Bound v. South Carolina Ry. Co.

71 F. 53, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3260
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 12, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 71 F. 53 (Bound v. South Carolina Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bound v. South Carolina Ry. Co., 71 F. 53, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3260 (circtdsc 1895).

Opinion

SIMONTON, Circuit Judge.

This case comes up by way of petition in the main cause. It sets up that the petitioners were holders of first consolidated mortgage bonds of the South ‘Carolina Railway Company; the petitioner Roseborough being the holder of bond Ho. 3,424 for $1,000, on which there were past due and unpaid seven coupons, of $30 each, and the petitioner Browning being the owner of two bonds, of $1,000 each, on which there were due, in all,- coupons, of $30 each. The petitioners go on to say that at the sale for foreclosure of the railway property,, the respondents Henry W. Smith, Gustave E. Kissell and Peter Geddes were the highest bidders, at $1,000,000, and that after the sale they immediately disposed of the purchased property to Charles Parsons and others for an amount equal to the full value of all the bonds represented by them, and that they remit the petitioners, with all other bondholders not in the syndicate with this committee, to the dividend on the $1,000,000 purchase money which their bonds would receive in a division, including all the bonds due and unpaid when the road was sold, thus including in this the bonds received by this committee;' that in this way these petitioners would receive 10 per cent, or 15 per cent, of their bonds, while the bondholders represented by this committee would each receive the same dividend, in spite of the fact that they have already received the full value of their bonds and coupons. The bonds not included in those protected by the committee amount in the aggregate to $63,100. The receiver, in his answer to the petition, says that he had then on hand $68,000, and that some $600,000 of the purchase money is yet unpaid. The petitioners ask that they, and all other bonds in like plight with those they hold, be paid out of the funds in the hands of the receiver, before the other bondholders, who were represented by the committee, are permitted to participate in this fund. The facts of this case, as developed in the record and by the testimony, are these:

When the proceedings by E. W. Bound, a second consolidated mortgage bondholder, were instituted, all the persons representing the several liens on the property were made parties defendant; the bondholders secured by the several mortgages on the property being represented by their trustees. Among other defendants were-the trustees of the first consolidated mortgage. In these proceedings the respondents Smith; Kissell, and Geddes intervened as [55]*55a committee representing certain first consolidated mortgage bondholders of the South Carolina Railway Company, expressed dissatisfaction with and distrust of their trustees, and asked that they be made parties defendant in the cause, and be permitted to represent their own interests apart from their trustees. The^ prayer of this petition was granted, and thenceforward these petitioners became and were parties to the cause, represented by their own counsel, the bondholders instructing them; the trustees of their mortgage being also active parties, with other counsel of their selection, representing the other first consolidated bondholders. The proceedings resulted in an order for a sale. Prior to such sale this committee advertised in several New York papers their purpose to protect the bonds in their charge as much as possible, and inviting all other bondholders to come in and share the expense with them and the result. This invitation was kept open until the day of sale. The present petitioners did not accept the invitation. Neither of them saw it, although it was advertised in the Charleston News and Courier, a paper published in South Carolina. The sale took place, and the committee became the purchaser of the whole property, which was sold, free of all liens», for the sum of §1,000,000. This sale was confirmed. After the sale the committee resold the property to the South Carolina & Georgia Railroad Company. A circular issued by them and admitted in evidence shows that they estimated that each of the bonds entitled to share in the proceeds of the resale would receive a share in the resale equal to the par and interest of the bond, less its share of expense. The fairness of the sale of the railroad property under the decree is not questioned, and all effort to set aside the sale to the South Carolina & Georgia Railroad Company has been abandoned on the record.

It is contended that this committee, and the bondholders whom it represents, stand in such a relation to the other bondholders under the same mortgage that they cannot, under that sale, reap all of its advantages for themselves, and counsel rely in great confidence upon the cases of Jackson v. Ludeling, 21 Wall. 616, and State v. Anderson, 91 U. S. 667. These cases clearly establish the principle that one having an interest in a mortgage, in which there are others having an equal or a similar interest, cannot make such use of Ms interest therein so as to defeat, annul, or exclude the interest of the others sharing the security with him; that is to say, cannot by reason of his interest in the mortgage, conduct by himself his separate proceeding, and under it dispose of the mortgaged property so as to deprive other persons having a lien of the same rank with his, or interested in the same mortgage with him, of their claim on the property. This is the precise point decided in Jackson v. Ludeling, and the qualification of the rule:

“When two or more persons have a common Interest In a security, equity will not allow one to appropriate it exclusively to himself, or to impair its worth to the others. Community of interest involves mutual obligation. If, e», g., a corporation issue many bonds, and give a mortgage on all its estate» [56]*56to secure them, one holder of the bonds, admitting that ho has a right to make use of the mortgage to enforce the payment of the bonds which he holds, has no right to employ it as an instrument by which he may become the owner of the property mortgaged at the lowest price at which it can be obtained, leaving the bonds held by his associate holders unpaid. His duty, if he uses it at all, is to make it productive of the most that can be obtained for all who are interested in it, and if he seek to make a profit out of it at the expense of those whose rights in it were the same as his own, he is guilty of fraud.”

The doctrine is a familiar one. If a holder of one of several bonds secured by a mortgage of real estate proceed at law on his bond, enter up judgment against the mortgagor, enforce it by execution, and at the sale purchase the equity of redemption, he cannot in this way deprive the other bondholders secured by the same mortgage of their protection under it. In the proceedings leading up to the sale in the present case, the committee and the bonds represented by them dissociated themselves from the other bondholders under their common mortgage, and thenceforward acted apart from them in the‘protection of their interests. These other bondholders, including the petitioners, were throughout represented by the trustees of their mortgage. There was, then, no duty or obligation on the part of the committee towards the bondholders not represented by them in any of the steps leading up to this sale. They were representing as distinct an interest from them as if they were protected by another security. ISfor was there any obligation upon them to consult or protect the other bondholders, who were actively and fully represented in the same cause by their own trustees and counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
71 F. 53, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bound-v-south-carolina-ry-co-circtdsc-1895.