Feike v. C. & E. Railway Co.

14 Ohio C.C. 186
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMay 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio C.C. 186 (Feike v. C. & E. Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feike v. C. & E. Railway Co., 14 Ohio C.C. 186 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

Russell, J.

This action was brought in Clermont county common pleas by the plaintiff, asking for the appointment of a receiver of tbe defendant road, and was subsequently transferred to the Clinton county court of common pleas, for hearing. While the action was pending in Clinton county •common pleas, proceedings were taken in the District Court ■of the United States for the southern district of Ohio, by trustees for certain mortgage bond-holders, to foreclose the mortgage and sell tbe defendant’s road. The road was sold, proceeds all distributed, except enough to satisfy the claim •of Casement, Kelly & Co.,who filed their answer and cross-petition herein, claiming a prior right to the funds so re•served to that of the trustee of the bond-holders, Hon. B. R. Cowan.

The facts, as found on the trial of the cause, are as follows:

On the 26th day of June, 1876, The Cincinnati & Eastern Railway Company, then being engaged in the building of its railroad from tbe city of Cincinnati to Portsmouth, 0,, to secure the payment of seven hundred and sixty bonds, ■amounting to the sum of five hundred thousand dollars, (1500,000,) with which to raise money for the completion of its road, executed and delivered its mortgage deed of that •date, to a trustee upon all its real and personal property, [188]*188legal and equitable, then owned by it or thereafter to be acquired, as well as the income thereof. That said mortgage deed was afterwards duly recorded in all the counties through which said road was afterwards built, That at the time of making said mortgage said railroad was only partially built, and no part of the line of said road had been located in the county of Scioto. That some time during the month of September, 1882, preliminary surveys were made for the bridge across the Scioto river near the city of Portsmouth, Ohio, and the permanent location of said bridge was made about October, 1862, near the line where the preliminary survey was made in September. Possession of the land on which the piers and bridges were afterwards built, was taken by said railroad company in the month of September, 1882, but no title was obtained by condemnation or purchase until November 2, 1882. That all of said bonds had been issued and sold before September, 1882. That some time in September, 1882, the said railroad company entered into a contract with the firm of Dewey & Campbell to construct a certain portion of its road, which included a bridge across the Scioto river, which required the building of seven piers. That the construction of said seven piers was, on the 21st day of September, 1882, sub-let to the firm of Casement, Kelly & Co., who some time in the month of September, 1882, began the work of constructing the said piers, and continued the same until the latter part of November, 1882, when the firm of Dewey & Campbell abandoned their said contract, owing Casement, Kelly & Co., for a large part of their work. Thereupon, Casement, Kelly & Co., entered into a contract with the railroad company, to complete the said seven piers, and the said company agreed to pay the sum then due from Dewey & Campbell,and for the balance of the work to be done. That Casement, Kelly & Co completed the construction of the said piers in the month -of April, 1883. That the firm of Casement & Kelly, as the [189]*189survivors of Casement, Kelly & Co., on the 18th day of May, 1883, filed a verified account, according to law, with the recorder of Scioto county, for a mechanic’s lien on the said bridge and piers. That afterwards the said Casement & Kelly brought an action in the court of common pleas of Scioto county, Ohio, on the said claim, and recovered a judgment for the full amount of labor and material furnished in and about the building of the said seven piers. And the said court found that the said Casement & Kelly were entitled to a mechanic’s lien against the said bridge and piers for the same, and that they were entitled to a sale of the whole road. But said court found that the exclusive right to sell said road and determine the priorities of the liens, belonged to the said court in Clinton county. And by consent of parties, ordered “That the question of pirority of liens as between Csaement & Kelly and the mortgage creditors of said railway company, be reserved for consideration and determination by said Clinton county common pleas.” On the hearing of the case before the Clinton common pleas court, a decree was rendered in favor of Casement & Kelly for the amount of their claim,and giving them priority therefor over the trust. And from this decree the trustee, B. R. Cowan, appeals to this court. After the evidence was heard in this court, and before the argument was closed,a motion was made to dismiss the appeal, on the ground that the case is not appealable. This motion is overruled, this court holding that this case is appealable. On the fore-going facts it is claimed by Casement & Kelly,that they' have a prior claim to this fund, and a superior equity to that of the trustee for the bond-holders, because, by the judgment and decree of the Scioto county common pleas court, finding the amount due Casement & Kelly and decreeing the same to be a lien upon the bridge piers and land upon which the bridge stands, and the pleadings then before that court, that this question is res adjudicata.

[190]*190We cannot agree with counsel on this proposition. Upon examining the record of the Scioto county common pleas,we find that court expressly reserved the question of the priority of liens as between the bond-holders and Casement & Kelly for a decision of the Clinton county court, in the following language in the decree:

“That the question of priority of liens as between Casement & Kelly, and the mortgage creditors of said railway company, be reserved for consideration by said Clinton common pleas.”

From this reservation, it is clear to us that the Scioto ■common pleas did not decide upon the question of priorities, but by the consent of parties, left it an open question to be determined by the Clinton common pleas court. Had this reservation not been made,from the record otherwise before us, we should be compelled to say that the court had not adjudicated on this question,because no finding of priorities is made by that court, and no presumption can be assumed in favor of one or other of the parties who were before that court contending for the priority, The law is well settled in Ohio by our supreme court, in the case of Petersine v. Thomas, 28 Ohio St., 596, as to when a matter will be presumed to have been finally determined, but the determination of the Scioto common pleas does not come within the rule there laid down, Having arrived at the conclusion that the question of priority has not been adjudicated, but is before us for a determination on the facts found by us from the evidence and pleadings, we proceed to the second claim made by Casement & Kelly, that their claim is prior in noint of time to the claim of the trustee, because, they say, their claim dates from September 21st, 1882, by reason of their contract with Dewey & Campbell as sub-contractors, and after the abandonment of the contract by Dewey & Campbell, their contract made the latter part of November, 1882, with the company,to complete the contract of Dewey & [191]

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14 Ohio C.C. 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feike-v-c-e-railway-co-ohiocirct-1897.