Boston Investment Co. v. Pacific Short Line Bridge Co.

73 N.W. 839, 104 Iowa 311
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 18, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 73 N.W. 839 (Boston Investment Co. v. Pacific Short Line Bridge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston Investment Co. v. Pacific Short Line Bridge Co., 73 N.W. 839, 104 Iowa 311 (iowa 1898).

Opinion

Given, J.

1 I. Owing to the number of the parties, and the nature of their respective claims, the pleadings are necessarily lengthy and complicated, but as the questions presented on this appeal are simply whether the court erred in appointing the receivers, and in ordering a sale of the property, and in the confimation of said sale, the following will be a sufficient statement of the cases for the purpose of these questions: The Pacific Short-Line Bridge Company was incorporated under the laws of Iowa, to build a combination railroad, wagon, and foot bridge .across the Missouri river, at Sioux City, Iowa, under an act of congress granting it a charter so to do, which required the bridge to be completed on or before March 1,1896. This company acquired certain franchises from the city of Sioux City, in certain of the city’s streets, for the purpose of approach to said bridge. It also acquired, for the same purpose, certain real ¿state. Said company executed a deed of trust to the Manhattan Trust Company, as trustee, on all its franchises and property, to secure its issue of bonds in the sum of one million five hundred thousand dollars, five hundred thousand dollars of which were certified by trustees and issued by said company. Said company entered into [314]*314contracts for plans, specifications, materials, and labor for the construction of said bridge, and tbe construction thereof was proceeded with thereunder, and said company became largely indebted therefor. This company, being unable financially to continue the work of constructing said bridge, did, on the sixth day of April, 1893, for the consideration of one dollar, execute a deed of conveyance of all its property and franchises to the Missouri River Bridge Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Iowa. The plaintiff, the-Boston Investment Company, having theretofore obtained judgment against the Pacific Short-Line Bridge Company, caused an execution to issue thereon on April 27, 1893, and to be levied on all property and franchises of said company, whereupon all further work on the bridge was suspended. On the same day, plaintiff brought this action to set aside said deed of conveyance, and to subject said property to its execution. On May 13, 1893, the court, on an .application of the parties, granted an order restraining the sheriff from selling under said execution until the further order of the court, to the end, evidently, that, the priority of the several liens against said property might first be ascertained. In the course of the further proceedings, the other persons named above as parties, except intervener, Goodwin, became such to this action by the consolidation of their actions herewith, or by intervention, and issues were joined upon their respective pleadings.

On October-19, 1893, the plaintiff applied for the appointment of a receiver, Avhieh application was set down for hearing on October 24, following, but does not appear to have been heard at that time. Thereafter the defendants Sooysmith & Go., and E. H. Hubbard, assignee, joined in asking the appointment of a receiver; and on the twenty-seventh day of May, 1895, after all the parties above named, except appellant, Goodwin, had become parties to this action, the court, with their [315]*315consent, and upon 'the pleadings and agreements, orally-made in open court as to the facts, appointed H. J. Taylor and E. H. Hubbard joint receivers of all said property and franchises. The court found that both of said bridge companies were insolvent; that the property was incapable of division, and should be treated as an entirety; that it was without care; that attachments and executions had been levied upon it; that the value of the franchises was being lost by delay; that the property had been abandoned.by the corporations, and was going to waste; that the charters would expire March 1, 189G, if the bridge was not built; that the claims of these parties required immediate protection; and that a receiver was necessary to prevent loss and injury. On the twenty-seventh day of May, 1895, said receivers, having qualified, applied for an order to sell said property, on the ground that the two completed piers, the one incomplete pier, and the materials on hand were exposed to loss; that the franchises woula be forfeited unless the work was completed by the time provided; and that, if a sale could be máde, the bridge could be completed within said time. On the same day, and with the consent of the then parties to this action, the order for the sale of said property in Woodbury county, state of Iowa, was made, the sale to be made on the tenth day of June, 1895.

2 On the eighth day of- June, 1895, appellant, W. H. Goodwin, filed his petition of intervention, claiming of the Pacific Short-Line Bridge Company five thousand, two hundred and thirty-five dollars, three hundred dollars of which was for money advanced by him for said company upon a contract for right of way, the balance being for unpaid salary as vice president of said company. His petition shows that a corporation known as the Nebraska Terminal Railway & Elevator Company was organized under the laws of Nebraska, to purchase [316]*316certain property in Dakota county, Nebraska, necessary to the construction of the bridge; that mortgages were given for part of tbe purchase money, which were foreclosed, and the property sold; and that intervener, with money furnished by the Pacific Short-Line Bridge Company, took assignments of the certificates of sale to himself, and thereafter received sheriffs deeds in his own name to said property. He claims that he is entitled to hold said Nebraska property as a mortgage to secure the indebtedness to him for said three hundred dollars advanced and for said balance of salary. Intervener alleges that he executed a conveyance in blank for said property, and deposited it with a statement of his account with one C. L. Wright, an officer of said bridge company, said conveyance to be used when intervener’s claim was settled; that said conveyance is still in the hands of said Wright, the claim unsettled; and that he has forbidden said Wright to make any use of said conveyance. Intervener then, after reciting the matters already sufficiently stated, alleges that the decree appointing said receivers was without jurisdiction and erroneous, for numerous reasons that will hereafter be noticed. He states as his only reason for delaying his intervention that he had been negotiating with the principal parties hereto with reference to an adjustment of his claim, and that the negotiations were only terminated on the afternoon of June 8, 1895, by their refusal to recognize his claim. With his petition appellant filed his motion to restrain the receivers from executing said order of sale, which motion was overruled, “except as to the property situated in Dakota county, in the state of Nebraska,” being the same upon which intervener claims a lien. The receivers having sold the property other than that in Dakota county, Neb., intervener filed his exceptions to the approval of said sale, upon several grounds that will be hereafter noticed. These exceptions were overruled, and an order was made approving [317]*317the sale and ordering a conveyance of the property. Invervener, appellant, makes eighteen assignments of error, based upon the overrulings of his said motion and exceptions.

3 II. Appellant’s first contention is that the pleadings do not show that the property, or the lands, income, and profits thereof, are in danger of being lost or destroyed. As we view the pleadings, they do show that this property was in danger of being lost.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 N.W. 839, 104 Iowa 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-investment-co-v-pacific-short-line-bridge-co-iowa-1898.