1. Where a right to recover as the result of a judicial sale
made under decrees both of the courts of the United States and of a
state other than that in which the action is brought, is
unquestionably set up in the complaint, federal questions exist in
the record, and a motion to dismiss must be denied.
2. Questions involved in the construction of a contract for the
advancement of money and its repayment and the effect of the lien
which the lender has on the accounts pledged as security for such
repayment, are not federal in their nature, and this Court must
assume that the construction given by the highest court of the
state in which the action was brought is correct.
3. Where the highest court of a state has construed decrees made
by a United States court and a state court of another state
authorizing the sale of certain accounts by a receiver as merely
authorizing a sale of the receiver's right, title and interest in
such accounts, and that such right, title and interest was subject
to the lien of one who had advanced money on the faith of a
contract authorizing him to collect such accounts and repay himself
thereout, such construction is not an unreasonable one, and the
burden rests upon the plaintiff in error to show that such
construction is in violation of the due faith and credit clause of
the federal Constitution. And the judgment will be affirmed unless
the record shows with certainty that such construction did deny due
faith and credit to the decrees in question.
A Tennessee corporation, styled the Commercial Publishing
Company, brought this action in a court of the State of New York to
recover from Samuel C. Beckwith a sum of money which, it was
averred, belonged to the publishing company. It was alleged in the
complaint that the right was derived from one Crawford, who, it was
averred, became the owner of certain newspaper advertising
accounts, on which payments had been made to Beckwith, the
aggregate thereof constituting the amount sued for. The manner in
which Crawford was asserted to have acquired the ownership of the
accounts will appear in the following statement summarized from the
pleadings:
Page 188 U. S. 568
On September 30, 1893 an action was begun in the Chancery Court
of Shelby County, Tennessee, to foreclose a deed of trust which had
been made by the Memphis Appeal Company, publishers of a newspaper
known as the Memphis Appeal-Avalanche. Samuel C. Beckwith was made
a party defendant to the cause. Contemporaneously with the filing
of the bill, a receiver of the assets of the newspaper company was
appointed, and he continued the publication of the paper. Although
the complaint in the action at bar did not set out the nature of
the controversy in the Tennessee suit between the trustees, who
were plaintiffs in the action, and Beckwith, it was alleged that, a
short time after the bill was filed, Beckwith procured the removal
to a circuit court of the United States of a separate controversy
existing between himself and the trustees, in which court, it was
averred, such controversy thereafter continued. Subsequently, it
was alleged, other actions were filed in the Tennessee court
against the Memphis Appeal Company, which actions were ultimately
consolidated with the trustee cause. It was charged that, in the
month of April, 1894, like decrees were simultaneously entered in
the consolidated actions in the state court and in the one which
had been removed to the United States court, and that, under such
decrees, a sale was had on June 16, 1894, of the property vested in
the receiver, including the accounts due said receiver,
representing moneys earned by the receiver in the operation of the
newspaper, of which the accounts upon which Beckwith had collected
the money sued for formed a part. At this sale, it was alleged,
Crawford became the purchaser of all the property embraced in the
order of sale, and he thereafter assigned his purchase to the
plaintiff.
In an amended answer, Beckwith admitted having collected and
retained the moneys sued for, and specially denied the other
allegations of the complaint. He also set up as a defense that he
had collected the moneys in question rightfully, under the
authority of an agreement with the Memphis Appeal Company made
prior to the execution of the deed of trust heretofore referred to.
He further alleged that the receiver never acquired title to the
moneys, and had never offered for sale or
Page 188 U. S. 569
sold any right or title thereto. Subsequently, by supplemental
answer, it was alleged that, after the execution of the decrees of
sale, and on appeal from a final decree which had been entered in
the consolidated cause, the Supreme Court of the State of Tennessee
adjudicated that the trust deed and all proceedings based thereon
were null and void, and that, by reason thereof, the sale in
question was a nullity.
