Atwood v. Shenandoah V. R. R.

9 S.E. 748, 85 Va. 966, 1889 Va. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 11, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 748 (Atwood v. Shenandoah V. R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atwood v. Shenandoah V. R. R., 9 S.E. 748, 85 Va. 966, 1889 Va. LEXIS 112 (Va. 1889).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a case of far more than ordinary importance; and in the investigation of the complicated questions involved, this court has been favored with elaborate arguments, written and oral, of eminent counsel, at home and from abroad, in which the claims of the respective contestants have all been discussed with consummate skill and ability.

In this opinion we have no concern with the questions decided by the court below in its decree of April, 1888, as those questions will he treated and decided in separate opinions; we are, therefore, restricted in this opinion to the consideration of the questions decided in the decree of the court below of December 24th, 1881, by which the fifteen hundred and sixty first-mortgage bonds? here in controversy, were declared to he valid outstanding obligations of the Shenandoah Valley Railroad Company, issued under and in pursuance of the terms of said company’s first mortgage of April 1st, 1880, and properly delivered to and now held by the Fidelity Insurance, Trust and Safe Deposit Company, as trustee in said company’s general mortgage of April 5th, 1881, as collateral security for the bonds issued under and in pursuance of the terms of said general mortgage and now so held by the appellees, the general mortgage bondholders. But before proceeding to consider this question, we must first dispose of two preliminary questions of practice.

I. It is objected that the circuit court erred in refusing to permit the appellants, the first mortgage bondholders, to file their supplemental hill; which hill was for the first time tendered, and leave asked to file it, at the term in which the decree [969]*969complained of was rendered, and just as the argument in the cause was about to- commence. From the facts and circumstances disclosed by the record, we are clearly of opinion that the objection is without merit.

The order of account made in the cause on the 11th of May, 1885, was for the express purpose, as shown on its face, of clearly ascertaining the rights of the respective classes of the creditors of the Shenandoah Yalley Railroad Company “to satisfaction out of its property and effects, and the amount due or to become due to said classes respectively.” Hence the master was directed to take, among others, an account of the amounts due or hereafter to become due under the respective trust deeds or mortgages which have been made by said ” Shenandoah Yalley Railroad Company, “ and which have not been relieved or satisfied, showing the relative rights and priorities and the property included in or conveyed by said deeds respectively.”

The taking of testimony under this order was commenced on the 26th of February, 1886, and was continued from time to time until the 12th of March, 1887, the counsel for appellants (first mortgage bondholders) being present and participating on each occasion in the examination of witnesses and introducing witnesses on behalf of their clients. And, as already stated, in the progress of taking this testimony, counsel for the first mortgage bondholders, the appellants, applied to the trustee company, the sole plaintiff in the suit, to be formally recognized of record as counsel by it as trustee, and to he permitted to appear in the trustee’s name, in order to protect the interests of their clients, the first mortgage bondholders. The request was very properly refused, and for the obvious reasons—first, that it involved the surrender in part, at least, of the plain right and duty of the trustee company, a common trustee in both the first and general mortgages, to conduct the suit for the protection of the interests of all parties secured by both mortgages; and, second, because to grant the request would be in effect to displace its own counsel, which it had no occasion for doing; at the same time, how[970]*970ever, expressing the opinion that doubtless the court would recognize the counsel of individual bondholders should they appear and so desire.

Afterwards, at the December term, 1886, the appellants (first mortgage bondholders), upon their petitions to be admitted as parties plaintiff, they were allowed to file them, and the original plaintiff, the Fidelity Insurance, Trust and Safe Deposit Company, was given until the 15th of January, 1887, to answer the same. And at the same term leave was given Lewis C. Clark, a general mortgage bondholder, to file his petition asking to be admitted as a party defendant; and leave was given the Fidelity Insurance, Trust and Safe Deposit Company and the said petitioning first mortgage bondholders to answer it. This action on the part of Lewis C. Clark, it is clear, was induced by the action of said first mortgage bondholders; for in his petition, .which was presented on his own behalf and on behalf of the other general mortgage bondholders, he says that he had not previously applied to be made a technical party to the suit, because he, in common with the other bondholders of his class, and also the first mortgage bondholders, had been represented by counsel, with the assent of the plaintiff, the Fidelity Insurance, Trust and Safe Deposit Company, in the proceedings in the suit; but that, inasmuch as sundry first mortgage bondholders had filed their petitions to be made parties plaintiff to protect their interests, which were in conflict with the interests of the general mortgage bondholders, it was manifestly proper that, if they should be admitted as parties plaintiff, he, on his own behalf and on behalf of the other general mortgage bondholders, should be admitted as defendant; and, in his petition stating that the fifteen hundred and sixty bonds were then uncertified by the trustee, asked that it should be required to certify them and deliver them to the general mortgage bondholders.

In their answers to this petition of Lewis O. Clark, a general mortgage bondholder, the first mortgage bondholders show that the ground, and the only ground, on which they based their [971]*971application to be admitted as parties plaintiff was their claim that the deposit of the fifteen hundred and sixty first mortgage bonds with the Fidelity Insurance, Trust and Safe Deposit Company, trustee, as security for the general mortgage bondholders, was unauthorized and illegal, and that the trustee company had, in its bill, taken a position in reference to said bonds adverse to the interest of the first mortgage bondholders; and they ask that the application of Lewis O. Clark that the trustee of the first mortgage be required to sign, certify and deliver these fifteen hundred and sixty bonds to the general mortgage bondholders be stricken out as irrelevant and impertinent; and then add “that the question as to the validity of these bonds is one of the main issues in the cause, raised under the pleadings and testimony taken and passed upon by the master commissioner in his findings, who holds the said bonds to be invalid; all of which, at and before the filing of said petition, was well known to' the solicitor of the petitioner.”

When this answer was filed all the testimony in the cause was in, and the master (before part of that testimony was taken) had made up and submitted to counsel, as already stated, the rough draft of his report, in which these fifteen hundred and sixty bonds were held to be invalid; but the petitions filed as aforesaid to be admitted as parties plaintiff or defendant had not then been acted on, and were not acted on until the 26th day of July, 1887, when the petitioners were all admitted as parties plaintiff or defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 748, 85 Va. 966, 1889 Va. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atwood-v-shenandoah-v-r-r-va-1889.