County of Warren v. Marcy, 97 U. S.
96, affirmed to the point that all persons dealing with
property are bound to take notice of a suit pending with regard to
the title thereto, and will on their peril purchase the same from
any of the parties to the suit.
Page 130 U. S. 566
The conveyance by the trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund
of Florida, on the 10th February, 1871, to the Southern Inland
Navigation and Improvement Company was subject to such decree as
the court might reader in a suit commenced in the Circuit Court of
the United States for the Northern District of Florida against said
trustees and others on the 3d of November 1870, and as the
Navigation and Improvement Company was a party to that suit, and as
the decree of December 4, 1873, in that suit rescinded the
agreements which the company had with the trustees in respect of
lands constituting a part of the trust fund and restored to that
fund the lands conveyed or attempted to be conveyed to the company
by the trustees, the said deed of February 10, 1871, and the
mortgage by that company to the Union Trust Company of March 20,
1871, based upon it, are invalid as against the present trustees of
the Internal Improvement Fund.
In equity. Decree dismissing the bill. The case is stated in the
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
This suit arises out of certain transactions connected with the
execution of the Act of the General Assembly of Florida approved
January 6, 1855, providing for and encouraging a liberal system of
internal improvements in that state. Laws Fla. 1855, c. 610. By
that act, so much of the 500,000 acres of land granted to Florida
by the Act of Congress of March 3, 1845, as remained unsold, the
proceeds of the sale of such as were on hand and unappropriated,
all proceeds thereafter accruing from similar sales, and all the
swamp lands or lands subject to overflow, granted to Florida by the
Act of Congress approved September 28, 1850, with all the proceeds
accrued and to accrue from their sale, were set apart and declared
a distinct and separate fund, to be called the "Internal
Improvement Fund of the Florida." The general object and scope of
the act are stated in
State of Florida v. Anderson,
91 U. S. 667,
91 U. S. 670,
91 U. S. 676,
where it was said that these lands and their proceeds
"were vested in the governor,
Page 130 U. S. 567
the comptroller, treasurer, attorney general, and register of
state lands, and their successors in office, in trust, to dispose
of the same, and invest their proceeds, with power to pledge the
fund for the payment of the interest on the bonds (to the extent of
$10,000 per mile) which might be issued by any railroad companies
constructing roads on certain lines indicated by the act. The
companies, after completing their roads, were to pay, besides
interest on their bonds, one percent per annum on the amount
thereof, to form a sinking fund for the ultimate payment of the
principal. The act declared that the bonds should constitute a
first lien or mortgage on the roads, their equipment and
franchises, and, upon a failure on the part of any railroad company
accepting the act to provide the interest and the payments to the
sinking fund as required thereby, it was made the duty of the
trustees to take possession of the railroad and all its property
and advertise the same for sale at public auction."
In the same case, it was said that the trustees are merely
agents of the state, invested with the legal title of the lands for
their more convenient administration, and that the state remains in
every respect the beneficial proprietor, subject to the guarantees
which have been made to the holders of railroad bonds secured
thereby.
See also Railroad Companies v. Schutte,
103 U. S. 118;
Littlefield v. Improvement Fund Trustees, 117 U.
S. 419;
Vose v. Reed, 1 Woods 647;
Vose v.
Trustees of Improvement Fund, 2 Woods 647.
On the 3d of November, 1870, Francis Vose brought a suit in
equity in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern
District of Florida against said trustees and others. Among the
defendants were the Florida Canal & Inland Transportation
Company, the Southern Inland Navigation Company (described in some
parts of the bill and in some of the interrogatories annexed as the
Southern Inland Navigation & Improvement Company), the New York
and Florida Lumber, Land, and Improvement Company, and M. S.