The action at bar was tried by a jury upon an agreed statement
of facts. By direction of the court, there was a verdict in favor
of the plaintiff for the full amount claimed. This judgment was
affirmed by the appellate division of the Supreme Court of the
State of New York. An appeal was then taken to the court of appeals
of the state, which reversed the judgment, and ordered the
complaint to be dismissed with costs. 167 N.Y. 329. The judgment of
the court of appeals having been made that of the trial court, a
writ of error from this Court was prosecuted.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
As in the complaint the plaintiff in error unquestionably set up
a right to recover as the result of a judicial sale made under
decrees, both of courts of the United States and of a state,
federal questions exist in the record, and the motion which has
been made to dismiss is therefore denied.
Coming to the merits, the questions for decision are whether due
effect was given by the Court of Appeals of New York to the decrees
in question.
Jacobs v. Marks, 182 U.
S. 583,
182 U. S.
587.
Two questions were considered by the state court in its opinion,
viz.: (1) the meaning and effect of the contract entered into
between Beckwith and the Memphis Appeal Company, and (2) whether
the rights of Beckwith under the contract had been conclusively
adjudicated by the prior litigation in Tennessee.
Page 188 U. S. 570
The agreement referred to was evidenced by two letters and
indorsements thereon, and a copy thereof is contained in the
margin. [
Footnote 1]
Page 188 U. S. 571
In disposing of the first question, the court held that
"the clause of the agreement giving to the defendant [Beckwith]
the right to collect all of the bills was evidently intended to
give him the control of the proceeds resulting from the
advertisements, so that he could apply the same upon his loan to
the amount of 1,000 per month,"
and that the clause referred to "was in the nature of an
equitable pledge of the receipts for that purpose." It was further
held that the receiver of the newspaper took possession of the
assets and business thereof subject to the liens and obligations of
the corporation (in other words, took only the interest which the
corporation had in the property which it assumed to possess and
own), and as the receiver
"accepted and published the advertisements procured by the
defendant [Beckwith], he [the receiver] must be deemed to have done
so under the contract which the defendant [Beckwith] had with the
corporation, and under that contract the defendant had the right to
collect the moneys accruing for such advertisements, and to retain
out of such collections a sum not to exceed $1,000 per month, to be
applied upon the loan."
It is manifest that the question of the proper construction of
this contract being nonfederal in its nature, is not subject to
review, and we consequently assume that the construction was
correct.
The second question was treated as involving only the issue of
res judicata. Considering the final decree entered in the
consolidated action, and the decree as subsequently entered by the
trial court upon the mandate of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, it
was decided that the Tennessee court
"did not adjudicate nor attempt to determine . . . [the] right
[of Beckwith] to
Page 188 U. S. 572
the moneys received by him for advertisements inserted in the
paper by the receiver after his appointment."
The court then said -- evidently assuming that the last decree
embodied the direction for sales --
"Under the judgment, the purchaser became entitled to all the
moneys due and owing to the receiver by reason of the publication
of the paper, but moneys that did not belong to the receiver, or to
which he was not entitled, did not pass to the purchaser, and we
find nothing in the prior decree that is an adjudication upon this
question."
In effect, therefore, the Court of Appeals of New York construed
the decrees of sale and held that the direction to sell merely
authorized a sale of the right, title, and interest of the receiver
in the accounts in question, and left for future determination in
any controversy which might arise in respect thereto the question
of the extent of the interest, if any, of the receiver in such
accounts.
The sole contentions which are open for our consideration are
did this judgment fail to give full faith and credit to the
judicial proceedings in the Tennessee courts as required by Section
1 of Article IV of the Constitution and did it deny due efficacy to
a title or right claimed under an authority exercised under the
United States? It is strenuously argued that, properly interpreted,
the decrees directed a sale of the accounts as they stood on the
books of the receiver, and that the effect of the decrees and the
sale made thereunder was that any right to or lien possessed by
Beckwith in the moneys due upon the accounts was transferred to the
proceeds of sale of all the property of the Memphis Appeal.
In considering this question, it is to be observed that the
records of the proceedings in the actions in which the decrees
relied upon were rendered were not offered at the trial below, but
that the case was disposed of solely upon an agreed statement of
facts, to which certain of the decrees made in those actions were
annexed as exhibits. To this agreed statement, therefore, and to it
alone, we are to look for the purpose of determining the question
presented for decision. A summary of the statement will be found in
the margin. [
Footnote 2]
Page 188 U. S. 573
It is to be borne in mind that, upon the plaintiff in error
rested the burden of establishing that the decrees of sale were not
given the due effect to which they were entitled, and if it has
Page 188 U. S. 574
failed to sustain such burden, this Court cannot say that error
was committed by the judgment below rendered.
