Central Trust Co. v. Georgia Pac. Ry. Co.

87 F. 288, 30 C.C.A. 648, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1794
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 1898
DocketNo. 644
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 F. 288 (Central Trust Co. v. Georgia Pac. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Trust Co. v. Georgia Pac. Ry. Co., 87 F. 288, 30 C.C.A. 648, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1794 (5th Cir. 1898).

Opinion

PARDEE, Circuit Judge.

This is an intervention to enforce a mechanic’s lieu in the main case, which is a foreclosure suit brought by the Central Trust Company of New York, trustee in a mortgage of May 1, 1888, against the Georgia Pacific Railway Company. The interveners allege that on June 8,1888, R. M. and J. M. Brooks made a written contract with the Georgia Pacific Railway Company to do all their earthwork, woodwork, clearing, and grubbing in the construction of 11 miles of its railroad, from sections 40 to 50, inclusive, in the counties of Clay, Oktibbeha, and Webster, in the state of Mississippi; that they commenced work about June 28, 1888, under this contract, and worked until November 14 or 15,1888, doing a very large proportion of work, and furnishing a very large amount of the material for the woodwork, on said 11 miles, for a large part of which work and material the railway company failed to pay; that on November 28, 1888, said It. M. and J. M. Brooks commenced a suit in the chancery‘court of Oktibbeha county, Miss., to enforce their mechanic’s lien under the laws of Mississippi against said railway company, ánd on November 15, 1893, the said court rendered a final decree in their favor for the balance due of $10,000 and cost's, amounting to ?895.88, and decreed that the same be a lien on that part of the railroad and right of way embraced in their contract, which lien, by an amended decree on April 28, 1894, was extended so as to cover all the railroad in Mississippi; that part of the railroad from Atlanta, Ga., to Columbus, Miss., had been completed and in operation several years before the date of the trust deed of May 1, 1888, but no part of the railroad from Columbus west to Johnsonville, Miss., a distance of 140 miles, had been built at that date; that the trust deed to the Central Trust Company provided for the building of this 140 miles, and also provided that the bonds secured by the trust deed could be issued on each section of 10 miles when completed, but not before; that interveners have a lien under the Mississippi statutes upon all of said railroad in Mississippi for said 810,000, with interest at 6 per cent, from November 15, 1893, and all costs; that said lien is superior to, and entitled to priority over, any and all bonds issued under and by reason of said trust deed; and that the holders of said bonds, or any part thereof, are in no sense bona fide purchasers or holders so far as interveners are concerned. The intervention, in suitable averments, contains, besides the above, all the specifications necessary to a full understanding of the case presented. The interveners pray, among other things, that the Georgia Pacific Railway Company, the Central Trust Company, and the receivers be made parties: that the court would require said decree of the chancery court of Oktibbeha county, iu the state of Mississippi, [290]*290to be paid in full, according to tbe directions therein contained, out of tbe income of said railway in tbe bands of said receivers, or out of tbe proceeds of said property; and that said decree be given priority over all said bonds, and be paid off in full, including interest and costs, before anything is paid upon said bonds or upon tbe interest due upon said bonds. This intervention was filed in tbe clerk’s office June 8, 1894, and was ordered by tbe court to be treated as an intervention as of that date. On August 18th tbe Central Trust Company of New York and tbe Georgia Pacific Railway Company and tbe receivers acknowledged service of tbe intervention, and consented that tbe matter should be referred at once to a master, whereupon, on tbe same day, tbe court ordered that tbe intervention be referred to W. D. Ellis, special master, to bear and report upon tbe same. '

On tbe 26th of March, 1894, a decree of foreclosure was entered in tbe main case, directing tbe sale of tbe Georgia Pacific Railway, to satisfy tbe principal and interest of tbe bonds secured by tbe trust deed to tbe Central Trust Company of May 1, 1888, and therein, among other things, it was provided as follows:

“The purchaser or purchasers at said sale shall, as part of the consideration for such sale, take the property purchased upon the express condition that he or they, or his or their assigns, approved hy the court, will, notwithstanding, pay off and satisfy any and all claims filed in this case, but only when the court shall allow such claims, and adjudge* the same to be prior in lien to the mortgage foreclosed in this suit, in accordance with the order or orders of the court allowing such claims, and adjudging with respect thereto; but this provision shall not be- in any manner applicable to the rights and claims of the complainant, as trustee under the said first mortgage of May 6, 1882, or of the trustee under said mortgage of October 1, 1883, or of the complainant, as trustee, under either of the equipment sinking fund mortgages; and the purchaser or purchasers or their approved assigns shall be entitled to appeal from any and all orders or decrees of the court in this respect to such claims, or any of them, and shall have all the rights in this respect to such appeals which the complainant Central Trust Company of New York would have in case such appeals had been taken by it.”

Tbe sale under tbe decree occurred on August 18, 1894; and tbe solicitors for tbe interveners appeared at tbe sale, and gave a written notice to bidders of tbe claims of tbe interveners; Tbe mortgaged property was adjudicated to Charles H. Costa and Anton EL Tbomas, purchasing committee for tbe Southern Railway Company, for tbe sum of $500,000, and tbe decree of confirmation recites as follows:

“And it appearing by the report of the special master that such purchasers have fully complied with the directions of said decree as to. the sale of the said property, and that such purchasers were the highest and best bidders for such railroad property and franchises, and that the same was struck off to them for the sum of -five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000), subject, however, as recited in said decree, to the mortgages, receivers’ debts, and other preferential liens and claims, and to all and singular the terms and conditions in said decree set forth, and that such purchasers have made the payment thus far obligatory upon them, and it being shown to the satisfaction of the court that the recitals in the report of the special master are true, and no cause being shown against such report; * * * and the court further reserves full power from time to time to enter orders binding upon the said Southern Kailway Company and the said Southern Railway Company in Mississippi, as such purchasers under its decree, requiring them to pay into the registry of this court all such sums as have been, or may be, ordered by [291]*291this court for the payment of any and all receivers’ debls or claims adjudged, or to be adjudged, by it as prior in lien or equity to the mortgage foreclosed in tills cause, or entitled to preference in payment out of the proceeds of sale prior to the bonds secured by the said mortgage, of the Georgia Pacific Railway Company.”

On November 3,1894, the following written agreement was filed in the ease, and submitted to the master:

“We hereby withdraw the demurrer heretofore filed to the intervening petition of said J. M. Brooks, surviving partner, et al., in the above-stared case, and admit the statements of fact contained in said petition to he true. We agree that Exhibit A to said petition is a true copy of the contract between the Georgia Pacific Railway Company and R. M. and 1. M.

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Bluebook (online)
87 F. 288, 30 C.C.A. 648, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 1794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-trust-co-v-georgia-pac-ry-co-ca5-1898.