Angle v. Chicago, St. P., M. & O. Ry. Co.

94 F. 717, 36 C.C.A. 438, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2391
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 1899
DocketNo. 501
StatusPublished

This text of 94 F. 717 (Angle v. Chicago, St. P., M. & O. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angle v. Chicago, St. P., M. & O. Ry. Co., 94 F. 717, 36 C.C.A. 438, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2391 (7th Cir. 1899).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge.

For a statement of the averments of the bill in this case reference is made to the opinion of the supreme court on demurrer thereto in Angle v. Railway Co., 151 U. S. 1, 11 Sup. Ct. 240. This appeal is from a final decree on the merits dismissing the bill for want of proof of the alleged conspiracy and fraud. Before the hearing was had which resulted in that decree, another suit, against the Omaha Company and the Portage Com[718]*718pany, wherein a bill averring the same facts as are here alleged was brought by the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company, as trustee of a mortgage executed by the Portage Company, for the purpose of charging the lands embraced in the disputed grant with the lien of that mortgage, had been determined in favor of the defendants on evidence which the court below deemed to be substantially the same as the evidence in this case, and on appeal that decree had been affirmed. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. Chicago, P. & S. R. Co., 163 U. S. 31, 16 Sup. Ct. 917. The opinion in that case shows that three propositions ,were claimed to be established by the evidence, any one of which it was contended entitled the plaintiff to the relief prayed for. The first two of those propositions, placing the second first, are in essence the same as the following, which are. insisted upon here: First. The evidence establishes that the Omaha Company became the sole or controlling stockholder of the Portage Company, and as such stockholder caused to be transferred to itself all of the property of the Portage Company, including its land grant, so as to deprive Angle, a creditor of the Portage Company, of- payment of his debt. By thus wrongfully acquiring the property of the Portage Company, the Omaha Company became trustee of the property for the satisfaction of the judgment Second. The evidence establishes that the Omaha Company wrongfully, unlawfully, unconscientiously, maliciously, or fraudulently interfered and prevented Angle and the Portage Company from completing the work of construction under the Angle contract, and from earning the land grant, and took over to itself the property of the Portage Company,, including the land grant. It thereby became liable to Angle for the damage done to him as measured by complainants’ judgment against the Portage Company, and became trustee ex maleficio of the land grant and its proceeds for the satisfaction of the judgment. These propositions both rest upon the charge of conspiracy and fraud. To use the language of the supreme court:

“Involved in and essential to the plaintiff’s case is the specific charge that the Omaha Company bribed certain officials of the Portage Company (in whose hands was, perhaps, the only valid outstanding stock of the Portage Company, and held by them in trust) to dispose of that stock, so that the Omaha Company, with knowledge of the trust attending the stock, and in breach thereof, became the controlling, if not the sole, stockholder in the Portage Company.”

It is said in the 'brief for appellant that “this declaration is clearly limited to the trust character of the Jackson stock,” but the language used, the context and other parts of the opinion, do not seem to warrant so narrow a construction. The opinion proceeds immediately to state the fact of the transfer of the Jackson stock to Gable, and then says, “This transaction is challenged, and its honesty and good faith are primary matters of inquiry.” Then follows a review of the evidence, ending on page 44, 163 U. S., and page 922, 16 Sup. Ct., with the following statement of the court’s conclusion:

“In short, to sum up this branch of the case, from the testimony in this record it is, we think, clear that Jackson was guilty of no breach of trust in [719]*719gelling this stock; that it belonged, both legally and equitably, to J. C. Barnes and himself; that they had a full legal and moral right to sell it to any one who would pay their price; and it equally follows that the Omaha Company and Cable, in making the purchase, were themselves guilty of no wrong.”

This is followed with a brief consideration of the charge that the Omaha Company wrongfully prevented the Portage Company from earning the land grant. The conclusion of the opinion is of present importance:

“No creditor of the Portage Company had any legal or equitable right to any portion of those lands; and if the legislature had simply revoked the grant, and resumed possession on behalf of the state, there would be no pretense of a claim that any such creditor could subject the lands, or any interest therein, to the satisfaction of his debt. There is no intimation of a contrary doctrine in the opinion filed in Angle v. Kailway Co., supra. All that was there held was that the legislative action did not condone, and was not intended to condone, any wrongs done by the Omaha Company; and that, if the Omaha Company had been guilty of any fraudulent conduct, in consequence of which the Portage Company had been prevented from earning the grant, and the legislature thereby induced to revoke it, and bestow it upon the Omaha Company, the party wronged by those acts of the Omaha Company was entitled to redress. But here, "as we have seen, although the charges are the same, yet the testimony fails to make good those charges, or to show any fraudulent or wrongful conduct on the part of the Omaha Company. The legislative act condoned no wrong, for there was no wrong to condone. It neither placed nor continued any burden upon the land grant, and hence the mortgage creditors of the Portage Company, having no lien, legal or equitable, cannot pursue the lands in the hands of Ihe Omaha Company. There is this substantial difference between the Angle Case and the present: While in each are charges of grievous wrong on the part of the Omaha Company, in consequence of which property which otherwise would have been subjected to the payment of the plaintiff’s claims was obtained by the Omaha Company, in the Angle Case the Omaha Company demurred, saying there was no remedy, notwithstanding the wrongs alleged. We held that, if such wrongs as were alleged had been committed, the law did furnish a remedy. In this case the Omaha Company took issue upon the charge of having committed such wrongs, and the testimony shows that it did not commit them.”

On the appeal in this case it was said:

“But it must be remembered that the wrongs of the Omaha Company were done before the legislature passed either the act of 1882 or that of 1883, and it is to redress those wrongs that this suit is brought. * * * The wrong was not done by the state, or in the act of the legislature in taking away the land grant, but in such proceedings on the part of the Omaha Company as put the Portage Company in a position which apparently called for the action of the legislature. * * * The property was in the Portage Company for the purpose of aiding in the construction of this road. Work was done by the plaintiff in that direction. Equity recognizes a right that that property should he applied in the payment for that work. The wrongdoing of the defendant, the Omaha Company, lias wrested the title to this property from the Portage Company. and transferred it to itself. It has become, therefore, a trustee ex male-ficio in respect to the property.”

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Bluebook (online)
94 F. 717, 36 C.C.A. 438, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angle-v-chicago-st-p-m-o-ry-co-ca7-1899.