Felker v. Southern Trust Co.

264 F. 798, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1317
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 8, 1920
DocketNo. 5469
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 264 F. 798 (Felker v. Southern Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Felker v. Southern Trust Co., 264 F. 798, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1317 (8th Cir. 1920).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

In a suit in equity pending in the court below, to which the Southern Trust Company, the trustee in the mortgage of January 1, 1907, securing bonds overdue to the amount of some $300,000 on certain railway iiroperty, J. E. Felker, W. R. Felker, and the Felker Construction Company, a co-partnership composed of J. E. Felker and W. R. Felker together, hereafter called the Felkers, claimants of some $210,000, and others, were parties, and in which suit by their pleadings and evidence the Southern Company, on the one hand, and the Felkers, on the other, had claimed the superior lien upon the mortgaged property, the court below rendered a decree of foreclosure of the mortgage and of a sale of the property dated March 8, 1918. The mortgaged property was sold under this decree to F. X. Queen, John J. Tyler, and James H. Morris, as the bondholders’ protective committee, for $275,000, and that sale was confirmed by the order of the court on October 4, 1918. In December, 1918, and January, 1919, the Felkers filed petitions and a statement of their election to stand on their statutory liens upon certain of their claims, and thereby again presented the same claims for a superior lien upon the mortgaged property which they had made at the hearing before the decree, and insisted that the court ought to allow these claims, to adjudge them to be secured by a lien superior to the lien of the [800]*800mortgage, and to require the purchasers at the sale to pay these claims in addition to the $275,000 which they had paid for the mortgaged property pursuant to their bid of that amount at the sale. The Southern Company and the purchasers moved to dismiss these petitions and this statement of election, on the ground that the Felkers were 'estopped by the adjudication evidenced by the decree, to the effect that the lien of the mortgage was first and superior and that these claims were subject to that lien, from again litigating the question of- their superiority; that motion was granted by the court, and the Felkers appealed.

[1] A motion to dismiss the appeal was made by the Southern ■Company and the purchasers at the sale, for the same reasons by which they persuaded the court below to make the order appealed from. But, even if those are sound reasons for that order, they are not tenable reasons why the appellants should be deprived of a review of that order and a reconsideration of those reasons by this court. The Felkers are entitled to a consideration of the merits of their case on their appeal from the order challenged, and the order to dismiss that appeal is denied.

On the first page of his brief counsel for the Felkers, referring to the decree of March 8, 1918, writes:

“If this decree is a final adjudication of the rights of the plaintiffs in error [appellants], and the purchasers are not liable under it, it is then unnecessary to go further into the other questions involved in this controversy.”

Counsel here states the real issue to be determined in this court, and others, including that of the right of the Felkers to a determination of the amount of the indebtedness of the Kansas City & Memphis Railway Company, the owner of the mortgaged property subject to the mortgage, to them, will be disregarded, because they do not condition the decision of the only issue between the Felkers, on the one hand, and the Southern Company and the purchasers, on the other, that it is necessary to consider in this case. For the purposes of the discussion and the decision of that issue it will be assumed that the Kansas City Company is indebted to the Felkers upon their claims in the full amount that they claim, some $210,000. The Felkers admit that the purchasers are not liable for their claims, unless those claims are secured by a lien on the mortgaged property that is superior in equity to the lien of tire mortgage of 1907. They claim, ■and the Southern Company and the purchasers deny, that they are so secured, and the latter insist that the Felkers are estopped from asserting or maintaining the superiority of their alleged liens by the fact that, after full hearing upon pleadings and evidence, the lien of the mortgage of 1907 was adjudged superior to the alleged liens of the Felkers by the foreclosure decree of, March 8, 1918. That decree was: rendered on the amended complaint of the Southern Company for a foreclosure and sale of the railroad property to pay the debt secured by the mortgage of 1907, the answer and cross-complaint of the Felkers, and the evidence of each of these parties, and it adjudged the foreclosure and sale prayed by the Southern [801]*801Company, the lienholders to whom the proceeds should be paid, their order of payment, and that the title to the mortgaged property should vest in and be held by the purchasers at the sale free and clear of all liens and claims of any of the parties to the suit.

[2] It has been the established law in the federal courts too long for debate or discussion now that a decree which orders a judicial sale of specific property under which the title may pass beyond the control of'the court is a final decree, although questions of amounts owing to some of the parties and of accounting's preparatory to the application of the proceeds of the sale are reserved for subsequent decision. Chase v. Driver, 92 Fed. 781, 784, 34 C. C. A. 669, 672, and cases there cited; City oí Des Moines v. Des Moines Water Co., 230 Fed. 570, 573, 144 C. C. A. 624, 627. The decree of March 8, 1918, seems to fall far within this rule, and to be a final and conclusive adjudication of the very issue between the parties to this controversy.

[3] Counsel for the Felkers contends, however, that an adjudication of the amounts of the claims of the Felkers, of the amount the Kansas City Company was indebted to them thereon, and of the amount for which they are entitled to a judgment against that company, was indispensable to a final decree adjudging the superiority of the lien of the mortgage of 1907 to the alleged liens of the Felkers upon the mortgaged property, and that the decree of March 8, 1918, was not a final decree, because it did not fix and adjudge those amounts. But the object which the Southern Company sought to attain by its complaint and its evidence was to foreclose its mortgage and to apply the proceeds of the mortgaged property to the payment of the bonds that mortgage secured. It claimed no debt or liability of the Felkers to it. The controversy between it and them arose out of the claims of the Felkers that they had liens upon the mortgaged property, growing' out of the indebtedness and liability of the Kansas City Company to them, which were superior in equity to the lien of the mortgage. It was a perfect defense for the Southern Company to the Felk-ers’ claims against the mortgaged property that they had no liens on that property superior to that of the mortgage. It they had no such liens, it was immaterial to the controversy between them and the Southern Company what the amount of the Felkers’ claims, or the amount of the Kansas City Company’s indebtedness to them, or the amount for which they were entitled to judgment against if, was. Hence the adjudication of those /natters was not only not indispensable, but it was immaterial, to a final decree between them that the lien of the mortgage upon the property was superior in equity to the alleged liens of the claims of the Felkers. If authorities for this conclusion arc sought, they will be found among those mentioned in the opinions in the cases which have been cited above.

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Bluebook (online)
264 F. 798, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/felker-v-southern-trust-co-ca8-1920.