Douglass v. Cline

75 Ky. 608, 12 Bush 608, 1876 Ky. LEXIS 125
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 17, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 75 Ky. 608 (Douglass v. Cline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglass v. Cline, 75 Ky. 608, 12 Bush 608, 1876 Ky. LEXIS 125 (Ky. Ct. App. 1876).

Opinions

JUDGE LINDSAY

delivered the opinion oe the court, Chiee Justice Peters and Judge Pryor concurring and Judge Coder dissenting.

The deed executed and delivered by the Louisville & Lexington and the Louisville & Frankfort Railroad Companies to Norvin Green was intended to secure the payment of bonds issued by said companies pursuant to legislative authority amounting in the aggregate to $3,000,000.

Subsequent to the execution of this deed the two companies were by act of the general assembly consolidated into one, to be known and designated as the “Louisville, Cincinnati & Lexington Railroad Company.” This corporation executed the deed to Douglass to secure the payment of bonds amounting in'the aggregate to $1,000,000. The two deeds, which we will hereafter term mortgages, covered the same property, which was made up of the railroads running from Louisville to Lexington, and from Lagrange to Newport, and all other property, rights, and franchises held or owned by the two old companies, and by their successor, the “Louisville, Cincinnati & Lexington Railroad Company.”

The bonds issued and sold under the mortgage to Green were to run thirty years from the 1st day of January, 1867. [614]*614They bear interest at the rate of seven per centum per annum, payable semi-annually.

Those issued under the mortgage to Douglass were to run thirty years from the 1st day of April, 1870. They bear interest at the rate of eight per centum per annum, payable semi-annually.

In the first named mortgage it is provided, in the event the mortgagors shall fail to pay any part of any installment of interest, that may fall due on the bonds it was intended to secure, for more than sixty days after such installment shall become due and be demanded, that upon the request in writing of any person holding any of such bonds the trustee, or his successor, may enter and take possession of the mortgaged property, and hold, use, and operate it for the benefit of the holders of the bonds; and further, that after such default and request, and possession taken, the trustee, or his successor, may, upon the written request of the legal holders of $500,000 of the bonds, sell the trust property to the highest bidder; “and said sale may be made for the whole amount of the principal and interest then accrued upon the whole issue of said bonds, treating the principal as become due by reason of the default in the payment of the interest.”

The mortgage to Douglass provides that upon the non-payment of any installment of interest, that may fall due upon the bonds it was intended to secure, for ninety days after it shall become due and be demanded, then the principal of all the bonds shall become due and payable, and the mortgage lien may at once be enforced for the entire amount of the bonds; and further, that in case of such default the trustee, upon the written request of the holders of a majority of the bonds, may take possession of the property, and by himself and agents, or by the receiver of a court, use and operate the same and receive the earnings and income therefrom, or said trustee in such case may, by the decree or judgment of a court having jurisdiction, have all the mortgaged property sold and conveyed.

[615]*615The company made default in the payment of the installment of interest falling due on the bonds issued under the mortgage to Green on the 1st of January, 1874, and in the payment of the installment of interest on the bonds issued under the mortgage to Douglass falling due on the 1st day of April, 1874.

Douglass, in the exercise of his contract right to have the mortgaged property sold by the decree, of a court of competent jurisdiction for the payment in full of the principal and accrued interest of all the bonds issued under the mortgage to him, on the 2oth of July, 1874, instituted his action in equity in the Louisville Chancery Court, and sought that relief. He made the railroad company and the senior mortgagee, Green, and other persons supposed to be interested in the mortgaged property, parties defendant to his action. He asked that the said property be sold and the proceeds distributed according to the rights of all the parties in interest, and in the meantime that it be placed in the hands of a receiver, and the earnings applied as the court might order.

Green answered, and made his answer a cross - petition against the railroad company, and joined with Douglas's in the prayer for the sale of the property and the appointment of the receiver.

After answer by the company, the court on the 19th of September, 1874, made the order for a receiver, and on the 21st of that month he was duly qualified, and at once assumed the possession of and commenced to operate the company’s roads.

On the 3d of the following month Cline and others, professing to represent large numbers of mechanics, artisans, laborers, workmen, engineers, firemen, conductors, brakemen, clerks, agents, and officers, who, they alleged, had been in the employ of the railroad company, presented their petition, and, upon their own motion, were made parties to the action. Two days thereafter Douglass amended his petition and made them [616]*616parties defendant. Thereupon they moved the court that the order, heretofore made for the receiver, be extended to enforce the payment of the back pay ” claimed to be due and owing to said employees. The petition of Cline, &c., was, by an amendment, made a cross-petition against Green, Douglass, and others. It was alleged in said petition that the company owed the persons whom he and his co-petitioners represented large sums of money for work and labor done and performed in operating, constructing, and repairing its roads subsequent to the 1st day of January, 1874, and prior to the appointment of the receiver. They filed with their pleadings a copy of the payrolls of the company, which they said set out in detail the nature of their several employments, the wages agreed to be paid them, and the balances due and in arrear to each person respectively. They claimed a lien upon the roads of the company, and upon their earnings, and asked that the receiver be required to satisfy their demands, out of the first net earnings that should come to. his hands. The company admitted the justice of their claims and the correctness of the amounts set out.

The appellants Douglass and Green, not objecting to the form of appellees’ action, nor to the sufficiency of-their petition, and not controverting the accuracy of the pay-rolls filed with it, replied to their cross-petition, and denied merely the existence of their asserted lien.

The appellant Patterson averred want of knowledge or information sufficient to enable him to form a belief as to the existence of the alleged claims. Two months before he answered, the pay-rolls upon which appellees based their proceeding had been made part of the record of the cause, and the company, the common debtor, had admitted the accuracy of these rolls. The means of information were thus placed within his reach, and as the payment of these claims will affect him only to the extent of diminishing a -fund to which he is [617]*617asserting title, lie could not be allowed to put the appellants upon the proof of their debts by a technical denial based upon a want of information palpably within his reach.

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Bluebook (online)
75 Ky. 608, 12 Bush 608, 1876 Ky. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglass-v-cline-kyctapp-1876.