While a railroad was in the hands of a receiver, appointed in a
suit for the foreclosure of a mortgage upon it, the court
authorized the receiver to borrow money and to issue certificates
of indebtedness, to be a lien upon the property prior to the
mortgage debt, and to part with them at a rate not less than ninety
cents on the dollar. The receiver borrowed money on hypothecation
of some of these certificates. The property was decreed to be sold
subject to liens established on then pending references.
Held that the hypothecated certificates were not liens to
the extent of their face, but that a decree directing the debts
secured by them to be paid in them at the rata of ninety cents on
the dollar to the extent of the money actually advanced, and making
that amount of certificates a lien, would be upheld in equity.
Page 110 U. S. 603
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is an outgrowth of a foreclosure suit brought by the
trustees in a first mortgage executed by the Alabama &
Chattanooga Railroad Company upon its road, property, rights, and
franchises, to secure the payment of bonds by it issued. The
history of that suit is given in the opinion just rendered in
Swann v. Wright's Executor. The terms of the several
orders and decrees in the foreclosure suit, so far as they affect
the rights of parties now before us, are set forth in that opinion,
and need not be here repeated.
Among the claims presented against the trust fund in the
foreclosure suit was one by appellee Clark for alleged loans made
to the receivers, for which the latter hypothecated to him
forty-five receivers' certificates. Commissioner Phillips found
that such hypothecation was unauthorized by the orders of the court
under and in virtue of which the certificates were issued. But he
reported that, upon principles of equity, those claims, to the
extent of moneys actually advanced to the receivers and applied to
the benefit of the trust estate, should be allowed and paid in
certificates at ninety cents on the dollar. The amount advanced by
Clark was ascertained to be $16,760.89, and for that sum, with
interest to September 1, 1875, amounting in all to $19,658.01, the
commissioner reported that he should be allowed, in certificates,
the sum of $21,842.23. These conclusions were sustained by the
court; but, as it appeared that the Clark certificates were, or
were supposed to be, in the hands of different parties, and
inasmuch as the rights of those parties could not be determined
from the reports of the commissioner, those certificates were not
allowed, and the parties were required to litigate their respective
rights with each other by bills filed in the same court, thereby
"to ascertain and settle the amount that the said trust fund is
liable for, and who are entitled to any, and which of said
certificates."
It was in consequence of this direction that the present suit
was brought by appellees, who unitedly held thirty-seven
Page 110 U. S. 604
of the forty-five certificates (as to two of which no further
claim on the trust fund was asserted by Clark), the remaining six
being held by some person to appellees then unknown. The object of
the suit was to obtain a decree adjudging that receivers'
certificates to the amount of the moneys advanced by Clark, with
interest thereon, be allowed to the petitioners and to the holder
of the six certificates -- the certificates so allowed to be
established as a prior lien upon the railroad and other property
purchased by Swann. The latter appeared and answered; and,
admitting that Clark had loaned the receivers $16,760.89, he denied
that he or any persons claiming under him were entitled to be paid
in said certificates, or any of them, or that the claim asserted
was a lien on the property to the prejudice of the rights of
himself or of the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company. A decree
was rendered wherein it was found that the amount, principal and
interest, of the loan by Clark was, on September 1, 1875,
$21,842.23. It was adjudged that the appellees, as the holders of
thirty-seven of the certificates, were entitled to thirty-seven of
forty-three of the total amount due, or the sum of $18,794.47. At
the instance of Swann, the court required appellees to hold three
certificates, subject to the further order of the court, for the
protection of the unknown holder of the six certificates, who, it
was suggested, might show himself entitled to be paid in full, and
petitioners were given leave to move at the next term for the
allowance of the suspended certificates. All the other
certificates, as well as the notes given by the receivers for the
moneys so loaned to them, were surrendered and destroyed. The
certificates so allowed were established by the decree as liens on
the mortgaged property.
A rehearing was asked by Swann at the succeeding term, but the
application therefor was denied. At that term, appellees asked to
have the suspension placed upon the before-mentioned three
certificates removed. Thereupon, E. J. Fallon presented his
petition in the cause, showing that the before-mentioned six
certificates had come into the possession of the Alabama Great
Southern Railroad Company through a settlement had between it and
J. C. Stanton, by the terms of which
Page 110 U. S. 605
the latter agreed to deliver to that company a large number of
receivers' certificates of admitted and ascertained validity; that
the company did not concede the six certificates to be valid, but
received them from said Stanton to be held as security only for his
delivery of a like number of admitted and ascertained validity;
which being done, they were to be returned to him. For that
purpose, and in that manner, Fallon averred in his petition, the
said six certificates were held by him as agent of the company. He
claimed that they had been originally transferred to D. N. Stanton,
from whom J. C. Stanton acquired them, and that if any of the
forty-five certificates were allowed, the six above named were
entitled to be paid in full before appellees received anything. He
asked that he and J. C. Stanton be made parties defendant, to the
end that none of the rights of said Stanton should be prejudiced by
any neglect upon the part of the company. He was made a defendant,
and his petition directed to be taken as his answer.
