Herring v. New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad

105 N.Y. 340, 7 N.Y. St. Rep. 547
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 19, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 105 N.Y. 340 (Herring v. New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herring v. New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad, 105 N.Y. 340, 7 N.Y. St. Rep. 547 (N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Earl, J.

The plaintiff alleges.that at the time of the commencement of the actions by the People against the Erie Railway Company for its dissolution, and by the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company for the foreclosure of the mortgages upon its property, it owned a large amount of stock and bonds in other corporations which were not covered by or subject to the mortgages; and he seeks now to reach that property and to subject it to the payment of certain unsecured obligations which he and other creditors, similarly situated, then held and still hold against the Erie Railway Company. He finds in his pathway the orders and decrees made in the actions mentioned which must be brushed aside or disregarded before he can succeed. He does not allege in his complaint that any fraud was practiced upon the court or any party to the action, and he does not assail those orders and decrees as in fact fraudulent and seek to have them vacated or annulled on that account. He does not claim that if the court had jurisdiction, as against lnm and the other general creditors, to make them, that he can attack them collaterally or maintain this [368]*368action. What he claims is that those orders and decrees, so far as they assumed to adjudicate upon or dispose of the property in question, were made without any jurisdiction and may, therefore, be disregarded, and that they furnish no obstacle to the maintenance of this action. Hence the general inquiry upon which we are to enter is whether the Supreme Court had jurisdiction to adjudicate upon and dispose of the property by the orders and decrees made in those actions.

About the 25th day of May, 1875, the People’s action was commenced for the dissolution of the Erie Railway Company upon the ground, among other things, that it was insolvent, and had been for one whole year; and the complaint in that action, besides other relief, prayed that Hugh J. Jewett, who was then president of the company, might be appointed receiver during the pendency of the action. On the twenty-sixth day of May he was so appointed with power, as provided in the order appointing him, among other things, to prosecute and defend actions for or against the company, either in the name of the company or in his own name as receiver, and to maintain and preserve the corporate organization and franchises of the company until final judgment in the action. Thereafter application was made in that action on behalf of the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company for leave to commence an action against the Erie Railway Company to foreclose the mortgages held by it. Such leave was granted, and on the 14th day of June, 1875, the foreclosure action was commenced in the Supreme Court. In the prayer for judgment in that action the plaintiff, besides other relief, prayed that an inquiry might be had and an account taken of and concerning the premises and property mortgaged to the plaintiff in order that it might be fully and at large ascertained whereof the mortgaged premises consisted, and that Jewett might be appointed receiver in the action. On the fifteenth day of June, by an order duly granted, Jewett was appointed receiver, in that action, of the mortgaged property, and he was specially authorized to receive and enforce possession of whatever he was bound to receive, to run and [369]*369operate the railway, to institute, as he might deem needful, whatever suits or proceedings he by counsel might be advised to be necessary and proper in the appropriate discharge of his duty as receiver, and to defend and resist any suit or proceedings which he should be so advised and should believe would ■otherwise be prejudicial to the property, interests or franchises committed to his charge, and generally to do and cause to be done in a lawful manner as receiver, what might be reasonable and needful in and about the care and preservation of the rights, interests and franchises on which the mortgages were a lien, or the discharge of his duty as receiver might render needful. These orders appointing Jewett receiver, and all the other orders in the two actions, were made in the .same court, the same judge presiding, and thereafter Jewett must be deemed to have taken and held as receiver in the forelosure action all the property covered by and subject to the mortgages and, as receiver in the People’s action, all the ■other property of the company.

On the 6th day of April, 1876, upon an affidavit and notice of motion, an order was made by tile court in the foreclosure action that the receiver should hold and deal with the stocks and bonds in question in all respects as a part of the general fund of the estate embraced in the mortgages, among other things, for the reimbursement to the plaintiffs in that action of all sums paid nnder the orders of the court out of the proceeds of the mortgaged premises for the discharge of debts due from the Erie Railway Company, at the date of the receiver’s appointment, for labor and supplies, “ without prejudice to any equitable rights and interests of the respective parties which may be established on final accounting,” and he Avas also authorized to sell any part of the stocks or bonds at public or private sale and to use and apply the proceeds for the purposes of the trust.

The foreclosure action proceeded to judgment on the 7th day of November, 1877, which judgment recited that the bonds and stocks lawfully came into the possession of the receiver, and that they were held by him as part and parcel of the property and premises mortgaged to the plaintiff; and it [370]*370authorized the referee appointed to sell the mortgaged premises, to expose for sale and to sell as part thereof the stocks and bonds mentioned which were described in the decree as a portion of the mortgaged premises and they were sold by the referee. The sale was afterward confirmed and the referee was authorized to convey the stocks and bonds with the other property, and he made such conveyance ; and the Erie Railway Company executed a similar conveyance of the same property. Afterward, upon the petition of Jewett in the foreclosure action, an order was made by the court on the 3d day of May, 1878, by which it was ordered that the receiver deliver to the Mew York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad Company, “ all the property and franchises whereof he is now possessed as receiver in this action, and which were embraced or intended to be embraced in the judgment of foreclosure herein, subject to the reservations and exceptions he remafter specified, and subject to all and singular the rights ot the people of this State in and to the premises, or any part thereof,, as the same may be ascertained on due inquiry and examination by the attorney-general, in the action of the People of this State against the Erie Railway Company, now pending, to the end that such rights and interests may be as fully protected as if this transfer had not been ordered and directed.” In pursuance of that order and upon the terms thereof, he did make the delivery, and that substantially terminated the proceedings in the foreclosure action.

But for the pendency of the People’s action, it cannot be-doubted that the determination and judgment in the foreclosure action would have been conclusive upon every one. It was within the province of the court to determine what property was actually embraced within or subject, in express terms, or by subrogation or any other equitable principles, to the mortgages foreclosed.

The unsecured creditors were not necessary or proper parties to that action and had no right to intervene therein, and any adjudication made against the mortgagor was binding upon them. (Bronson v R. R. Co., 2 Black [U. S.] 524;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 N.Y. 340, 7 N.Y. St. Rep. 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herring-v-new-york-lake-erie-western-railroad-ny-1887.