Day v. Postal Telegraph Co.

7 A. 608, 66 Md. 354
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 4, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 7 A. 608 (Day v. Postal Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day v. Postal Telegraph Co., 7 A. 608, 66 Md. 354 (Md. 1887).

Opinion

Alvey, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On the 30th of May, 1885, Austin G. Day, the appellant on this appeal, filed in the Circuit Court of Baltimore [358]*358City, a general creditors’ bill against The Postal Telegraph and Cable Company, and The Postal Telegraph Company of Baltimore City. Both companies have been duly incorporated, the former under the laws'of the State of New York, and the latter under the general incorporation law of this State. As the titles indicate, these companies were incorporated as telegraph companies, with p>owers to construct and maintain lines of telegraph, and to do a general telegraph business. The New York Company was formed several years ago for constructing and operating telegraph lines within the United States, with its principal office in the City of New York, and the Maryland Company was subsequently formed in 1883, professedly for the purpose of constructing and operating telegraph lines within this State.

The appellant alleges himself to be creditor of the New York Company to a considerable amount; and he also-alleges that said company is hopelessly insolvent and that its affairs have been placed in the hands of receivers by a Court of competent jurisdiction in New York. And in the original bill filed, the appellant alleged that the telegraph property in Maryland, which was in the possession of and being operated by the New York Company, such as right of way, poles, wires, &c., was in the Maryland Company, and that such property had been leased by the latter company to the New York Company; and that the New York Company was the owner of all the instruments and material used in operating the telegraph lines, and paid all the operatives and employés, and received and applied all the revenues and profits derived from the operation of said lines. Upon these and other allegations contained in the original bill, the appellant prayed for the appointment of a receiver of the property and effects of both companies found in this State, and for an injunction to restrain the companies, and their agents, and the receivers of the New York Court, from interfering with [359]*359the property or receiving and disposing of the revenues and profits derived from the Maryland telegraph lines ; and that the property be sold for the payment of debts.

But a few days after this bill was filed, another bill was filed in the same Court, by A. B. Chandler, in his character simply as receiver of the The Postal Telegraph and Cable Company (deriving his appointment and authority from the Supreme Court of New York,) against that company as defendant. In this bill it is charged, upon the oath of the plaintiff, that the defendant company, in accordance with the purpose of its organization, constructed lines of telegraph within the States of New York, Illinois, Ohio, Missouri, and. the District of Columbia, and caused corporations to be organized within the States of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Indiana and Maryland, under the laws of those States, for the purpose of constructing and operating lines of telegraph therein; That the corporations organized under the laws of the last named States, constructed and acquired lines of telegraph in those States respectively, which lines were connected with and made part of the general telegraph system of the defendant company: That such corporations so organized in the States named, are controlled by'the defendant company, and that the stock therein is held almost entirely by the defendant company, or in its interest: That the lines of telegraph constructed by the defendant company, and those acquired or constructed by the corporations organized as stated, are operated together and comprise the telegraph system of the defendant company. The bill then charges that this company is largely indebted, and is utterly insolvent, and that the value of its property largely depends upon its being kept together and intact, so as to be operated as an entire system under one management. It then prays that the receivership created by the appointment of the Supreme' Court of New York be extended over the property within the jurisdiction of this [360]*360State; and that an injunction he issued to restrain all persons from interfering with .the property and effects of the defendant company.

A short time after this hill was filed, that is to say, on the ITth of June, 1885, and before answer was filed, the Court below, by order, consolidated the cases made by the two bills to which we have referred, and directed that such cases be proceeded in as one case. It thereupon rescinded previous orders passed upon the bills separately, and appointed the Hon. Geo. W. Dobbin, Samuel Snowden and Samuel D. Sprigg, receivers, with power and authority to take charge and possession of all the property and effects of both companies, and to collect all debts, revenue, &c.

In passing, it is proper to observe, that there was error in consolidating the bill filed by the receiver with that filed by the appellant, and thus making one case of hills that sought to accomplish objects that would conflict the one with the other. Moreover, the receiver appointed by the Court of New York had no extra-territorial power to institute proceedings in the Courts of this State, in regard to property not subject to the jurisdiction of the Court from which he received his appointment. His functions and powers, for purposes of litigation, are held to be limited to the Courts of the State within which he was appointed, and the principles of comity between the States do not apply to a case like the present. Bartlett vs. Wilbur, 53 Md., 485; Booth vs. Clark, 17 How., 322, 338; High on Rec., sec. 239. Whatever exceptions may exist in certain cases to the general rule, it is clear that a case like the present does not fall within any of them; for here, to entertain the hill of the receiver and grant the relief prayed by it, would likely, if not certainly, interfere with the exercise of the jurisdiction of the Court previously invoked, in regard to the same subject-matter. The hill by the receiver, therefore, should have been dismissed; or if not dismissed, should have been simply retained by the [361]*361Court to await the final determination of the rights of the parties under the prior suit instituted by the appellant, for the benefit of all the creditors of the foreign insolvent corporation.

After the order of consolidation and the appointment of receivers, as just stated, upon the coming in of the answer of The Postal Telegraph Company of Baltimore City, the Court, by its order of the 23rd of Sept., 1885, dissolved the injunction and discharged the receivers as to that company, but continued the receivers as to the New York Company; and they continued to hold possession of all the property that had come into their hands, as property belonging to the New York Company, or which was liable for its debts.

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7 A. 608, 66 Md. 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-postal-telegraph-co-md-1887.