Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Penn Plate Glass Co.

186 U.S. 434, 22 S. Ct. 842, 46 L. Ed. 1234, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 907
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 2, 1902
Docket180
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 186 U.S. 434 (Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Penn Plate Glass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Penn Plate Glass Co., 186 U.S. 434, 22 S. Ct. 842, 46 L. Ed. 1234, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 907 (1902).

Opinion

*444 Mr. Justice Peckham,

after making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

The only question involved in this case arises from the provision made in the decree by the Circuit Court Judge, impressing what is termed an equitable lien upon the insurance moneys collected on the policies taken out by The Penn Company, sufficient to pay any balance which' may remain unpaid on the bonds secured by the mortgage to complainant, after the application of the proceeds of the sale of the property mortgaged. The Circuit Court held that the complainant had such equitable lien, while the Circuit Court of Appeals, Judge Acheson dissenting; was of the contrary opinion, and therefore reversed that portion of the decree which provided for it.

The policies upon which the moneys were collected to pay the loss happening by fire, were taken out by The Penn Company for the purpose of covering its own interest in the property, and the language of the policies covered such interest only. There was no contract in the policies covering the interest of the complainant as mortgagee, nor was the insurance, in fact, effected for the purpose of carrying out any agreement or obligation on the part of The Penn- Company with the complainant to effect insurance covering the interest of the bondholders. On the contrary, this purpose was disaffirmed and the obligation denied. The Penn Company had the right to insure its own interest, and unless there was some contractual obligation on its part on the subject, which bound it, or some conduct on its part, or on the part of Kann, its immediate grantor, which -would estop it from setting up the fact that it had procured the insurance for itself, the moneys arising out of the contracts which it made with the various insurance companies, cannot be taken from it and bestowed on the complainant for the benefit of the bondholders secured by the mortgage in suit. Some obligation of the defendant of a contractual nature must exist, or some conduct must be proved, estopping the defendant from denying süch obligation, before the court can be authorized to take such moneys and bestow them upon the mortgagee for the benefit, of the- bondholders.

*445 The complainant asserts that, without regard to any pro-vision in the mortgage, it has an equitable lien upon The Penn Company’s insurance, and that, under the circumstances, such company must be treated as in the position of a receiver,appointed on complainant’s motion in this'case. The peculiar circumstances upon which the claim is based that defendants should be so treated, seem principally tó be the denial of complainant’s motion for the appointment of a receiver at the time-of the commencement of this suit to foreclose the mortgage, and the fact that The Penn Company had insurance on the property. The denial of the motion- for ■ a receiver, it is averred, was brought about by the. opposition of the defendants Kann and The Penn Company, and it is argued that they ought not to have opposed the motion, and their opposition was improper and in bad faith. But it must be remembered they were parties to the.suit, and in the legal protection of -their rights it was perfectly proper for - them to oppose, before the court, the appointment of a receiver, even though their opposition secured the denial of the complainant’s motion. We see nothing upon which to base an.accusation of bad faith iñ this conduct of defendants. The complainant, however, regards the application for a receiver as the sarrfe in substance as an application to take possession of the premises in pur--suance of the provisions of the mortgage, consequent upon a default in the payment of the principal or interest of the bonds, or because of a violation of any other of the covenants contained in such mortgage. Even if that, be so, we see nothing in such fact to in any way alter the right of defendants to oppose by argument before the court the appointment of a receiver. There is.no pretence that they made any allegations ■' upon the hearing which were untrue-or that their opposition was based upon anything other than conceded facts. Possibly the Circuit Court ought to have appointed a receiver upon the application of the complainant. That was a matter resting a good deal in its sound 'discretion. The Penn Company and Kann were, however, entirely within their- legal rights when they opposed such application, and we are unable to see that, their conduct in so doing in any manner, altered those rights *446 or added to tbeir own legal obligations. Yery likely a receiver, if be bad been appointed, would on bis own motion have taken out insurance upon tbe property, or would have been directed by tbe court to do so, in order to cover the interest of tbe bondholders. But no receiver was appointed and no such insurance was taken out, and we cannot see that tbe defendant, Tbe Penn Company, has in any manner made itself liable to pay to the complainant any of tbe insurance moneys which it obtained to cover its own interest only, in the property, because of tbe successful opposition made by it to tbe appointment of a receiver.

The court on bearing all sides and interests denied tbe application. There was nothing which then prevented tbe complainant from itself taking out insurance under tbe tenth article of the inortgage. It could have taken out such insurance as a thing proper to be done by it as trustee within tbe provisions of the mortgage, and in such case it would have been entitled, by the specific provisions in the tenth article, to reimbursement therefor and to compensation from the trust fund. We do not say that it was its duty to do so, for it bad no cash of the mortgagor on hand, but it had the power under the article to advance the insurance premiums and the right to demand reimbursement and compeúsation for having done so. The fact that it had no funds at its command at that time is very likely an answer to the proposition that it was its duty to have itself procured insurance; but if it had advanced the money and thus procured the insurance, the amount which it advanced would have been a lien on the trust fund and payable thereout before any claim on the part of the bondholders could have been asserted. The risk of loss to the complainant by making such advances would have been nothing. We refer to the subject to show that the mere fact that the trustee was without actual cash in hand to procure the insurance is not material.

Nor can we see that the execution of the agreement soon after the court had decided to deny the application for the receiver, in any way affects the liability of the defendants on this branch of the case. ■ From the time that Kann bought the premises. on the receiver’s sale and took a deed therefor subject to *447 the mortgage, he denied any liability on his part to insure the premises for the bondholders, and refused so to do, and The Penn Company from the time it became the purchaser of the premises, also denied any liability to insure and refused to do it. The denial of this obligation to insure and the refusal on the part of both Kami and The Penn Company had been explicit, open and continuous from the time the property had first been acquired up to the hearing upon the motion for a receiver. "Whether the defendants or either of them were bound to insure for the benefit of the bondholders was a question which the Circuit Court said it could not decide at that time.

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Bluebook (online)
186 U.S. 434, 22 S. Ct. 842, 46 L. Ed. 1234, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-loan-trust-co-v-penn-plate-glass-co-scotus-1902.