1. To make a
nunc pro tunc order effectual for the
purposes of a supersedeas, it must appear that the delay was the
act of the court, and not of the parties, and that injustice will
not be done.
2. A motion to set aside a decree, made by persons not parties
to the suit, but who are permitted to intervene only for the
purpose of an appeal from the decree as originally rendered, will
not operate to suspend such decree.
3. Their separate appeal having been properly allowed and
perfected, the case is here to the extent necessary for the
protection of their interests.
4. A cause involving private interests only will not be advanced
for a hearing in preference to other suits on the docket.
MOTION, 1. To vacate a supersedeas; 2. Dismiss the appeal: Mr.
R. L. Ash~urst in support of the motions.
Page 93 U. S. 413
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, trustee for the bondholders
secured by a mortgage of the Central Railroad Company of Iowa,
whose claims amounted in the aggregate to $3,700,000, exclusive of
interest, commenced a suit in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Iowa, Oct. 14, 1874, to foreclose the
mortgage for the benefit of all parties interested in the
security.
This was done at the request of a large number of the
bondholders, and after much consultation between them in regard to
their common interests. After the cause had been pending for nearly
a year, and at some time between Oct. 1 and Oct. 22, 1875, Russell
Sage, F. Leake, James Buell, and Edwin Parsons, presented a
communication to the trustee, a copy of which is as follows:
"
To the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, Trustee,
&c.,"
"
First Mortgage Bondholders"
"GENTLEMEN -- We are informed by your counsel, Grant and Smith,
that they will ask the court, in the foreclosure suit now pending,
to enter such decree as the majority of the bondholders desire.
Believing that some of the bondholders have other interests to
serve than to protect the first mortgage bondholders, and that
large numbers of the bondholders, from want of proper information,
have been induced to sign various reguests to the court for certain
forms of decree injurious to us as bondholders, and being your
cestui que trust to the amount set opposite our names of
the first mortgage bonds, to secure the payment of which you hold
the mortgage as trustee for ourselves and others similarly
situated, this is to notify you of such interest on our part, and
to request you to instruct your counsel to procure the ordinary
decree of foreclosure and sale; and, failing to get this from the
court, to take an appeal to the Supreme Court of the United
States."
"If, for any reason, you decline to give your counsel such
instructions, please inform us, that we may become a party to said
proceedings, and take such course as we may be advised in the
matter. We understood the trust deed to require you to procure the
ordinary decree of foreclosure and sale. If the bondholders, or a
majority of them, request you to purchase the mortgaged premises,
and to form a new company, that it is competent for you to do so,
upon such terms and conditions as a majority of the bondholders
desire,
Page 93 U. S. 414
but, until you do so purchase, you are to do all you reasonably
can be expected to do to protect the minority as well as the
majority of your
cestui que trust."
"Respectfully, your obedient servants,"
"RUSSELL SAGE, $100,000"
"F. LEAKE, by Russell Sage, $25,000"
"JAMES BUELL, $10,000"
"EDWIN PARSONS, $13,500"
"NEW YORK, Oct. 1, 1875"
A term of the court commenced Oct. 11, 1875, and on the 22d of
that month, the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, the Central
Railroad Company of Iowa, and all the other defendants, together
with committees of various bondholders, represented by their
respective attorneys, appeared in court and agreed to the form of a
decree to be entered in the cause, the same having been the result
of consultation and compromise among the parties in interest. At
the same time, the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company exhibited to the
court the communication it had received from Sage and his
associates, accompanied by a statement that Buell had deposited
with it as trustee $10,000 of bonds secured by the mortgage, Leake,
$25,000, and Sage, $100,000, and that it was ready to execute any
decree which might be made by the court under the circumstances.
The court thereupon, without considering the rights and interests
of the various parties, entered, Oct. 22, 1875, the decree agreed
upon, and then adjourned until some time in January, 1876.
Down to this time neither Sage nor any of his associates had
asked to be made parties to the suit, or to be permitted to
intervene in any manner for the protection of their interests, but,
Dec. 16, 1875, Sage, Buell, and N. A. Cowdrey presented to the
circuit judge, at St. Paul, Minn., the Iowa Circuit Court not being
then in session, a petition, as follows:
"Now comes the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, as trustee in
said cause for Russell Sage, James Buell, and N. A. Cowdrey, and
plaintiff in said cause, and prays of the court that an appeal may
be allowed to said plaintiff, and tenders to the court an
appealbond, with a request that the same may operate as a
supersedeas."
Signed, Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, by Grant and Smith,
solicitors.
Page 93 U. S. 415
Upon this petition, the circuit judge entered his order, as
follows:
"In this case, an appeal is asked by the complainant so far, and
only so far, as it affects the interests of Russell Sage, James
Buell, and N. A. Cowdrey."
"I deny the appeal prayed for, because,"
"1. The decree in question was entered by consent of all the
parties in interest."
