A receiver, as soon as he is appointed and qualifies, comes
under the sole direction of the court, and his engagements are
those of the court, and the liabilities he incurs are chargeable
upon the property, and not against the parties at whose instance he
was appointed and who have no authority over him and cannot control
his actions.
While cases may arise in which it may be equitable to charge the
parties at whose instance a receiver is appointed with the expense
of the receivership, in the absence of special circumstances the
general rule which is applicable in this case is that such expenses
are a charge upon the property or fund without any personal
liability therefor on the part of those parties, and the mere
inadequacy of the fund to meet such expenses does not render a
plaintiff who has not been guilty of any irregularity liable
therefor.
145 F. 820 reversed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 208 U. S. 364
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The principal question in this case -- now before us upon writ
of certiorari for the review of a final order of the Circuit Court
of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit -- is stated by counsel to be
this: is a complainant who has, in good faith, prosecuted a suit
upon a good cause of action, and upon whose application the court
has properly appointed a receiver, and who obtains a decree fully
establishing his rights, nevertheless personally responsible for a
deficiency caused by the failure of the property which is the
subject of the suit to bring enough to cover the allowances made by
the court to the receiver and his counsel, and the expenses which
the receiver, without special request of the complainant in any
instance, had incurred?
The Woodbridge Canal & Irrigation Company, a corporation of
California, executed July seventeenth, 1891, a mortgage conveying
all its property and franchises to the Atlantic Trust Company, a
New York corporation, in trust to secure certain bonds, with
interest coupons attached, issued by the mortgagor company for the
purpose of raising money to fully complete and equip its canal and
headworks, and of paying its indebtedness then existing or to be
subsequently incurred. The bonds were made payable with interest
semiannually at the office of the trust company in the City of New
York.
In the event of default in the payment of semiannual interest of
the bonds for six months, or of any tax or assessment for the same
period, the trustee and its successors were authorized, on the
written request of the majority of the holders of the outstanding
bonds, or, if the principal of the bonds shall be due, upon the
request of the holders of outstanding bonds, to take actual
possession of the mortgaged property, and, by themselves or agents,
hold, use, and enjoy
Page 208 U. S. 365
the same, and from time to time make repairs, replacements,
alterations, additions, and improvements as fully as the company
might have done before such entry, and receive all tolls, income,
rent, issues, and profits arising from the property. The trustee
and its successor or successors were authorized, on such default,
to sell the mortgaged property at public auction, after at least
two months' notice, and execute to the purchaser or purchasers a
deed in fee simple, or otherwise, for all the right, title,
interest, and estate reversionary or in possession which they might
be entitled to receive, have, or hold of the company, such sale to
be a complete bar against the company, its successors or assigns,
and all persons claiming from or under it.
The mortgage made provision as to the disposal of moneys
received from tolls, income, profits, etc., and provided that
"nothing herein shall be construed as limiting the right of the
trustee to apply to any competent court for a decree of foreclosure
and sale under this indenture, or for the usual relief in such
proceedings, and the said trustee, or its successor, may, in its
discretion, so proceed."
The Canal & Irrigation Company having made default in the
payment of the principal and interest due on its bonds, its board
of directors, by formal action, recognized their inability to meet
its obligations and requested the trustee to bring the present suit
for the foreclosure of the mortgage, and enforce the payment of the
principal and interest of the bonds. The bringing of the suit was
also in conformity with the written request of the owners and
holders of fifty-five of the outstanding bonds, who expressed their
election and option that the principal of the bonds should
forthwith become due and payable.
The bill filed by the trust company prayed: 1. that a receiver
be appointed to take charge of the mortgaged property and to
maintain and operate the canals pending the suit and until sale
under a judgment of foreclosure; 2. that the court ascertain the
number and amount of outstanding bonds, fix
Page 208 U. S. 366
the compensation of the receiver and his attorney, and that the
plaintiff have judgment against the Canal & Irrigation Company,
for the amount due for principal and interest on the bonds, and for
attorney's fee, trustee's commissions, costs, and expenses of the
suit; 3. that the mortgaged property be sold at public auction, and
that out of the proceeds the expenses of sale, costs of suit,
trustee's commissions, and counsel fees be paid, the balance to be
applied in payment of outstanding bonds.
The court, on motion of the trust company, the Canal &
Irrigation Company appearing and consenting thereunto, appointed E.