Mickles, agent of the last-named company. The object of that suit
was to obtain an injunction and decree protecting the Internal
Improvement Fund against waste and misappropriation by the
Page 130 U. S. 568
trustees, to the injury of Vose and others, who held unpaid
bonds issued by the Florida Railroad Company in conformity with the
act of 1855. The bill charged that the trustees had violated the
law of their trust by misappropriating money received by them,
leaving unpaid past-due coupons, by neglecting to collect the
amount due the sinking fund created by the act of 1855, and by
illegally conveying millions of acres of land to corporations that
had no right to receive them, and that unless restrained they would
continue to waste and misapply, to the irreparable injury of the
plaintiff, Vose, and others, the fund entrusted to them for the use
and purposes indicated in the act. Among other allegations in the
bill was one to the effect that
"on the 28th day of July, 1868, the said trustees, by resolution
of that date, attempted to secure to the said Southern Inland
Navigation and Improvement Company forty thousand acres, or
thereabouts, of the said trust lands, and that about the 1st of
March, 1870, they entered into an agreement with the said New York
and Florida Lumber, Land and Improvement Company, by which they
undertook to convey one million one hundred thousand acres of the
same for the nominal price of 10 cents an acre, and that this vast
domain was and is to be selected from the most valuable of the said
trust lands."
On the 6th of December, 1870, the circuit court issued an
injunction to the trustees and their successors, commanding them,
among other things, to desist "from selling or donating or
disposing of the land belonging to said trust otherwise than in
strict accordance with the provisions of said act of 1855," and
"from selling said lands for scrip or state warrants of any kind,
or for aught other than current money of the United States." This
injunction was duly served upon the trustees within a few days
after it was issued.
On the 6th of February, 1871, an order was made reciting the
service of subpoena in chancery upon the "defendants" in conformity
with the rules and practice of the court, and the bill was taken
for confessed (except as to the defendant Walker) for want of an
answer, plea, or demurrer. The trustees of the Internal Improvement
Fund subsequently appeared and were permitted to file their answer
controverting
Page 130 U. S. 569
the principal allegations of the bill. On the 10th of February,
1871, four days after the bill had been taken for confessed, a
majority of the trustees, "for and in the consideration of the sum
of one dollar to them in hand paid," conveyed to the Southern
Inland Navigation and Improvement Company 1,360,600 acres of land,
and shortly thereafter, March 20, 1871, the latter company
mortgaged the above and other lands obtained from the trustees of
the Internal Improvement Fund, to secure the payment of bonds for a
very large amount, which the mortgagor company proposed to
issue.
By a decree rendered December 4, 1873, in the suit brought by
Vose it was, among other things, adjudged that
"the contracts or agreements entered into by the trustees of the
Internal Improvement Fund with the corporation known as the
'Southern Inland Navigation and Improvement Company,' be rescinded,
and the same are hereby declared to be null and void, and the lands
undertaken to be conveyed or contracted to be conveyed shall be
restored to the said Internal Improvement Fund, and be subjected to
sale by the agents appointed by decree of this court, rendered
during the term in accordance with the provisions of said
decree."
Subsequently, in May, 1875, the Southern Inland Navigation and
Improvement Company filed its petition in the Vose suit praying
that the decree of December 4, 1873, be vacated and it be permitted
to file such pleadings as were necessary for the defense of its
interests. The grounds upon which this relief was asked were that
the company had not been made a party to the suit, nor served with
a subpoena. These grounds were controverted in an answer filed by
Vose to the petition. The questions thus raised were heard by MR.
JUSTICE BRADLEY, March 26, 1877, who found that the Southern Inland
Navigation and Improvement Company was duly made a party to the
bill filed by Vose, was served with process of subpoena thereon,
and failed and neglected to appear and answer the bill. Its prayer
to vacate the order or decree of December 4, 1873, and to permit it
to file necessary pleadings in that suit was denied.
Page 130 U. S. 570
The present suit was instituted April 12, 1883, by the Union
Trust Company of New York against the Southern Inland Navigation
and Improvement Company and the trustees of the Internal
Improvement Fund. Its object is to obtain a decree adjudging that
the said trustees have no right, title, or interest in the lands
embraced in the mortgage of February 10, 1871; that the same are
subject to said mortgage, and that the property so mortgaged be
sold to pay the amount found to be due upon any outstanding bonds
secured by that mortgage. The principal defense rests upon the
above proceedings, orders, and decrees in the Vose suit. The bill
was dismissed with costs, and from the decree of dismissal the
present appeal was prosecuted.