"(The term at which this decree was rendered has not yet ended,
but stands adjourned until in January next; and the proper course
for the parties in whose behalf an appeal is sought is for them to
appear, and, if the decree is erroneously entered, or is improper,
to apply to be made parties, or to have the decree corrected, or a
new decree entered.)"
"2. An appeal cannot be taken on behalf of certain bondholders,
not parties to the record, leaving the rest of the decree
unappealed from. As the trustees (complainants) do not ask for an
appeal from the whole decree, I need not consider when they would
be justified in a case where there are several millions of dollars
of bondholders who acquiesce in the decree, to appeal at the
instance of three bondholders who only claim to hold bonds to the
extent of $200,000."
"3. If an appeal could be allowed, as asked for, the bond
offered is insufficient, as to amount, to secure costs, damages for
delay, and costs and interest on the appeal. The clerk will enter
the above order of record, denying the appeal prayed for."
"(Signed) JOHN F. DILLON,
Circuit Judge"
"AT CHAMBERS, ST. PAUL, Dec. 16, 1875"
The court met pursuant to adjournment, and Jan. 11, Sage, Buell,
and Cowdrey, claiming to be the owners of $200,000 of the bonds
secured by the mortgage, filed their petition for leave to
intervene in the suit as plaintiffs or defendants, to the end that
they might have opportunity to protect the interests they had in
common with the other holders of bonds, and with liberty to appeal
to this court. Jan. 13, they filed a motion to set aside the decree
of Oct. 22.
On the next day, Jan. 14, the cause came on for hearing upon the
motion filed Jan. 13, the petition filed Jan. 11, and the petition
presented to the circuit judge Dec. 16, with his order thereon. The
motion to set aside the decree was
Page 93 U. S. 416
denied, and as to the other petition the following order was
made:
"Upon consideration of the premises, it is now by the court
ordered, that Sage, Buell, and Cowdrey be, and they are hereby,
permitted to become so far parties to the suit as to prosecute, if
they so elect, for the protection of their said several interests
therein, and in their own names, an appeal to the Supreme Court
from the decree entered herein on the twenty-second day of October,
1875; and, if said Sage, Buell, and Cowdrey desire said appeal to
operate as a supersedeas, the bond for that purpose is fixed at the
sum of $1,000,000, to be given in thirty days from this date, and,
if so given, said appeal shall be regarded as taken and perfected
on the sixteenth day of December, 1875, the said parties having
then applied as aforesaid for said appeal, and having delayed the
same until this time by order of the judge at chambers, as above
shown; but if said appeal is not to operate as a supersedeas, the
bond is fixed at the sum of $2,000."
No bond was executed under the authority of this order, and,
Feb. 16, 1876, a petition for the allowance of an appeal from the
orders and decrees of Oct. 22 and Jan. 14, to operate as a
supersedeas, was presented to MR. JUSTICE MILLER, the Justice of
this Court assigned to the eighth circuit, in which the District of
Iowa is situated, and he allowed the appeal as prayed for, and
accepted a supersedeas bond in the sum of $20,000. In due time the
transcript of the record was filed in this court, and the appeal
docketed.
The Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, represented by a joint
committee of the bondholders, now move, 1. To vacate the
supersedeas; and, 2. To dismiss the appeal.
1. As to the supersedeas.
In
Kitchen v. Randolph, supra, 86, we held that it was
not within the power of a justice of this court to grant a
supersedeas on a writ of error or upon an appeal, unless the writ
of error was sued out and served or the appeal taken within sixty
days, Sundays exclusive, after the rendition of the judgment or
decree complained of.
The decree in this case was rendered Oct. 22, 1875. At that
time, the present appellants were not parties to the suit, and
consequently could not appeal. The application of Dec. 16,
Page 93 U. S. 417
though made in their interest, was in form by the Farmers' Loan
and Trust Company. This application was denied; and properly so,
because an appeal was only asked so far as it affected the
interests of these appellants. The trustee represents all the
bondholders; and as the decree is indivisible, it must appeal for
the whole, or none. No application was then made by the appellants
for leave to intervene and become parties, and consequently the
court could not then have been asked to allow them an appeal as
parties. Such an application was, however, made Jan. 11, and Jan.
14 they were admitted as parties for the purpose of appealing. An
appeal was then allowed to them; but they did not avail themselves
of it, either by giving a supersedeas bond or a bond for costs. And
if they had done so, it could not have had the effect of a
supersedeas, because it was not allowed until after the expiration
of the sixty days. The order of the court, to the effect that if
the bond should be given the appeal might be regarded as taken and
perfected Dec. 16, was of no effect for the purposes of a
supersedeas. While it is true that the court may enter an order in
a cause
nunc pro tunc, where the action asked for has been
delayed by or for the convenience of the court,
Perry v.