C. Chapman receiver of the mortgaged property, with authority to
take possession of it. The receiver was empowered by the order of
court to continue the operation of the main and branch canals of
the mortgagor company in the usual and ordinary way as the same
were then operated, discharging, so far as practicable, contracts
for water supplies entered into by the company, collecting rents,
tolls, moneys payable under water contracts, keeping the property
in good condition and repair, employing needful agents and servants
at such compensation as he deemed reasonable, paying for needful
labor, supplies, and materials as might seem to him to be necessary
and proper in the exercise of a sound discretion, "with leave to
apply to the court from time to time, as he may be advised, for
instructions in the premises." "He shall," the order proceeded,
"do whatever may be needful to preserve and maintain the
corporate franchises of said defendant corporation and its rights
to the use of the water and all its property, until final judgment
in this action, and to defray the necessary and proper expenses
incident thereto."
The above order was made October 3, 1894.
In the progress of the cause the receiver, upon his own motion,
and not, so far as the record shows, by direction of the plaintiff,
applied to the court and obtained its authority to borrow money and
issue certificates, which were used by him in the operation of the
property, paying debts, etc.
Page 208 U. S. 367
Certain parties were permitted to intervene, and the litigation
lingered until September 18th, 1897, when a decree of foreclosure
and sale was entered, nearly three years after the receiver was
appointed. There was great difficulty in effecting a sale, partly
because of the washing away of a dam. Finally, a bid of $21,000 by
one Thompson, acting on behalf of the receiver and his attorneys,
was accepted. That amount was just enough to cover the fees of the
receiver and his counsel and the expenses of the sale, and to make
a small
pro rata payment on the accrued interest on
receiver's certificates. This left unpaid all other expenses and
certificates of the receiver. The sale was confirmed August 15,
1898, and the commissioner was directed to deliver a deed for the
property.
The order confirming the sale directed the clerk of the court to
report the balance remaining unpaid on account of the fees of
officers or appointees of the court, or of advances made by them,
and on account of receiver's certificates, time checks, or other
expenses of the receiver's administration. The order also directed
the receiver to render an account of his receipts, disbursements,
and expenses in the management and care of the property between the
date of the decree of foreclosure and the date of the sale and
transfer of possession.
The clerk made the required report, from which it appeared that
the proceeds of sale, $21,000, were absorbed by these claims:
compensation of receiver, $9,000; receiver's attorneys $9,000, and
fees of commissioner, master, advertising, etc., $3,000. He further
reported that of the amounts found due by the decree of foreclosure
of September 18, 1897, there remained unpaid, on the following
accounts, these sums: receiver's certificates, $12,292.47;
receiver, for advance made by him, care, and management of
property, $3,105.72; time checks issued by receiver, $5,728.89;
work done for receiver, $2,269.85; expenses of operating canal
system, $5,728.54; other sums, $13,723.49; total, $42,848.96.
On the third of August, 1899, nearly five years after the
appointment of the receiver, he filed his final report and
petition,
Page 208 U. S. 368
in which he prayed that the balance due him on account of his
receipts and disbursements after the making of the decree, also the
balance due to his employees after the making of the report upon
which the decree was based, and the compensation to be allowed to
him and his counsel since the date of the decree, be fixed and
established by the court, and judgment entered
"
against the plaintiff in this cause for the full
amount of the deficiency hereinbefore stated, with the sum so
allowed for services and expenses since the date of said decree,
and that the proper process of court be issued for the collection
thereof from plaintiff, and that, when collected, the same be paid
into court, to be by the court disbursed to the several persons
entitled thereto."
The petition alleged that the Canal & Irrigation Company was
insolvent and unable to respond to any judgment for deficiency that
had been or might be entered in the cause. Upon this report and
petition being filed, the circuit court ordered the trust company
to show cause why the amount due the receiver and his employees
should not be settled and allowed, and why judgment for such
deficiency should not, when ascertained, be entered against that
company and it be required to pay the same into court.
The trust company appeared and demurred to the receiver's report
and motion for judgment against it. The circuit court, after
hearing, sustained the demurrer and discharged the rule to show
cause. Upon appeal to the circuit court of appeals, the order of
the circuit court was reversed, the former court being of opinion
that the trust company was liable to a personal judgment for the
alleged deficiency.
Chapman v. Atlantic Trust Co., 119 F.
257.
The grounds upon which the circuit court and the circuit court
of appeals, respectively, proceeded, appear in the margin.
