Dunham v. Isett

15 Iowa 284, 1863 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 9, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 15 Iowa 284 (Dunham v. Isett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunham v. Isett, 15 Iowa 284, 1863 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 99 (iowa 1863).

Opinion

Wright, J.

The motion to dissolve the injunction was based upon two general grounds: 1. That there is no equity in the bill: 2. That the Company had no authority to make the trust deeds. Hnder these general propositions appellant’s counsel has presented several questions for our consideration, which will be briefly noticed:

1. It is claimed that it does not appear that the bonds attempted to be secured by the deeds of trust, have been sold or hypothecated. The bill avers that the Company was desirous to obtain large sums of money for the purpose of constructing, &c., a certain Railroad then in the course of construction from, &c., that for this purpose the said Company issued their certain bonds, each for the sum of one thousand dollars, amounting in the aggregate to three millions and nine hundred and ninety thousand dollars, drawing interest at the rates of seven and eight per cent, payable semi-annually; that to secure the payment [290]*290of these bonds and make them current in market, the company by its legally constituted officers and in pursuance of law, executed and delivered to complainant, as trustee, their certain mortgages, “by which they granted,-transferred and conveyed,” &c. It is then particularly averred that on the 1st day of July, 1855, there was issued bonds, known as construction bonds, to the amount of $1,9-90,-000 ; and that there has been issued and sold $2,000,000 of land grant bonds, and that there is now due and unpaid on interest coupons on said bonds about the sum of $418,-309 ; that none of the principal and but a portion of the interest has been paid. What more could be legally required of the pleader than has been averred in this instance, it is difficult to imagine. It is stated that these bonds were “issued;” that they were “issued and sold;” in other words, that they were sent out and delivered for circulation; that there is now due and unpaid on the interest coupons over $400,000. How these averments could be true, and the bonds still remain in the hands of the treasurer or other officer of the Company for negotiation or hypothecation, we cannot conceive. The word “ issued ” is that employed in all the cases, when speaking of similar bonds after their negotiation, after they have passed to third parties, and its meaning is well understood. To use other or different language is not required,of the pleader. In this connection we remark, also, that there is no such negation of the existence or negotiation of these bonds in the respondent’s answer, as to authorize the Court, without further showing, to dissolve the injunction.

2. It is also claimed that complainant has a full and adequate remedy at law; that an action at law could be maintained against Isett and the Sheriff; that their insolvency is not averred and it is not shown that the action is brought to avoid a multiplicity of suits. Assuming for the present the validity of the mortgages, we deem it very [291]*291clear that the revenues so pledged are not liable to attachment or execution by the judgment creditors of the corporation. Galena & Chicago Union Railroad Company v. Menzies, 26 Ill., 121. And while it is possible that equity might not interfere if complainant was merely seeking to obtain possession of some specific, tangible property of the Company, not for foreclosure but to take its profits; the case is very different where he seeks protection and quiet in the possession of certain rights, incorporeal in their nature. And especially is this true when the nature of these rights, and their-liability to frequent interruptions and infringements render the powers of a court of equity almost indispensable to their complete protection. See Hale v. Sullivan Railway, opinion of Curtis, J., cited p. 582, Redf. on Railways. Says the Chancellor in Groton Turnpike Company v. Ryder, 1 John. Ch., 615: “ The equity jurisdiction in such a case is extremely benign and salutary ; without it the party would be exposed to constant and ruinous litigations, as well as to have his rights excessively impaired by frauds and evasion.”

3. These mortgages contain a provision, as stated by appellant, in substance, that “ all of the rights of the bondholders or trustee, are subject to the possession, control and management of the directors of said Company until default,” &c. It is now claimed that this stipulation means that the directors have the right to make any and all contracts, and' that when made before default, will be valid as against the trustee, giving the creditor a preference over the mortgage liens. This is not our understanding of this provision. So far as the mortgage relates to real property, the mortgagor would be entitled to the possession, control and management, until an entry for default or foreclosure as contemplated by the conveyance, without any such provision. And so far as it covers personal property, in the absence of some such stipulation, the legal title and right [292]*292of possession would have passed to tbe mortgagee. This clause, therefore, only provides for the ownership, possession and management of the property in a manner clearly recognized by our law. The lien of the mortgage is not affected thereby. Persons dealing with the Company, extending credit to it and the like, knew that this management and possession is subject to the incumbrances created by these mortgages, which may be enforced, if there is default in the payment of the bonds. If the question related to the right of a party purchasing some article of property covered by the mortgages, prior to the foreclosure or default, and while it was thus controlled and managed by the Company, it might involve different principles, and there would possibly be more plausibility in the argument' of the appellant.

4. Finally, it is insisted that these mortgages were made without authority of law, and are absolutely void. Under this head it is argued that the power to make such instruments did not exist at common law, and has not been conferred by statute; that unless derived from some statute, the corporation could not encumber or transfer its franchise, and that if there was no authority to mortgage the franchise, the Company could not make a conveyance or create a lien upon the future tolls or earnings of the road. And in these propositions we have the points principally relied upon by appellant to reverse this case.

Jessup et al., Trustees v. Bridge et al., 11 Iowa, 572, clearly and conclusively recognizes the right of a Railroad Company to mortgage its future net earnings to secure the prompt payment of interest accruing on its construction bonds. And when the authority is conferred by statute, there can be no question as to the correctness of this ruling, sustained, as it is, by the numerous well considered cases there cited. And see 2 Law Reg., N. S., 527, and the cases there referred to; Morrell v. Noyes, reported in 3 Id., [293]*29318, and the note of Judge Redfield; Pennock v. Coe, 23 How., 117; opinion of Judge Curtis in Hall v. Sullivan Railway, supra; Redf. on Railw., § 235, and notes 19, 20.) But it is insisted, that while the mortgage in the ease decided in 11 Iowa, may have been authorized by oh. .182, of the Laws of 1857, these mortgages were made before that time and are not sustained by any such statute.

These instruments recite that this corporation was organized under the provisions of ch.

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15 Iowa 284, 1863 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunham-v-isett-iowa-1863.