The decrees of sale were made in the consolidated action in
Page 188 U. S. 575
the state court and in the action pending in the United States
court, and preceded, by nearly two years, the making of the final
decree, which, however, was entered only in the consolidated cause,
and not in the action pending in the United States court. It is
disclosed by the record that, in two of the actions which were
consolidated -- that filed by the trustee and one on behalf of
certain employees of the Memphis Appeal Company -- liens were
asserted upon all the assets which came into the possession of the
receiver,
viz., those embraced in the deed of trust which
was sought to be foreclosed. The deed of trust was made long after
the execution of the contract between Beckwith and the Memphis
Appeal Company, and vested rights, if any, of Beckwith were not
affected by the execution of the deed or by the appointment of a
receiver. The agreed statement is silent as to what was the
controversy between the trustees and Beckwith, but Beckwith, in the
correspondence with the receiver, claimed that his contract right
was unaffected by the receivership. Now in the recital in the
decrees of sale of the property to be sold, there is first an
enumeration of property generally, in language similar to that
contained in the deed of trust; there is then an exemption from
sale of uncollected book accounts accruing prior to the appointment
of the receiver, and next is the following recital:
"All accounts which may be or are to become due to the receiver
by reason of the operation of the newspaper in his hands will pass
to and be acquired by the purchaser at this sale, who will become
the full owner of the same."
It may be fairly inferred that Beckwith then was,
Page 188 U. S. 576
and prior thereto had been, making direct collections from
advertisers under the assumed authority of the contract, and he was
undoubtedly asserting the right to retain the moneys which he might
collect upon advertisements which had been procured by him. The sum
due upon such accounts for advertisements published by the receiver
was small as compared with the main assets in the custody of the
receiver, yet, in that portion of the decree which made the liens
and encumbrances operative against the proceeds of sale, the entire
proceeds of sale, and not the proceeds of a particular portion of
the property sold, were made subject to all liens and encumbrances
sought to be enforced in the litigation.
As before stated, the record shows that in two of the actions
which had been consolidated, the complainants were asserting liens
against all the property which had come into the possession of the
receiver, and the decree of sale recites that the sale was ordered
upon the motion of the complainants. Beckwith nowhere appears to
have been an active participant in obtaining such decree or
assenting thereto. It does not even appear that, at the time of the
entry of the decrees of sale, he was a party to any of the actions
which had been consolidated, for it cannot in reason be so inferred
from the mere circumstance that, nearly two years after, on the
entry of the final decree, he is referred to therein as being a
cross-complainant in one of the actions seeking to enforce a lien,
the nature of which was not disclosed.
The stipulations contained in the agreed statement, particularly
the recitals in subdivision numbered 13, lend color to the
construction that, as respects the accounts in question, all that
was intended to be sold was the right, title, and interest of the
receiver therein, the nature and extent of which title was left
unadjudicated. The expression "the property aforesaid," used in the
paragraph, it may well be argued, was intended to refer to
something distinct from the accounts in question, and the language
may properly be interpreted as relating to the property covered by
the trust deed, which came into the possession of the receiver. A
reasonable construction of the paragraph can be adopted supporting
the claim that, as regards the accounts,
Page 188 U. S. 577
all that was sold was the right, title, and interest of the
receiver therein. In the light, therefore, of all the circumstances
which have been detailed, we cannot sustain the contention of the
plaintiff in error that the guaranty clause of the decrees,
transferring liens upon the property to the proceeds of sale, was
intended to apply to the accounts in question without indulging in
conjecture and giving to the plaintiff in error the benefit of the
doubts which arise as to the precise meaning of the decrees.