*
Page 208 U. S. 369
Upon the return of the case to the circuit court, the trust
company filed its answer to the receiver's petition, and the cause
was submitted, by consent, as upon bill and answer, on
Page 208 U. S. 370
the issues joined by the receiver's final report and petition
and the answer of the trust company. In conformity with the opinion
of the circuit court of appeals, the circuit court gave personal
judgment against that company for $36,207.57, as the amount due the
receiver. That judgment was affirmed by the circuit court of
appeals.
Atlantic Trust Co. v. Chapman, 145 F. 820.
We are of opinion that the court of appeals erred in holding
that the trust company was liable for the deficiency found to
exist. No such liability could arise from the simple fact that it
was on plaintiff's motion that a receiver was appointed to take
charge of the property pending the litigation. The motion for a
receiver was to the end that the property might be cared for and
preserved for all who had or might have an interest in the proceeds
of its sale. The circumstances seemed to have justified the motion,
but whether a receiver should have been appointed or not was in the
sound discretion of the court. Immediately upon such appointment
and after the qualification of the receiver, the property passed
into the custody of the law, and thenceforward its administration
was wholly under the control of the court by its officer or
creature, the receiver. In
Booth v.
Clark, 17 How. 322,
58 U. S. 331,
it was said:
"A receiver is an indifferent person between parties, appointed
by the court to receive the rents, issues, or profits of land, or
other thing in question in this Court, pending the suit, where
Page 208 U. S. 371
it does not seem reasonable to the court that either party
should do it. Wyatt's Prac.Reg. 355. He is an officer of the court;
his appointment is provisional. He is appointed in behalf of all
parties, and not of the complainant or of the defendant only. He is
appointed for the benefit of all parties who may establish rights
in the cause. The money in his hands is
in custodia legis
for whoever can make out a title to it.
Delany v.
Mansfield, 1 Hogan 234. It is the court itself which has the
care of the property in dispute. The receiver is but the creature
of the court; he has no powers except such as are conferred upon
him by the order of his appointment and the course and practice of
the court.
Verplanck v. Mercantile Insurance Company, 2
Paige, 452."
In
Porter v. Sabin, 149 U. S. 473,
149 U. S. 479,
the Court said:
"When a court exercising jurisdiction in equity appoints a
receiver of all the property of a corporation, the court assumes
the administration of the estate; the possession of the receiver is
the possession of the court, and the court itself holds and
administers the estate, through the receiver as its officer, for
the benefit of those whom the court shall ultimately adjudge to be
entitled to it,"
citing
Wiswall v.
Sampson, 14 How. 52,
55 U. S. 65;
Peale v.
Phipps, 14 How. 368,
55 U. S. 374;
Booth v.
Clark, 17 How. 322,
58 U. S. 331;
Union Bank v. Kansas City Bank, 136 U.
S. 223;
Thompson v. Phenix Ins. Co.,
136 U. S. 287,
136 U. S. 297.
Ought the receiver, in this case, to have been authorized to burden
the property with indebtedness on account of money borrowed or on
account of certificates which should become a first lien? Ought
some limit have been put on expenses of that kind? These were
matters to be determined by the court in the light of all the
circumstances. It was for the court to say whether the Canal &
Irrigation Company should be kept on its feet by moneys borrowed or
obtained, under its orders, by the receiver. The wishes of the
parties could not control as to such matters. Indeed, they need not
in strictness have been consulted as to what should be done from
time to time in the management of the property. If the situation
was such as to render it uncertain or doubtful whether the
property
Page 208 U. S. 372
would ultimately bring at a sale, enough to meet the expense
incurred in connection with its management, the court might well
have declined to permit its receiver to issue certificates or to
borrow any money on the property as security for its payment. So,
if the condition and apparent prospects of the property made such a
course proper, the court, in the exercise of a sound judicial
discretion, and looking to the interests of all who might be
affected by its action, could at the outset have made it a
condition of the appointment of a receiver that the plaintiff and
those whom it represented should be liable for any deficiency in
the funds required for the expenses of the receivership, or it
might have made it a condition of any order authorizing receiver's
certificates or the borrowing of money that the plaintiff, or those
whom it represented, should make good any deficiency that might be
disclosed after applying the proceeds of the sale according to the
rights of parties. Still further, the court -- if it had been
proper, under all the circumstances, to pursue such a course --
could have refused to operate the canals in question at all, and
required the parties to proceed to a final decree of foreclosure
and sale at the earliest practicable moment. But none of these
things was done. Under the responsibility imposed upon it by law,
the court determined to carry on the business of the Canal &
Irrigation Company for a time, and, under the same responsibility,
it authorized the receiver to borrow money, issue receiver's
certificates, and incur expenses, without any security for
indebtedness incurred in this way except the property or the fund
in the control of the court and the good faith, discretion, and
care of the court in its administration. No other security seems to
have been contemplated by the court or the receiver or any party to
the cause. No hint or warning was given, in the progress of the
cause, that the absent trustee was to be liable in the event that
the property or fund under the control of the court proved
insufficient to meet the expenses of the receivership. The trust
company, it is true, invoked the jurisdiction of the court by
bringing this suit for foreclosure and sale and
Page 208 U. S. 373
making a motion for the appointment of a receiver to hold and
manage the property
pendente lite. That surely the trust
company had the right to do, but it did not thereby make itself
ultimately liable for money borrowed and receiver's certificates
issued by order of the court. The one person who was in a position
to inform the court from time to time of the condition and probable
value of the property, and of what was or what seemed to be
necessary in order to preserve it for the parties interested in it,
was its officer and representative, the receiver. It was at his
instance and because of his report of the condition and needs of
the property that money was borrowed and certificates issued in
order that expenses incurred in the administration of the property
might be met. To hold the trust company liable for indebtedness
thus created would be most inequitable, and would not, we think, be
in accord with sound principle.
