and filed with him their bonds and coupons. As no
objections were made to any of the proof, the claims were allowed
as presented. Under these circumstances, we cannot review the
decree in this particular.
As to the third objection, the railroad company has alone
appealed. The bondholders and trustees under the mortgage are
satisfied with the decree as it has been entered. The railroad
company has no other property which can be subjected to the payment
of the balance of the mortgage debt remaining due after the
mortgage is exhausted, and if the mortgagees are
Page 109 U. S. 173
satisfied with the security as it has been adjudged to them, we
see no reason for inquiring, on the suggestion of the railroad
company only at this late day, whether they might not have had
more.
The decree is affirmed.