Grandy v. Real Estate Trust Co. of Philadelphia

137 S.E. 519, 147 Va. 371, 1927 Va. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 17, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 137 S.E. 519 (Grandy v. Real Estate Trust Co. of Philadelphia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grandy v. Real Estate Trust Co. of Philadelphia, 137 S.E. 519, 147 Va. 371, 1927 Va. LEXIS 308 (Va. 1927).

Opinion

Chichester, J.,

[374]*374The only contest in this litigation is between W. F. . Grandy, receiver of the American Bonding and Casualty Company of Sioux City, Iowa, hereafter referred to as appellant, and the mortgage bondholders of the Washington-Virginia Railway Company, which company being insolvent is represented in the litigation by A. L. Reynolds, receiver.

The'Washington-Virginia Railway Company, a Virginia corporation (hereafter referred to as the railway company), operated an electric railway from Washington, D. C., to Mount Vernon in Fairfax county. It was heavily mortgaged and it becoming apparent to the bondholders that it was hopelessly insolvent, in the fall of 1923, four separate suits were instituted in the Circuit Court of Fairfax county by creditors (mortgage bondholders, appearing ip the caption as appellees), but open to any and all creditors if they desired to participate. On November 23, 1923, these suits were consolidated and A. L. Reynolds was appointed receiver with the usual power in such cases.

On November 6, 1923, litigation. involving a claim of $22,649.25 between the appellant -and the railway company, which had been pending for a long'time and was then pending on appeal in the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit (293 F. 695), terminated favorably to appellant, and judgment was docketed on December 17, 1923, for the full amount of the claim. Upon the judgment, executions issued December 22, 1923, April 9, 1924, and January 28, 1925. The executions were all returned “no effects upon which levy could be made.”

. The appellant, upon petition, became a party to the consolidated suits and contends that his judgment should be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property.

[375]*3751. Because of Ms judgment and executions.

2. Because of diversions.'

3. Upon general equitable principles.

. The cause was referred to‘Commissioner George B. Robey who reported against the priority of the judgment of appellant, and upon exceptions being filed, the circuit court overruled the exceptions and confirmed the commissioner’s report by decree June 2, 1925. An appeal was allowed from this decree by one "of the judges of tMs court. •

The several grounds upon wMeh appellant based his claim of priority in the trial court are urged here as sound and as grounds for reversal'of the decree complained of. We will take them up in order.

(1) It will be noted from an examination of the chronological order of events heretofore narrated that appellant had acquired no lien prior to the appointment of the receiver. At that time, however, there were certain assets in the receiver’s hands, cash and other intangibles, in the hands of the treasurer at the time of the appointment of the receiver, which were not subject to any of the mortgages because not within their terms, and which the trustees in the mortgages therefore had no title to or right to possession of.

The contention is that these intangibles remained unaffected by the appointment of a receiver, and because intangibles are incapable of being levied on, were subject to the lien of the appellant’s execution issued subsequent to the appointment of the receiver, under section 6501 of the Code, and under the decisions .of tMs court in Frayser’s Admr. v. R. and A. R. Ry. Co., 31 Va. 393, and Harman v. McMullin, 85 Va. 187, 7 S. E. 349, and other cases.

There are two very vital points in the instant case which differentiate it from the eases relied on and [376]*376defeat appellant’s claim to a lien on these assets by reason of his judgment.

The first is that the proceeding in the court below was not merely a suit to foreclose the mortgage liens, but was also, especially under the bill of the Bank of North America and Trust Company, a general creditors’ bill against a confessedly insolvent corporation for the ascertainment of the rights and equities of all creditors and stockholders in and to its assets, and for the administration thereof for the benefit of all creditors according to their several equities; and

Second, that in the decree .appointing the receiver the court recognized the superior equity of current unpaid labor and supply creditors in and to the liquid assets then on hand, and directed the receiver to apply the same to the payment thereof and they were applied probably. before the executions were issued, and certainly before the petition was filed. These were equities which would have been applied against the appellant even if he had acquired a lien first, as will later become apparent. A fortiori it was properly applied before lien acquired by him.

It is clear from' these facts, that the court took charge of all of the assets of the insolvent railway company, through its receiver, to be administered for the benefit of all creditors, as their rights then stood and that priorities as to debts were fixed as of the date of giving bond and taking charge of the assets by the receiver. No creditor in the nature of things could thereafter by individual action acquire a lien or a right which had not previously obtained.

The rule that liens cannot be acquired against an insolvent corporation after the filing of a general creditors bill and appointment of receiver is stated thus in 34 Cyc. 199 (e): “One who has no lien when a [377]*377receiver is appointed, although the mere right to acquire one may then exist, cannot proceed for that purpose by independent action after the appointment of the receiver and gain a preference over other creditors, as in the case of the administration of insolvent’s estates in which creditors are entitled to pro rata and equitable distribution. The application of this rule depends upon the nature of the suit in which the receiver is appointed, and the rule has been held not to apply to a receiver pendente lite when the sole object is to preserve the property for the purpose of the decree as betweén the parties to the suit only, without affecting. the interest of third persons as distinguished from a receivership for, the general administration of assets as above mentioned.” See also.pages 231-2; Hollins v. Brierfield C. & I. Co., 150 U. S. 371, 380-382, 14 S. Ct. 127, 37 L. Ed. 1113.

An examination of the cases cited by appellant will show that they contain no holding contrary to this rule, under circumstances such as exist here.

(2) (3). The, second and third grounds upon which appellants claim priority of their judgment over the bondholders will be considered together as they involve practically the same question, as upon either ground the right of priority depends upon the superiority of the equity. Stated concisely, the proposition of appellant is that when equity takes charge of railroad property at the instance of bondholders through the trustee, claims such as the appellant’s are given priority, both on general equity principles and because of diversion of earnings and assets, where there has been diversion, to payment of interest and principal to bondholders.

It will, of course, be conceded that this is true .of some claims, but the question as to whether appellant’s [378]

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.E. 519, 147 Va. 371, 1927 Va. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grandy-v-real-estate-trust-co-of-philadelphia-va-1927.