The argument at the bar covered several questions of an
interesting character which we do not deem it necessary to
determine, as the decree below must be affirmed upon the ground
that the deed of February 10, 1871, by the trustees of the Internal
Improvement Fund to the Southern Inland Navigation and Improvement
Company -- under which deed the present plaintiff, as mortgagee of
the grantee, claims title -- was made in violation of the
injunction previously issued and served upon said trustees in the
suit instituted by Vose. That suit, as we have seen, had for its
object the protection of the rights of Vose and other holders of
railroad bonds in the lands and money under the control of the
trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund. The injunction bound the
trustees, and they and all other parties to the suit who were
before the court were concluded by the decree subsequently rendered
in respect to the disposition of the lands that were the subject
matter of the litigation. In
County of Warren v. Marcy,
97 U. S. 96,
97 U. S. 105, it
was said to be a general rule that
"all persons dealing with property are bound to take notice of a
suit pending with regard to the title thereto, and will, on their
peril, purchase the same from any of the parties to the suit."
While this rule was said not to apply to negotiable securities
purchased before maturity nor to articles of ordinary commerce sold
in the usual way, it was held to be applicable in cases relating to
land. And in support of this view was
Page 130 U. S. 571
cited the case of
Murray v Ballou, 1 Johns.Ch. 566, in
which Chancellor Kent laid it down as an established rule that
"a
lis pendens, duly prosecuted and not collusive, is
notice to a purchaser so as to affect and bind his interest by the
decree, and the
lis pendens begins from the service of the
subpoena, after the bill is filed."
Here, the Southern Inland Navigation and Improvement Company
accepted a conveyance of the lands in question from the trustees of
the Internal Improvement Fund, after service of the subpoena, and a
copy of the injunction, upon the trustees, its grantors. That
company therefore took its titles
pendente lite, and its
mortgagee, the Union Trust Company, was bound by the final decree
rendered in the case to the same extent that it is bound.
It is, however, suggested that the Southern Inland Navigation
and Improvement Company was not a party to the Vose suit, and
consequently was not bound by that part of the decree of December
4, 1873, adjudging that the contracts or agreements entered into by
the trustees with that company
"be rescinded, and the same are declared null and void, and the
lands undertaken to be conveyed, or contracted to be conveyed,
shall be restored to the said Internal Improvement Fund, and be
subjected to sale by the agents appointed by the court."
To this suggestion there are two answers.
First. The
question whether the Southern Inland Navigation and Improvement
Company was a party defendant to the Vose suit, and therefore
affected by the decree
pro confesso, passed February 6,
1871, was determined adversely to it by the order of March 26,
1877, denying its application to have the order of December 4,
1873, set aside. From the order of March 26, 1877, no appeal was
prosecuted, and in this collateral proceeding that order is to be
taken as conclusively establishing the fact that the Southern
Inland Navigation Company was a party to the Vose suit, was served
with process of subpoena therein, and neglected to appear and
answer the bill.
Second. The relief granted in the Vose
suit in respect to the agreement or contracts which the Southern
Inland Navigation and Improvement Company claimed to have with the
trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund was within the general
scope of
Page 130 U. S. 572
that suit, and was fairly covered by the prayer for such relief
as might be deemed just and equitable. Besides, if that company was
a party to the Vose suit, and we have seen that it was, the decree,
so far as it rescinds the agreement or contracts it had with the
trustees, and restores to the Internal Improvement Fund the lands
covered by these contracts, was not void. If erroneous, it could
only be avoided by an appeal. It cannot be questioned in this
collateral proceeding.
It results from what has been said that the conveyance by the
trustees to the Southern Inland Navigation Company was subject to
such decree as the court might render in the Vose suit, and as the
decree of December 4, 1873, rescinded the agreements which the
latter had with the former in respect to lands constituting a part
of the trust fund, and restored to that fund the lands conveyed, or
attempted to be conveyed, to that company by the trustees, the
conveyance of February 10, 1871, and the mortgage of March 20,
1871, based upon it, are invalid as against the present trustees of
the Internal Improvement Fund of Florida.
Decree affirmed.