The parties having chosen to try the case on a statement of
facts, which does not afford us the means of saying with that
certainty which is required, that the judgment below denied due
faith and credit to the decrees in question, we cannot, in view of
the burden of proof, reverse the judgment below, and it is
therefore
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
"Memphis, Tenn. Jan. 3, 1891"
"S. C. Beckwith"
"48 Tribune Building, New York City"
"Dear Sir: --"
"In consideration of special efforts which you pledge yourself
to make in our behalf to the best of your efforts and ability, and
furthermore, in consideration of allowing you nothing in the shape
of salary, office rents, or traveling expenses, we hereby authorize
and appoint you our sole and exclusive agent for a term of five
years from September 1st, 1891, and sooner if possible, on a plain
commission basis of twenty-five percent on all business for all
that portion of the United States, north of a line running east and
west with the southerly boundary of Ohio, Missouri, embracing
Cincinnati and St. Louis, including these two points."
"All applications for rates, space, etc., from aforesaid
territory to be referred to you, and in case we should make a deal
direct with any parties, agent, or advertisers, from your territory
(which, however, is not contemplated), we will allow you the
commission named upon same, and refer it to you for
collection."
"You are to collect all bills and render monthly statements, and
to be held responsible for all accounts, except where a concern
should fail through no fault of yours, and, in event of that, you
are simply to lose your commission, but not to be liable beyond
that."
"You are not to represent any other morning paper in the State
of Tennessee or Arkansas without our consent in writing, but to do
all you can in every way, and at all times, within the above
territory, to advance the interests of the Appeal-Avalanche."
"Memphis Appeal-Avalanche Company"
"T. B. Hatchett, Bus. Manager"
"Accepted. S.C. Beckwith"
"Memphis, Tenn. Jan. 3, 1891"
"The Memphis Appeal Company"
"Memphis, Tenn."
"Gentlemen: In consideration of a contract this day entered into
by and between us, I hereby agree to advance to you thirty thousand
dollars ($30,000), as follows:"
"$5,000 in cash on or before January 7th, $5,000 on or before
the 12th of January, 1891, then $5,000 on the 26th of January,
1891, to take up your note now in the Nassau Bank of N.Y. for that
amount. And $15,000 from time to time as you may advise me and so
desire."
"The amount named of $30,000 to be loaned you on the Appeal
Company's notes, indorsed by W. A. Collier, and I am to be further
secured by a deposit as collateral of an equal amount of the
capital stock of your company, and which stock shall not be
increased without my consent during the term of this loan; neither
shall any encumbrance be placed upon same."
"Said loan and interest at six percent to be paid me in monthly
installments by moneys coming into my hands from the advertising in
your paper, in amounts, say $1,000 per month, until paid."
"S.C. Beckwith"
"O.K.: Memphis Appeal Company"
"T. B. Hatchett, Business Manager."
"(Endorsed): As the debt is reduced, I will surrender stock
collateral
pro rata. -- S. C. Beckwith."
[
Footnote 2]
On January 3, 1891, the Memphis Appeal Company, then engaged in
publishing a newspaper at Memphis, entered into the contract with
Beckwith which has heretofore been set out. Beckwith made the
advances stipulated and $20,000 thereof was owing to him at the
time the action at bar was instituted. While the Memphis Appeal
Company was a going concern, Beckwith, under the contract
aforesaid, procured advertising orders, the indebtedness upon which
collected by him was the basis of the recovery sought in this
action. After the making of the contract and prior to September 30,
1893, the Memphis Appeal Company executed a deed of trust upon its
property to secure certain creditors. On the date named, Andrew D.
Gwynne and others, the trustees under the deed of trust, brought
suit to enforce that instrument. Beckwith was made a party
defendant, and a receiver was appointed, who took possession of the
property of the Memphis Appeal Company and continued the
publication of its newspaper from September 30, 1893, to June 16,
1894. On October 5, 1893, Beckwith procured the removal of the
controversy between himself and the trustees into a court of the
United States, and that controversy there continued, though it does
not appear how it was terminated, if it ever was.
Beckwith served written notice on the receiver that he claimed
that his rights under the contract were not affected by the
appointment of the receiver, and the receiver replied disputing the
right of Beckwith to collect moneys for advertising matter which
might be published by the receiver.