Wilson, 7 Mass. 394, it is never done where the parties
themselves have been at fault,
Fishmongers' Company v.
Robertson, 3 Man., Gr. & S. 974, or where it will work
injustice.
A supersedeas is a statutory remedy. It is only obtained by a
strict compliance with all the required conditions, none of which
can be dispensed with.
Hogan v. Ross,
11 How. 297;
Railroad Co. v.
Harris, 7 Wall. 575. Time is an essential element
in the proceeding, and one which neither the court nor the judges
can disregard. If a delay beyond the limited time occurs, the right
to the remedy is gone, and the successful party holds his judgment
or decree freed and discharged from this means of staying
proceedings for its collection or enforcement. This is a right
which he has acquired, and of which he cannot be deprived without
due process of law. The court can no more give effect to a
supersedeas by ordering that the appeal shall relate back to a time
within the sixty days, than it can to an appeal taken after the
expiration of two years, by
Page 93 U. S. 418
dating it back to a time within the limitation. To make a
nunc pro tunc order effectual for such purposes, it must
appear that the delay was the act of the court and not of the
parties, and that injustice will not be done.
A slight examination of the facts in this case will be
sufficient to show that the failure to take this appeal in time is
attributable entirely to the parties. They knew, more than twenty
days previous to the entry of the decree, that there was a conflict
of interest between them and a large majority of the bondholders,
and that the trustee had been asked to have a decree entered such
as those opposed to them desired. Instead of seeking to be made
parties to the suit at that time, or during the first eleven days
of the term and before the decree was entered, they contended
themselves with a notice to the trustee and a demand upon it to
procure such a decree as they required, and, if that could not be
done, to appeal. This too, when they knew that they had only
$200,000 out of $3,700,000 of the secured bonds. After the decree
was entered, they delayed any application to the court for leave to
intervene for the protection of their own interest until after an
adjournment to a remote day had taken place. Then delaying, until
near the expiration of the sixty days, they caused the trustee to
apply for leave to appeal, so far as their interests were affected,
when it must have been apparent that such an order could not have
been made. Even then they filed no application to be made parties
so that they might appeal for themselves, but delayed all action in
that behalf until long after the time when a supersedeas could be
had as a matter of right. All this was the act of the parties, and
not of the court.
It is claimed, however, that the motion filed by the appellants
Jan. 13, to set aside the decree, operated to suspend the decree,
and that under the authority of
Brockett
v. Brockett, 2 How. 238, they had until sixty days
after their motion was denied to perfect an appeal and obtain a
supersedeas. But there is an essential difference between that case
and this. In that, the motion was made by parties to the suit. The
motion was one that could be made without leave, and it was
entertained. The cause was referred to a master upon this motion.
Under such circumstances, the Court held that the decree did
Page 93 U. S. 419
not become final until the motion for rehearing was decided.
Here, however, the movers were not parties to the suit. They had no
right to intervene, except upon leave, and this was refused. Under
such circumstances, it is clear that the decree was not suspended
in whole or in part by their motion. The appellants were permitted
to intervene, but only for the purpose of an appeal. It would have
been within the power of the court to set aside the old decree and
enter it over again, but this was refused. Leave only was granted
to appeal from the decree as originally rendered.
No supersedeas can follow from the appeal allowed by MR. JUSTICE
MILLER, because that clearly took effect after the expiration of
the sixty days from the date of the decree. Neither can the order
of the same justice have the effect of the allowance of a
supersedeas on the original appeal, because, as has already been
shown, that appeal was not taken in time.
From this it follows that the motion to vacate the supersedeas
must be granted.
2. As to the appeal.
The appellants, by the order of Jan. 14, became parties to the
suit for the purposes of an appeal. This order, having been made at
the same term in which the decree was entered, was within the power
of the court; and although it does not appear whether they were
admitted as plaintiffs or defendants, it was sufficient to enable
them to prosecute an appeal for the protection of their interests.
Under this authority their appeal has been allowed and perfected.
Whether this brings up the whole of the case, or only a part, it is
not necessary now to consider. It is clear that these parties have
been allowed their appeal, and that the case is here to the extent
that is necessary for the protection of their interests. It is
their separate appeal within the rule as to the form in which a
severance may be obtained, which is laid down in
Masterson
v. Herndon, 10 Wall. 416. The motion to dismiss the
appeal is therefore denied.
Both the appellants and the appellees ask to have the cause
advanced for a hearing, but, as only private interests are
involved, we see no reason why it should have preference over other
suits upon the docket. This motion also is denied.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE FIELD,
dissenting.
I dissent from this opinion.
I think the circuit court, under the circumstances of the case,
had a right to treat the application of appellants for appeal as
having been made when they asked liberty to use the name of their
trustee for that purpose; and it was rightfully allowed by the
circuit court as of that date. It this be so, it is not denied that
the bond approved by me would operate as a supersedeas.