It is true that cases are cited in which the party bringing a
suit in which a receiver is appointed has been held liable for
expenses incurred by the receiver in excess of the proceeds arising
from the sale of the property. But in most, if not in all, of those
cases, the circumstances were peculiar, and were such as to make it
right and equitable, in the opinion of the court, that that should
be done. As, for instance, in
Ephraim v. Pacific Bank, 129
Cal. 589, 592, in which arose a question as to the party to whom a
receiver should look for reimbursement or payment of his expenses,
the court recognized the fact that the general rule that the
compensation of a receiver was a charge upon the fund in his hands
did not apply without qualification to every case, and said:
"If he [the receiver] has taken property into his custody under
an irregular, unauthorized appointment, he must look for his
compensation to the parties at whose instance he was appointed, and
the same rule applies if the property of which he takes possession
is determined to belong to persons who are not parties to the
action, and is taken from his possession by paramount authority. As
to such property, his appointment as receiver was
Page 208 U. S. 374
unauthorized, and conferred upon him no right to charge it with
any expenses."
In
Farmers Nat. Bank v. Backus, 74 Minn. 264, the
Supreme Court of Minnesota said:
"The second proposition is that, a receiver being an officer of
the court, subject to its control, and not to that of the party
asking for his appointment, his fees and expenses are chargeable
solely against the fund which comes into his hands as receiver. The
parties to the action are not personally liable therefor, unless
they have given a bond or other contract to pay them as a condition
of the appointment or continuance of the receiver. This may be
conceded to be correct as a general rule, but there are cases where
the court will, if the fund in court be insufficient to give the
receiver reasonable compensation and indemnity, require the parties
at whose instance he is placed in possession of the property to pay
him.
Johnson v. Garrett, 23 Minn. 565;
Knickerbocker
v. McKindley Co., 67 Ill.App. 293; High, Rec., § 796. The
special facts of this case fully justify the order of the trial
court. It is not a case where the party asking for the appointment
of a receiver is required to pay the receiver's charges without
having received any benefit from the receivership. It is a case
where the benefits so received were more than five times as great
as the amount required to be paid. . . . The order of the court
requiring the appellant to pay the receiver is, in effect, the
enforcement of the receiver's equitable right to be paid from a
fund growing out of the receivership."
In
Cutter v. Pollock, 7 N.D. 631, 634, the Supreme
Court of North Dakota, speaking by its chief justice, said:
"We do not believe that any case can be found to uphold the
palpably unjust rule that one who is shown to have had no right to
maintain the action, and no interest whatever in the property which
he claims, can require that the defendant, who has paid out of his
own pocket the expenses of a receivership, shall not call upon him
(the plaintiff in the action) for reimbursement."
See High on Receivers (3d ed.), § 796; Beach on
Receivers, § 774.
