Central Trust Co. v. Ohio Cent. R. Co.

36 F. 520, 6 Ohio F. Dec. 159, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2642
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio
DecidedAugust 29, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 F. 520 (Central Trust Co. v. Ohio Cent. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio 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. Ohio Cent. R. Co., 36 F. 520, 6 Ohio F. Dec. 159, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2642 (circtndoh 1888).

Opinion

Ja.ckson, J.

The original or main suit herein was brought by complainant to foreclose certain mortgages executed by the Ohio Central Railway Company, January 1,1880, to secure $3,000,000 of first mortgage bonds and $3,000,000 of income bonds. The mortgage or trust deed securing the first mortgage bonds conveyed to said Central Trust Company of New York, as trustee, in very broad and comprehensive terms, all the line of railroad of the mortgagor, with all rights of way, rpad-bed made and to be made, track laid and to be laid between the designated terminal points, including all the stations, depot grounds, fences, rails, bridges, sidings, engine-houses, machine-shops,buildings in any way then or thereafter appertaining unto said described line of railroad, “together with all the engines, cars, machinery, supplies, tools, and fixtures now or at any time hereafter held, owned, or acquired by said party of the first part for use in connection with its line of railroad aforesaid.” ■ This mortgage, as well as the income mortgage securing the $3,000,000 [521]*521of income bonds, was duly recorded. The railroad company made default in paying the interest on said bonds, and the said trustee thereafter, in pursuance of and in conformity with the terms and provisions of said mortgages, commenced proceedings in this court to foreclose said mortgages by a sale of the property covered thereby. Such proceedings were had in the cause as resulted in a sale of the franchises and property of the said Ohio Central Railway Company in the summer of 1885, when, under a scheme of reorganization participated' in by a large majority of the bondholders and a considerable portion of the stockholders, said property and franchises ivere purchased for this account, and then conveyed to a newly-organized corporation, called the “Toledo & Ohio Central Railway Company,” which thus became the successor of the said Ohio Central Railway Company in and to franchises and property of the latter covered by said mortgages. At or about the time of commencing said foreclosure suit, John E. Martin was, on September 30, 1883, appointed receiver of the road and property of said Ohio Central Railway Company, and said receivership continued for the period of 21 months, extending from October 1 1883, to June 30, 1885. The regularity of these proceedings, not being called in question or in anywise involved in the present controversy, need not be noticed with more particularity or detail.

On April 2, 1884, during the pendency of said foreclosure suit, George J. McGourkey, trustee, filed his two intervening petitions in the cause, alleging that under three certain lease contracts entered into and executed between himself and said Ohio Central Railway Company, bearing date, respectively, August 20, 1880, March 1,1881, and March 1, 1882, he had leased and delivered to said railway company 27 locomotives, 3,300 coal cars, and 340 box ears, designated and identified by serial numbers mentioned, and the letters “O. C. C. T.” marked thereon, for which the railway company had agreed to pay him certain rentals during the period stated in each lease, when said locomotives and cars were to become the property of said railway company. The petitions, after setting out the-terms of said lease contracts, and the payments that had been made thereunder, both by the company and the receiver, alleged that said cars and locomotives had gone into the possession of said receiver, and were then being used by him in conducting the business of said railroad, and prayed that said receiver be directed by the court either to perform the covenants of said leases by paying the balance due petitioner thereunder, or that he be directed to deliver up said equipment, and pay petitioner for the use thereof; and asking for a reference to a special examiner to ascertain and report the value of such use. On the 18th of June, 1887,. said McGourkey, trustee, filed a third petition in the suit, claiming that there was due him as rental under said leases from March 1, 1883, to October 1, 1883, when said equipment went into the hands of the receiver, the sum of $124,000, which, though accruing before the receivership, should be paid him, because cash assets, personal property, and earnings to a large amount had come into the possession of the receiver, and been applied towards permanent improvements, new equipment, and [522]*522betterments placed upon the 'property, etc. The Central Trust Company, complainant in the foreclosure suit, and the Toledo and Ohio Central Eailway Company, as the purchaser of the mortgaged property sold thereunder, answered said petitions, denying the title of McGourkey, trustee, to the equipment claimed by him, and disputing his right to any rental for the use of the same while in the hands of the receiver. A reference was directed to a special master, who took proof, and reported that the petitioner, McGourkey, trustee, should be paid about the sum of $80,-000 as rental while said equipment was used by the receiver between October 1,1883, and June 30, 1885, in addition to what had been paid during said period, which amounted to about $129,600. The petitioner and the complainant, together with the Toledo & Ohio Central Railway Company, each filed exceptions to said report; the petitioner claiming that he has a valid title to said equipment, and is entitled to a much larger rental therefor; and the complainant, in behalf of the first mortgage bondholders, and the Toledo & Ohio Central Railway Company in its own behalf, insisting that the title to said cars and locomotives was vested in said Central Trust Company, under and by virtue of the “after-acquired property” clause of the mortgage of January 1, 1880, executed to secure the railway company’s first mortgage bonds. That said McGourkey, trastee,, under and by virtue of said leases acquired nothing more than a lien upon said equipment, subject to the prior lien and title of said mortgage, and that he is not entitled to any rent or purchase money therefor as against said bondholders or their trustee; but, if mistaken in this view of their rights, that the surplus earnings derived from the receivership, and now in court, amounts to oxrly about $80,000, and that petitioner should in no event be awarded a greater allowance than such surplus earnings, as any greater allowance would have to be paid out of funds or property belonging to and purchased by the bondholders under the foreclosure suit. It is conceded by counsel for petitioner, McGourkey, (and, as the court thinks, properly so,) that complainant and the Toledo & Ohio Central Railway Company are not estop-ped by anything that has occurred during the progress of the foreclosure suit from setting up the claims they insist upon in respect to said equipment.

But counsel for complainant and the Toledo & Ohio Central Railway Company have gone further, and contended that the leases, under which petitioner asserts his claim to said equipment and to compensation for the use thereof while in the possession of the receiver, were a part and parcel' of a fraudulent scheme contrived and put in operation by the pool or syndicate which originally organized the Ohio Central Railway Company. It appears that, in 1879, what is called the “$3,000,000 pool” was formed to acquire and complete certain lines of railroad, which were to constitute the Ohio Central Railway Company. This syndicate, through its com-' mittee, composed of George I. Seney, Dan P. Eells and George F. Stone, representing the subscribers to said pool, contracted with Brown, Howard & Co., also members of said syndicate, to acquire and construct the lines that were to form said Ohio Central Railway Company; to organize' [523]

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Bluebook (online)
36 F. 520, 6 Ohio F. Dec. 159, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-trust-co-v-ohio-cent-r-co-circtndoh-1888.