After the institution of the trustee suit, sundry actions were
filed in the same court by general creditors and others against the
Memphis Appeal Company, which were afterwards consolidated with the
trustee suit. In April, 1894, in the consolidated action, and in
the action pending in the United States court, a decree of sale was
entered, "on the motion of the several complainants," directing a
sale of the property in the hands of the receiver, because of the
asserted fact that the property was deteriorating and was not
self-supporting. The property which was ordered to be sold, after
due advertisement, was thus described in the order:
"The Memphis Appeal-Avalanche newspaper, with all the rights,
privileges, benefits, franchises, etc., belonging to or in any way
pertaining to same, together with its goodwill, subscription list,
advertising patronage, income, and profits, and all the machinery,
appliances, furniture, material, property, assets, etc., of every
kind and description, and the general outfit of the newspaper now
in the hands of the receiver in these causes."
"He will sell all and every kind and description of property in
his hands, saving and except the uncollected book accounts of the
Memphis Appeal Company accruing prior to his appointment as
receiver and which were placed in his hands for collection. Such of
these accounts as remain uncollected will not be sold."
"All accounts which may be or are to become due to the receiver
by reason of the operation of the newspaper in his hands will pass
to and be acquired by the purchaser at this sale, who will become
the full owner of the same. And such purchaser will take the
property decreed to be sold herein, subject to all of the contract
obligations incurred by the receiver, and will assume the payment
of same, including any amount due the receiver on the day of sale
for overchecks made by him for personal advances on account of the
property in his hands. Excepting only the certificates issued by
the receiver for the payment of which the purchaser shall in no way
be liable."
After directing that the receiver report his proceedings under
the decree to the court, it was further recited as follows:
"The purchaser at the sale herein ordered will acquire the
absolute title to all the property decreed to be sold, free from
all claims, liens, and encumbrances whatever, save as provided
above as to the contract obligations of the receiver, and the
proceeds of sale will stand in these causes in lieu and place of
the property itself."
Subsequently the decree of sale was modified by directing a sale
to be made by the clerks of the respective courts, as
commissioners. Respecting the sale and the confirmation thereof, it
is recited in the agreed statement as follows (italics not in
original):
"13. Thereafter, and on the 16th day of June, 1894, said
commissioners, acting under the decrees aforesaid, sold at public
auction in the City of Memphis the property aforesaid,
and also
all the right, title, and interest of said receiver to the various
sums set forth in Exhibit B annexed to the complaint herein, and in
and to the claims of said receiver against the parties therein
mentioned for said advertisements published by said receiver for
their account in said Memphis Appeal-Avalanche between September
30, 1893, and June 16, 1894, as aforesaid, when and where same
was struck off to one West J. Crawford, he paying therefor to said
J. B. Clough and E. B. McHenry as such commissioners the sum of
$65,200, and he being the highest, best, and last bidder therefor.
That whatever title the receiver had to said sums set forth in
Exhibit B was derived from said trust deed and his appointment as
such receiver. On the 3d day of July, 1894, decrees were
simultaneously entered in said actions thus pending in said
Chancery Court of Shelby County, and said circuit court of the
United States, confirming the sale."
On March 26, 1896, a final decree was entered in the
consolidated action determining the rights of a large number of
persons, one such being Beckwith, whose claim of a lien on the fund
under an execution issued in an action brought by a named party
other than Beckwith, in which action judgment had been obtained
against the Memphis Appeal Company, was overruled, and he was
allowed an appeal. A portion of the defendants thereafter
prosecuted an appeal to the Supreme Court of Tennessee, and after
the decision of that appeal, a decree was entered in the trial
court in conformity to the directions of the appellate court, on
July 8, 1896. The appeal of Beckwith was disposed of by a general
affirmance of the decree below, except as particularly specified in
the judgment of the appellate court.
Crawford, the purchaser at the sale,
"duly assigned and transferred to the plaintiff all his claims,
demands, and right of action against the defendant, which he
acquired by virtue of the sale of June 16, 1894, above referred
to."
As heretofore stated, the collections made by Beckwith sought to
be recovered in the action at bar were made on advertising orders
procured by Beckwith under the contract and published by the
receiver.