Investment Registry, Ltd. v. Chicago & M. Electric R. Co.

1 F.2d 1008, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1078
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 29, 1924
DocketNo. 80
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 F.2d 1008 (Investment Registry, Ltd. v. Chicago & M. Electric R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Investment Registry, Ltd. v. Chicago & M. Electric R. Co., 1 F.2d 1008, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1078 (E.D. Wis. 1924).

Opinion

GEIGER, District Judge.

The case is before the court upon the merits of the petition of the Filer & Stowell Company, whose subject-matter had been incorporated in a complaint in the circuit court for Milwaukee county pursuant to an order of this court, which order was revoked on March 19, 1917, to the end that the issues be determined in the court having jurisdiction of the property affected. See Investment Registry, Limited, v. Chicago & M. Elec. R. Co., 251 F. 510, 163 C. C. A. 504. Notwithstanding- the years of litigation, and the numerous reported decisions dealing with various phases of this matter, the question presented necessitates preliminarily noting the chronology of the steps in the litigation; also, some detail of the facts evidencing the transaction between the petitioner and the railroad company.

The Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railroad Company was organized under the laws of Wisconsin iñ June, 1904. On January 28, 1908, upon a bill then filed, this [1009]*1009court (the United States Circuit Court, as its predecessor) appointed receivers at the instance of tho Sovereign Bank of Canada. The railroad company at that time owned a railroad, not fully completed, extending from the southern boundary line of Wisconsin, through the counties of Kenosha, Xtacine, and Milwaukee, into the city of Milwaukee, but some two years prior thereto had executed a lease to an Illinois corporation, which described its property as extending from the village of Lake Bluff, in Illinois, to Kenosha, in Wisconsin, and then had under construction the extension of its road from Kenosha into the city of Milwaukee. Tho lessee corporation operated the road down to the lime of tho appointment of the receivers.

On March 27, 1908, the petitioner, Filer & Stowell Company, in the cause instituted as above noted, filed its petition representing that it had sold to the railroad company certain premises, for which the sum of $160,000 was agreed to be paid, and that the petitioner had an equitable vendor’s lien upon tho premises. Leave was asked to institute suit in the state court to establish this lien. Such leave was granted on the same day, and on the following day the petitioner began its suit in the circuit court for Milwaukee county against the railroad company, its receivers, and the trustees under a mortgage of the railroad company, dated January 1, 1905, and securing $10,-000,000 of bonds. The complaint charged the sale of the property for $160,000, on or about October 30, 1907, its conveyance by the petitioner to the railroad company, and that by reason of the failure of the latter to pay the purchase price the petitioner had an equitable vendor’s lien upon the premises, which was asked to be established and adjudged to bo superior to the lien of the trust mortgage. Such complaint was amended on November 5, 1908, by charging that the plaintiff (the petitioner here) was induced to accept bonds of the railroad company in place of money by alleged fraudulent representations on the part of A. C. Frost, acting as president of the company; that the railroad company had taken possession of the premises sold, had begun tho construction of its railroad track thereon, and made the premises a part of its right of way. An offer was made in such complaint to make such disposition of its bonds and the agreement of Frost with reference to the bonds (to be referred to) “as this court may adjudge just and equitable, as a condition of and for the enforcement of the plaintiff’s said vendor’s lien.”

In the receivership suit in this court, the trustees under the railroad company’s mortgage subsequently appeared, filed a cross-bill to foreclose their mortgage — the petitioner herein being a party defendant to the cross-bill — and the receivership and foreclosure cases, and all other litigation growing out of it, passed into a consolidated cause. A foreclosure decree was rendered August 7, 3912, the court reserving jurisdiction to hear and determine the petition of tho mortgage trustees to vacate tho order granting leave to the petitioner to sue in the state court, and likewise to hear and determine the issues involved in, or concerning, the claims of the petitioner herein to, upon, or in respect of any of the property mentioned in the decree. See 251 Fed. 510, 163 C. C. A. 504.

The petitioner, Filer & Stowell Company, in October, 1907, owned a large manufacturing plant upon land near the southern limits of the city of Milwaukee, a portion of which the railroad company sought to acquire for the purpose of extending its road to and into the city of Milwaukee. Condemnation proceedings instituted in Ihe circuit court for Milwaukee county had progressed to the point of an award to the petitioner in the sum of $315,000, and under the law of Wisconsin the railroad company was then privileged to enter upon the possession of the property by paying the award into court for the use of the condemnation respondent. Tho latter, however, the petitioner herein, being dissatisfied, took an appeal from the award of the commissioners to the circuit court for Milwaukee county, where, under the Wisconsin statute, the amount of the damages award-able was subject to bo hoard de novo.

In this situation the parties entered upon negotiations concluded by written contracts now in evidence without controversy or dispute. It is quite immaterial which of the two parties be regarded as the more eager to effect an adjustment of the pending condemnation proceeding, or any controversy therein. No sort of doubt exists respecting — ■

(1) The initial purpose of the railroad company to abide by the award of the commissioners and to pay the money into court.

(2) The notification to the railroad company of tho herein petitioner’s purpose to appeal from tho award.

(3) The willingness on the part of the railroad company to discuss and consider [1010]*1010bases of adjustment and disposition of the condemnation controversy.

(4) The insistence on the part of the petitioner that it receive from the railroad company more favorable terms.

(5) The insistence on the part of the railroad company that any augmented award effected by compromise could not and would not be paid in cash.

(6) The insistence by the railroad company that it could not and would not secure any obligation for more favorable terms, by mortgage or other lien upon the specific property involved.

As noted, the petitioner initially moved this court, by its averment that it had a vendor’s lien upon certain property in the possession of the receivers, and praying that it be allowed to proceed in the state court for the assertion and enforcement thereof. Pursuant to leave granted, and on or about March 28, 1908, it filed the suit in the circuit court for Milwaukee county referred to, charging that it had sold a parcel of land to the railroad company for $160,000, on or about October 30, 1907, and that by reason of the sale and conveyance and the failure of the railway company and its receivers to pay the purchase price, “this plaintiff has an equitable vendor’s lien upon said premises and the whole thereof, which lien is prior and superior to the lien of the * * * mortgage or deed of trust to said defendants,” the mortgage trustees, who had been made parties to the state court suit. Judgment was prayed for an equitable vendor’s lien upon “said premises” — the conveyed premises.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F.2d 1008, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/investment-registry-ltd-v-chicago-m-electric-r-co-wied-1924.