Hervey v. Illinois Midland Ry. Co.

12 F. Cas. 60, 7 Biss. 103, 8 Chi. Leg. News 274, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1719
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Illnois
DecidedMarch 11, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 F. Cas. 60 (Hervey v. Illinois Midland Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Illnois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hervey v. Illinois Midland Ry. Co., 12 F. Cas. 60, 7 Biss. 103, 8 Chi. Leg. News 274, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1719 (circtsdil 1876).

Opinion

DRUMMOND, Circuit Judge.

An original bill was filed in the Edgar county circuit •court, on the 11th of September, 1875,.by one Henry Hervey, who claimed to be owner of the majority of the stock of various railroad companies, the Paris & Decatur Railway Company, the Peoria, Atlanta & Decatur Railway Company, and the Paris & Terre Haute Railway Company, all of which had been merged in the Illinois Midland Railway Company, and which was made a defendant. The only plaintiffs in the original bill were Hervey, and some judgment creditors of the Peoria & Decatur Railway Company.

The original bill alleged that there were very large claims in judgment and otherwise against these various companies, and that executions had been issued; and that owing to the purchase by the Peoria, Atlanta & Decatur Railway Company, of the other roads, it could not be ascertained how the judgments could be collected or appropriated, and therefore asked for the appointment of a receiver.

The claims outstanding—what are called the floating debts of the company—were said to be something over three hundred thousand dollars. A receiver was appointed. An amended .bill was then filed which set out in more detail the various facts stated in the original bill and also included numerous plaintiffs besides those in the original bill.

These various parties were stockholders of the road, and also judgment and other creditors, and it was stated in the amended bill that if the property was placed in the hands of a receiver, and thus a foreclosure prevented by the sale under execution of the property, the company • might be placed upon a stable footing, and that something might be realized for the stockholders and the creditors.

The receiver took possession; various applications were made by him to the court; money was paid under the direction of the court, and contracts also entered into with approbation of the court, by which the receiver became liable to pay certain moneys from time to time, and to issue certificates, (a very objectionable thing which, however, the courts have to some extent countenanced of late, while the property is in possession of the receiver; but it is only to be permitted, I think, under extraordinary circumstances) so that the Edgar circuit court had retained possession of this property for a very considerable time. The only defendant to the original and amended bill, was the Illinois Midland Railway Company.

This was substantially the condition when in February, two creditors, Albert and Morris Grant, citizens of Great Britain, and representing themselves to be bondholders of all these various companies merged into the Illinois Midland Railway Company, came into court and asked to be made parties defendant, and also for leave to file a cross-bill. At the same time Secor, representing himself to be trustee of the mortgage executed by the Peoria, Atlanta & Decatur Railway Company, asked to be made a party. An order was accordingly made by the court. The order [61]*61seems to have anticipated the actual application, the order being on the 7th of February, and the' application not being in fact made in the clerk’s office1 until about the 15th of February. This, perhaps, is not material. They were made parties, on leave given by the court. They then filed answers to the original and amended bills, in which Secor set up that he was mortgagee and trustee of the Peoria, Atlanta & Decatur road; that he represented thirteen hundred thousand dollars for which the mortgage was given; that the plaintiffs were seeking to make the property, which he states was covered by the mortgage, available to them to pay the claims which they had against these companies, and alleging an independent fact, that the Midland Railway Company, and all these companies, were insolvent; that they had not property enough to pay the various mortgage 1 debts against them; and that the bonds secured by the mortgage were a prior lien over the claims represented by the various claimants in the original and amended bills.

These were also the substantial allegations of Albert and Morris Grant, with .the exception that they represented in their answer that they were bondholders of these three companies. They allege also that there was a mortgage made by the Paris & Decatur road, of which they held bonds, and also by the Paris & Terre Haute road, of which they were the owners of the bonds, but who the mortgagees and trustees were they do not say. All that is stated is that there were mortgages or deeds of trust to secure bonds of which they were the holders.

Now this was the status of the case when, on the 16th of February these defendants, Albert and Morris Grant and Secor, filed a petition in the clerk’s office of the circuit court of Edgar county, to have the cause removed to this court, for the reason that there was a controversy which could be wholly determined as between the trustee and these bondholders and the plaintiffs in the original and amended bills; and if that were so there would be no objection in one aspect of the case for the court to take jurisdiction, because the language of the law is, that when the controversy is wholly between citizens of different states, the court may have jurisdiction, although perhaps the implication is, there may be other controversies in the case between other parties.

It can hardly be said that is true in this case. For instance, in the original and amended bills, there is no allusion whatever to any of the bonds issued — to any paramount claim over that of the stockholders and the judgment and other creditors. But it is insisted that the property, if put in the hands of a receiver, and taken care of, and an arrangement made by which the floating debt can be paid off, can become valuable to the stockholders; and there is nothing in the original or the amended bill to indicate that the Midland Railway Company, which is a citizen of this state, has no interest in the property. And it is manifest that the case cannot be transferred without affecting the interest of the Midland Railway Company very seriously, and the only ground upon which it could be transferred by these bondholders and this trustee is that the Midland Railway Company is a mere nominal party.

If it is a real party, it being one of the defendants as well as the bondholders and the trustee, it is a controversy between that company as one of the defendants and the judgment and other creditors, the plaintiffs in the original and amended bills, and therefore it cannot be wholly determined as between these parties who seek for a removal-

But, independent of that, it appears that Albert and Morris Grant are citizens of Great Britain. They are not citizens of one of the states of this Union, as we think they must be within the meaning of the last clause of the second section of the act of the 3d of March, 1875, under which this case is sought to be removed.

“Between citizens of a state and foreign states, citizens or subjects” (18 Stat 470), is: one of the conditions under which the federal court has jurisdiction. Now “citizens of a state” there means citizens of one of the United States, and the suits contemplated are suits between citizens of one of the states of the Union on one side and foreign states or citizens or subjects on the other.

Then the next section proceeds to say (18 Stat.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 60, 7 Biss. 103, 8 Chi. Leg. News 274, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hervey-v-illinois-midland-ry-co-circtsdil-1876.