Green v. Coast Line Railroad

33 L.R.A. 806, 97 Ga. 15
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 33 L.R.A. 806 (Green v. Coast Line Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Coast Line Railroad, 33 L.R.A. 806, 97 Ga. 15 (Ga. 1895).

Opinion

Simmons, Chief Justice.

At my request, concurred in by my associates, ex-Chief Justice Bleckley has assisted the court both in deciding this case and in preparing the opinion. After adoption by the full court, it now appears in his language. The same is true of the head-notes.

[17]*17The Coast Line Railroad Company executed to trustees two mortgages in the form of trust deeds, the first dated September 1st, 1874, and the second May 1st, 1876. The former was made to secure the payment of bonds amounting to $25,000, maturing September 1st, 1894, issued by the company to raise a fund for use in the construction of a portion of its railway; the latter to secure bonds of the company amounting to $32,000, maturing May 1st, 1886, issued to liquidate the floating debt of the company. Both mortgages covered the franchises, present and prospective, and all the property, real and personal, of the company, both acquired and to be acquired, including expressly all “tolls, income, rents, issues and profits,” accruing after any default made in the payment of the bonds themselves or of any interest due thereon. All the bonds bore interest from date, payable semi-annually.

The Coast Line Railroad Company had its origin as a corporation under the name of the "Wilmington Railroad Company. Acts of 1868, p. 114. Bor change of name, see Acts of 1872, p. 375. “Power to borrow not exceeding $25,-000, current and lawful money, and issue bonds for the payment of the same,” was conferred upon a majority of the directors by an amendment to the charter. Acts of 1874, p. 312. The first mortgage was made to secure these bonds, and there was no statutory authority for making it except the general provision relating to mortgages, contained in section 1954 of the code, which reads as follows: “A mortgage in this State is only a security for a debt, and passes no title. It may embrace all property in possession, or to which the mortgagor has the right of possession at the time, or may cover a stock of goods, or other things in bulk but changing in specifics, in which case the lien is lost on all articles disposed of by the mortgagor up to the time of foreclosure, and attaches on the purchases made to supply their place.” Before the second mortgage was executed, power was conferred upon the company to issue bonds, not to exceed the [18]*18sum of $250,000, “secured by mortgage upon tbe whole or any portion of the property of the company.” Acts of 1876, p. 258. Though the act of February 29th, 1876-(Acts of 1876, p. 118), which now forms sections 1689(v)-to 1689(y) of the code, was in existence when the second mortgage was executed, it has no application to that mortgage, for the reason that this act relates only to railroad corporations formed by the purchasers of railroads in the-mode pointed out by the provisions of the act.

The company made default as to the principal, as well as. interest, on the second mortgage bonds in 1886, and as to-the interest on the first mortgage bonds in March, 1890,. and has continued thus in default ever since.

On the 30th of April, 1890, a train, when running upon the railway of the company by steam power, ran against or over the husband and also a son of Mrs. Green, killing them both; and on July 17th, 1890, she recovered against the company, in the city court of Savannah, $1,750, as her damages for this tort. The Messrs. Green, at the time of the homicide, were not employees of the company, or, so far as-appears, under any contract relation to it or with it, but were simply members of the general public, passing on foot along a sidewalk adjacent to the railway track.

According to express provision of the mortgage deeds, the-trustees could, when the default of the company in paying-principal or interest due on any of the bonds had continued for sixty days, have entered into possession and operated the railway, or could have instituted legal or equitable proceedings to foreclose; but neither of these steps was taken until after judgment in favor of Mrs. Green was rendered,, nor until October 25th, 1890, when a petition by the only trustee then in office and by one of the bondholders (the-latter owning all the second mortgage bonds and most of the others) was filed in Chatham superior court to foreclose the mortgages and for the appointment of a receiver. This bondholder coplaintiff was president of the railroad [19]*19company at tlie time of bringing’this suit, and had been so continuously since the year 1883 or 1884. A receiver was appointed on November 7th thereafter, and the company turned over to him all- of its property, including $225.04 in cash. Among the expenditures of the receiver, reported by him August 6th, 1892, was an item of $2,349.88 for steel rails, iron and cross-ties, which he had purchased and used in improving the property; and the net earnings for distribution reported by him amounted to $2,327.22. The corpus of the property when sold on July 5th, 1892, produced $75,000, none of which was expended by the receiver.

Pending the cause in Chatham superior court, Mrs. Green filed her intervention claiming payment out of the fund under the control of the court. There was a reference to a master in August, 1891, and the master reported in April, 1893, and again by supplemental report in March, 1894. The master disallowed Mrs. Green’s claim as one having priority over the mortgages, ranking it as inferior to them, both as to corpus and income, and she filed exceptions to his reports, which exceptions the court overruled on July 9th, 1894, and approved both reports of the master. The verdict of a jury was rendered on August 3d, 1894, in conformity with the master’s report, and on the next day exceptions pendente lite were filed by Mrs. Green complaining of error committed by the court in overruling her exceptions and in approving the reports. Afterwards on the same day, the court decreed finally in favor of the priority of the mortgages; and by bill of exceptions certified September 1st, 1894, Mrs. Green brought the case to this court, assigning error on the decree and on the matters embraced in her exceptions pendente lite.

Pending the case before the master, and on the same day of the receiver’s last report, to wit August 6th, 1892, the court ordered the receiver’s counsel to be paid $1,000 out [20]*20of income; and on December 17th, 1892, ordered the receiver himself to be paid a like sum out of the income.

Assuming both mortgages to be good and valid, and conceding their priority over Mrs. Green’s judgment as to the corpus of the property mortgaged, two general questions arise for our determination, which are: first, had they a like priority in respect to the income; and secondly, if they had not, but the priority as to it was with the judgment, whether the application of a portion of the income to betterments, made by the receiver while he was in charge of the railroad and operating it, and of another portion, made by the court, to the payment of the receiver’s counsel and to the receiver himself while the case was pending before the master in chancery, would defeat Mrs. Green’s claim altogether, in so far as the fund derived from income has thus been exhausted, or whether that fund, so far as may be necessary to pay her judgment, should be reimbursed oixt of the fund produced by the sale of the corpus, and which was still under the control of the court at the time the final decree was rendered. Upon both principle and authority, the second question is, under the special facts of this case, so clear that it may be left to stand on the head-notes.

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Bluebook (online)
33 L.R.A. 806, 97 Ga. 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-coast-line-railroad-ga-1895.