The above cases relied upon in the circuit court of appeals
--
Page 208 U. S. 375
and others of like kind could be cited -- proceeded upon their
special facts. They do not, in our judgment, authorize the order
made by that court, although they tend to support the rule that
cases may arise in which, because of their special circumstances,
it is equitable to require the parties at whose instance a receiver
of property was appointed to meet the expenses of the receivership
when the fund in court is ascertained to be insufficient for that
purpose. Here, it is not asserted that the plaintiff trustee was
not in the exercise of his strict rights when bringing a suit for
foreclosure and sale and asking that the property be put in
possession of a receiver. It gave no assurances as to the probable
value of the property or of the profits to arise from its
management. It misled no one who loaned money to the receiver, or
who purchased the certificates. It acted as an ordinary litigant,
submitting to the action of the court in all particulars. We do not
think that the mere insufficiency of the property or fund to meet
the expenses of a receivership entitled the receiver to hole the
plaintiff in the suit personally liable if all that could be said
was that he instituted the suit and moved for the appointment of
the receiver to take charge of the property and maintain and
operate it pending the suit. A receiver, as soon as he is appointed
and qualifies, comes, as we have said, under the sole direction of
the court. The contracts he makes or the engagements into which he
enters from time to time under the order of the court are, in a
substantial sense, the contracts and engagements of the court. The
liabilities which he incurs are liabilities chargeable upon the
property under the control and in the possession of the court, and
not liabilities of the parties. They have no authority over him,
and cannot control his acts.
When neither the order appointing a receiver nor the order
authorizing him to borrow money and issue certificates was
conditioned upon the plaintiff's (in a suit for foreclosure and
sale) being liable for the expenses of the receivership, and when
no special circumstances appear which, upon equitable principles,
would authorize the court to fix liability upon the plaintiff
Page 208 U. S. 376
for such expenses, the general rule should be applied which
makes such expenses a charge upon the property or fund under the
control of the court, without any personal liability therefor upon
the part of the plaintiff, who invoked the jurisdiction of the
court. The mere inadequacy of the property or fund to meet such
expenses constitutes, in itself, no reason why liability should be
fastened upon the plaintiff, who has been guilty of no
irregularity, and who, so far from seeking any improper advantage,
has succeeded in his suit by obtaining the relief asked -- namely,
a decree of foreclosure and sale.
The considerations which, in our judgment, should control in
cases like this are well stated by the Supreme Court of Oregon in
the above case of
Farmers' Loan Co. v. Oregon Pacific R.
Co., 31 Or. 237. That, it is true, was the case of a railroad
receivership, but what is said is equally applicable to other
quasi-public corporations having public duties to perform,
as in the case of water and irrigation companies. The particular
question in that case was whether the plaintiff in a suit brought
to foreclose a railroad mortgage could be held liable for the wages
of employees of the receiver, who had no funds with which to pay
them, having exhausted his power to float receiver's certificates.
After observing that the plaintiff at whose instance a receiver is
appointed thereby consents to the absolute control and management
of the mortgaged property by the court and its agents, and to the
priority of claims for the expenses incurred in its operation and
management, and after declaring that it was not perceived upon what
ground it could be claimed that, because the expenses of the
receivership were allowed, without any fault of his, to exceed the
value of the mortgaged property, thus entirely destroying his
security, he must, in addition to the loss of his debt, be
compelled to make good the deficit, unless the order of appointment
was made upon that condition, the court in that case proceeded to
say that the plaintiff
"has no control over the acts of the receiver, and if, without
his consent, he is to be held responsible therefor, he is liable to
absolute bankruptcy and ruin. Such a
Page 208 U. S. 377
rule would render the plaintiff's position so uncertain and
precarious as practically to preclude him from any protection
whatever through the appointment of a receiver pending the
foreclosure suit. But the inquiry is made,"
"shall not a railroad mortgagee who applies for and obtains the
appointment of a receiver, with authority to operate the road, be
held responsible for the liabilities incurred by such officer when
they cannot be made out of the property itself?"
We think not, unless such responsibility was imposed as a
condition to the appointment or the continuance of the receiver in
office. The appointment of a receiver in a suit to foreclose a
railroad mortgage is not a matter of strict right, but rests in the
sound judicial discretion of the court, and it may, as a condition
to issuing the necessary order, impose such terms as may, under the
circumstances of the particular case, appear to be reasonable, and,
if not acceded to, may refuse to make the order. 30 Am.L.Rev. 161;
Fosdick v. Schall, 99 U. S. 235. If,
therefore, upon an application for the appointment of a railroad
receiver, it appears probable that the income and corpus will prove
insufficient to pay the expenses and liabilities thereof, we have
no doubt that the court may require of the plaintiff, as a
condition to such appointment, a guaranty of the payment of the
expenses of such officer. And if at any time after the appointment
has been made it become apparent to the court that it will be
unable to pay and discharge the present or future liabilities
incurred by its executive officer and manager, it should refuse to
continue the operation of the road under the receiver unless its
expenses are guaranteed. No court is bound or ought to engage or
continue in the operation of a railroad or any other enterprise
without the ability to promptly discharge its obligations, and,
unless it can do so, it should keep out or immediately go out of
the business. But, unless such terms are imposed as a condition of
the appointment or continuation in office of the receiver, his
employees must look to the property in the custody of the court and
its income for their compensation. They have no claim whatever on
any of the parties to the litigation. They
Page 208 U. S. 378
are the employees and servants of the court, and not of the
parties. Their wages are in no sense costs of the litigation; and,
although incurred during the progress of the suit, they are not
incurred in the suit. They are neither expenses of the plaintiff
nor of the defendant, and are not fees or costs which can be
charged against the successful party to the litigation, as is
sought to be done in this case.
