Hubbard v. Tod

171 U.S. 474, 19 S. Ct. 14, 43 L. Ed. 246, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1620
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 17, 1898
Docket24
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 171 U.S. 474 (Hubbard v. Tod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hubbard v. Tod, 171 U.S. 474, 19 S. Ct. 14, 43 L. Ed. 246, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1620 (1898).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the Court.

It is provided by the judiciary act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, § 6, 26 Stat. 826, 828, that any case in which the judgments or decrees of the Circuit Court of Appeals are thereby made final, may be required, by certiorari or otherwise, to be certified to this court “ for its review and determination, with the same power and authority in the case as if it had been carried by appeal or writ of ebror to the Supreme Court.”

This case belongs to the class of cases in which the decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals is made final by the statute, and having been brought up by certiorari on the application of petitioner below, is pending before us as if on his appeal.

And as respondents did not apply for certiorari, we shall confine our consideration' of the case to the examination of errors assigned by petitioner.

These errors as assigned in the brief of counsel are, in short, that the Circuit Court erred, (1) in not establishing the priority of petitioner’s lien or right in and to the securities ; (2) in subordinating that lien or right, and decreeing foreclosure unless payment was made as prescribed; (3) in not entering a decree giving priority to petitioner because respondents set up absolute title by purchase, which was not sustained by the court; (4) in not restraining respondents by injunction and not ordering the surrender of the securities to petitioner.

*495 The supposed errors in decreeing foreclosure, and that respondents were entitled to hold as pledgees notwithstanding their title by purchase was so far defective as to let in redemption, may readily be disposed of.

This was not a proceeding by Tod & Co. to obtain foreclosure. It was petitioner who sought the aid of the court, and this by an application which was, in effect, a bill to reclaim the securities absolutely and free from incumbrance. The Circuit Court treated the pleading as if framed in the alternative, and allowed redemption on conditions stated, the right thus accorded being necessarily declared to be extinguished if the conditions were not complied with as prescribed. And no error is assigned to the particular terms imposed.

Nor is there any tenable basis for the proposition that respondents’ failure to sustain their purchase at the sale as a defence affected their rights as pledgees. Respondents stood on all their rights and were not put to an election. If the purchase was valid, the equity of redemption was wiped out. If invalid, the original lien remained. If superior, its superiority was not displaced by the claim of absolute title derived ■through the pledge as set forth in the pleadings.

Assuming that, as between the Union Loan & Trust Company and the syndicate, the company or its assignee had a lien on the securities in question, did the Circuit Court err in holding that the rights of respondents in respect thereof were paramount to those asserted by the intervening petitioner ?

If not, then although the Circuit Court may have erred in holding that the sale of the securities did not absolutely cutoff the claim of the company or its assignee, that would be an error of which petitioner could not, of course, complain.

Petitioner contends that his alleged lien or right was entitled to priority, because the securities “ were wrongfully and fraudulently abstracted and diverted from said Trust Company in subsequent re-hypothecation with respondents; ” and respondents did not hold them as received in good faith, in due course of business, for value and without notice, but acquired possession through transactions known to be *496 fictitious, usurious, ultra vires, fraudulent and void, and with notice.

The Circuit Court and the Circuit Court of Appeals agreed' that respondents’ right to the securities was superior to that asserted by petitioner, and we entirely concur in that conclusion.

So far from. the securities being wrongfully abstracted from the Trust Company, we think that, whatever the agreement between the Trust Company and the syndicate, the Trust Company must be held to have parted with such of the securities as were, ever in its custody, with full knowledge that they were to be hypothecated by Garretson; that indeed the evidence fairly shows that those which at any time came, into the possession of. the Trust Company were either deposited there by Garretson or by his order and direction, with the understanding on his part that he was authorized to withdraw them for the purpose of sale, pledge or otherwise, and that he always acted on that theory, with the consent and participation of Smith, as secretary and treasurer; and that in any view Smith’s acts in the company’s behalf must be held to have been performed with the actual or implied authority of the directors.

Smith, as secretary and treasurer, was the person who was actively engaged in the management of the affairs of the Union Loan & Trust Company; and held out to the public-as having-unlimited authority to manage its business and dispose of any of its securities. He endorsed in the company’s name every note it put out, signed every letter that it wrote, and was, as' respected the public, the Trust Company itself. Throughout all the transactions his conduct conceded that Garretson was the lawful holder of the stock and bonds tendered by him' as collateral to the loans he negotiated. As such officer,.he directly transmitted the securities of the Sioux City & Northern Railroad Company to New York, and likewise the $1,433,000 of Nebraska & Western bonds to Garretson at Omaha, to be.delivered to the agent of Tod & Co., under the contract for the million dollar loan, and to- be turned into court in carrying out the reorganization scheme *497 in accordance with which the Sioux City, O’Neill & Western bonds were to be issued.

It appears to us indisputable on the face of this record that Garretson was entrusted, according to the understanding of all parties, with the right to sell the Sioux City & Northern bonds; that the Union Loan & Trust Company received the proceeds of a million dollars of those bonds, thus ratifying the transaction; and that the proceeds of the balance were applied with Smith’s knowledge, without objection on his part, or that of any other officer or director of the Trust Company, to taking up notes secured thereby, which had been given by Garretson to acquire the Nebraska & Western bonds, which he afterwards pledged to Tod & Co., and which were exchanged for the bonds of the Sioux City, O’Neill & Western Railroad in controversy.

None of the securities ever stood in the name of the Union Loan & Trust Company. And they were delivered in such form as to enable Garretson to hold himself out as the owner or lawful holder thereof, with full power of disposition.

The District Judge well said : “ It is entirely clear that E. E.

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Bluebook (online)
171 U.S. 474, 19 S. Ct. 14, 43 L. Ed. 246, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbard-v-tod-scotus-1898.