Upon final hearing, the three suspended certificates, with
coupons maturing after September 1, 1875, were allowed to the
appellees, while three certificates in full and a fourth one for
$47.75 were allowed to Fallon -- the excess in certificates and
coupons held by Fallon to be surrendered.
From this decree Swann, Fallon, and the Alabama Great Southern
Railroad Company appealed.
The main question to be determined is that which arises between
Swann and the appellees touching the alleged lien upon the property
sold in the foreclosure suit, for the certificates allowed to the
appellees. If the lien established in favor of appellees for the
amount of those certificates belongs to the class, subject to which
the property was sold, purchased, and conveyed, then, for the
reasons stated in
Swann v. Wright's Executor, Swann is not
at liberty to raise any objection to the allowance of such
certificates to the extent of the moneys originally advanced by
Clark to the receivers. The decree of August 26, 1872, under and in
virtue of which the receivers' certificates were issued, reserved a
prior lien to secure the payment of all moneys raised, through the
receivers, by loan or which might be advanced to them, for the
purposes expressed in the orders
Page 110 U. S. 606
of the court. While the receivers were adjudged not to have
authority to hypothecate certificates, as was done in Clark's case,
yet, as early in the litigation as January 23, 1874, the date of
the first decree of sale, the court -- having before it the report
of Commissioner Burke, and being thereby informed of Clark's claim,
as well for moneys advanced to the receivers as of a lien therefor
-- declared in that decree that nothing therein should impair the
rights of "holders of certificates under hypothecation to the
extent of money loaned and advanced on the same" for the purposes
contemplated by its orders, "with interest and expense added
thereto." And the decree of February 14, 1876, based upon the
report of Commissioner Phillips, shows upon its face that the court
recognized the soundness of the rule suggested by him, which
required the payment, in certificates, of all claims for moneys in
good faith advanced to the receivers, and applied to the benefit of
the trust estate. By that decree, it was ordered that the holders
of the forty-five certificates interplead in the same court, so
that the court would be informed as to the amount for which the
trust fund was liable. This was not a disallowance of these claims
as liens, but only a suspension of them until the suit thus
directed to be brought was ended. They were pending and
undetermined when the decree of December 4, 1876, was made. That
decree, we have seen, required the sale to be made
"subject to all liens established, or which shall be
established, by said court in this cause, on references heretofore
had and now pending, as prior and superior to the lien of the
holders of bonds issued under the first mortgage."
The claims in question had theretofore been the subject of
reference to commissioners, and, within any just interpretation of
the words of the decree, they were the subject of pending
references unless it be that the court, by requiring the parties to
litigate them in a new suit between themselves, instead of
requiring them to disclose their interests before a commissioner,
intended to make a distinction between liens established by means
of a formal reference to the commissioner, and those established in
an independent suit brought in conformity with its orders. But that
supposition is inadmissible, especially in view of the fact,
apparent upon
Page 110 U. S. 607
the face of the decree of February 14, 1876, that numerous
claims, similar in their origin to Clark's, and secured by
hypothecated certificates, were then, before the final decree of
sale, allowed, payable in certificates at ninety cents on the
dollar. It is manifest from the decree that the court would then
have allowed the Clark claims, to the extent of money actually
loaned to the receivers, and applied for the benefit of the trust,
and paid them in certificates had it been possible at that time to
determine the actual ownership of the forty-five certificates. And
this view is strengthened by the further fact that, in the decree
of June 19, 1877, confirming the sale to Swann, subject to the
liens described in the decree of December 4, 1876, the court
expressly freed the trust estate from liability to certain persons
on account of hypothecated certificates held by them, but does not
name the forty-five certificates as among the number so cut
off.
It seems to us entirely clear that, by the decree of sale, the
liens which were attached to such certificates as the court might
award, on account of the moneys loaned to the receivers by Clark,
were among those expressly subject to which Swann purchased, and
received title to, the property. Consequently, for the reasons
stated in
Swann v. Wright's Executors, the property is
liable to the holders of such certificates.
This disposes of all that there is of substance in the case. We
perceive nothing of merit in the appeals of Fallon and the Alabama
Great Southern Railroad Company. Upon the issue as to whether the
property was liable for the amount of the certificates awarded to
appellees, the only necessary party defendant was Swann, the
purchaser. The railroad company was a purchaser
pendente
lite, and was not entitled to be made a party to issues
pending and undetermined when it purchased. That company was, upon
the showing made by its agent, the holder of the before-mentioned
six certificates which were made payable to bearer. It placed the
certificates in his hands for the purpose of having him present
them in court for allowance in full. He did appear and was made a
party. Waiving any inquiry as to whether the amount involved in the
appeal, so far as it concerns Fallon or those whom he represents,
is
Page 110 U. S. 608
large enough for our jurisdiction, it is sufficient to say that
no facts were disclosed which entitled the six certificates to be
paid in full. We perceive no error in the decree as to him or the
company, and it is
Affirmed.