Without further elaboration, or further citation of authorities,
we adjudge that the final orders of the circuit court and of the
circuit court of appeals whereby the trust company was held liable
to make good the deficiency found to exist in the funds required
for the expenses of the receivership were erroneous. Those orders
must be set aside, and the petition of the receiver, so far as it
seeks to impose such liability on the plaintiff, must be dismissed.
To that end, the decree is reversed and the cause remanded for such
proceedings as will be consistent with this opinion and be in
conformity with law.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA did not sit in this case.
* CIRCUIT COURT -- JUDGE MORROW:
"I am of the opinion that provisions should have been made when
this suit was commenced, or at the time when the receiver was
appointed, for the payment of or security for the amount of his
expenses, and for the redemption of whatever certificates might be
issued by him, in the event that the proceeds of the sale of the
property should prove insufficient. But such provision was not made
at the time by the court, and I am of the opinion that the court is
without authority to do so now. In
Farmers' Loan Co. v. Oregon
Pacific R. Co., 31 Or. 237, this question was fully
considered, and the views there expressed are in accord with my
opinion in the present case."
CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS -- JUDGE ROSS, 119 F. 268:
"Those who render services in and about the receivership are
justly entitled to be paid the fair value of such services, and
when the issuance of receiver's certificates becomes necessary for
the proper preservation of the property, and such certificates are
authorized by the court to be issued by the receiver for money to
be used for such purposes, those who buy the obligations are
entitled to have them paid. How? In cases like the present, out of
the property or its proceeds, certainly. No one, we apprehend, will
question that. But the property having been sold for but a trifle
more than the amount theretofore allowed the receiver and his
attorney for their services in and about the receivership, and they
credited with such allowance on their bid, who is to suffer? The
complainant at whose instance the receiver was appointed, or those
who, relying upon his acts, based upon the authority and sanction
of the court, invested their money and rendered their services in
and about the operation and preservation of the property? It is not
difficult to determine on which side of this question are the
equities. With due deference, we are unable to see any force in the
suggestion of the Supreme Court of Oregon in the case cited that,
as the complainant in such a suit has no control over the receiver,
if he be held liable for the expenses of the receivership, in the
event the property prove insufficient to pay them, he may be
bankrupted. At the same time, it is conceded by that learned court
that, where it appears probable that the property will prove
insufficient, the court may require, as a condition to the
appointment of a receiver, a guaranty of the payment of the
expenses of such officer, and a like guaranty subsequently, on pain
of the discharge of the receiver, when it becomes evident that the
property will prove insufficient to pay the expenses. The theory of
this manifestly is that, in these two instances, the complainant
can inform himself of the probable outcome of the property, and if
he be not willing to give the guaranty, he will not secure the
appointment of a receiver in the one instance, or his continuance
in office in the other. But why should he not be required to inform
himself, also, when no such condition is imposed by the court?
Precisely the same opportunity on complainant's part, and precisely
the same duty to inform himself in that respect, exists in the
absence of the requirement of the guaranty mentioned. The
complainant, whose lien upon the property it is sought to
foreclose, in the nature of things must and should be held to have
much better information regarding the value of the property and its
probable outcome than the court. Indeed, it is not easy to see how
the court can be properly expected to know anything about it. The
appointment of a receiver, if made at all, is usually made at the
request of the complainant -- occasionally, as in the case at bar,
with the consent of the defendant. If the complainant was not
willing to pay the expenses of the receivership it asked for, in
the event of the insufficiency of the property to do so, it should
not have asked the court to make the appointment, incur the
liabilities, and pledge its faith to their payment. It was the duty
of the complainant to keep informed in respect to the progress of
the receivership, the property, and its probable outcome, and
whenever it became unwilling to further stand good for any
deficiency, to ask the court to bring to an end the business it
undertook and was conducting on complainant's petition."