Karn & Hickson v. Rorer Iron Co.

11 S.E. 431, 86 Va. 754, 1890 Va. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 3, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 11 S.E. 431 (Karn & Hickson v. Rorer Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Karn & Hickson v. Rorer Iron Co., 11 S.E. 431, 86 Va. 754, 1890 Va. LEXIS 41 (Va. 1890).

Opinion

Lewis, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a creditors’ suit in the hustings court of Roanoke City against the Rorer Iron company and others, for the appointment of a receiver, and to have the property of the defendant iron company subjected to the payment of its debts.

It appears that on the 25th day of January, 1883, the company executed a deed of trust on certain mineral lands; situate about six miles south of Roanoke City, which it had previously acquired by purchase, to secure the payment of ninety thousand dollars of bonds issued by the company. Subsequently the company acquired a right of way from its mines on the said lands to a point within the limits of the said city, upon which, pursuant to authority conferred by its charter, it constructed a railway for the transportation of its ores to a point of connection with the Uorfolk & Western railroad. It also acquired for its terminus and other purposes, twenty-nine acres of land in Roanoke City by purchase from one J. W. Webb; and after-wards, on the 1st day of July, 1884, it executed a second deed of [756]*756trust on all of its property, including the mineral lands embraced in the first deed of trust, to secure an issue of two-hundred thousand dollars of its bonds.

At the time these deeds were respectively executed, there was a vendor’s lien on the mineral lands, in favor of M. P.. Preston, which at the time the bill was filed amounted to something over $5,000, and on the Webb land there was a similar lien for about the same amount, both of which liens are paramount to the deeds of trust.

The hill was filed in May, 1866, by George M. Bartholomew, president of the company, and trustee in the two deeds of trust, and also, as he alleged in the bill, the owner by assignment of the Preston and Webb lions. The bill -alleges that the company is in default; that its railroad bridge across the Roanoke river had then recently been swept away by floods ; that the company was unable to rebuild it, and that in consequence the operations of the company had ceased, and its property was lying idle and liable to greatly deteriorate and to be scattered and wasted, unless the court should appoint a receiver, etc. And the prayer of the bill, among other things, was that for the purpose of raising funds with which to rebuild the bridge, and for other necessary purposes, the receiver, when appointed, be authorized to issue receiver’s certificates, tó be-declared a lien on all the property of the company prior to the deeds of trust above mentioned.

The court appointed a receiver of all the property, rights, and franchises of the company, with authority to operate the mines, and to carry on the business of the company under the supervision of the court. The receiver was also authorized to issue receiver’s certificates-to an amount aggregating eleven thousand dollars, which on their face are declared to be a lien on all the property and assets in the receiver’s hands. The decree authorizing them does not in express terms declare that these certificate's shall constitute a lien paramount to the deeds-[757]*757of trust, but sucli is the effect of the decree, construing it, as it must be, construed in connection with the prayer of the bill on that subject.

The proceeds of the certificates were used in rebuilding tbe bridge across Roanoke river, in paying taxes, in defraying the cost of certain condemnation proceedings, and for other necessary purposes, the chief object of which was to put the property in a salable condition, in due time a sale of the property ivas ordered, and sale was made, the commissioners of sale reporting that the property had been sold for $35,000. The sale was confirmed without objection, and a deed made to the purchasers, under a decree of the court, pursuant to the provisions of sections 1233 and 1234 of the Code.

Out of the fund arising from the sale the court, ordered the following payments to be made, viz:

1. An amount sufficient to pay the costs of suit, the fees of the master, and of the receiver for his services.

2. The cost of the condemnation proceedings.

3. And the court, being of opinion that the property conveyed by the first, deed of trust ivas of equal value with that conveyed by the second, exclusive ot the property embraced in both deeds, ordered that the residue of the fund be divided into two moieties; and out of the first moiety it was ordered that the Preston lien and one-half of the receiver’s certificates be paid, and the balance paid to the first mortgage (or deed of trust) bondholders. Out- of the second moiety it. ivas ordered that the Webb lien and the other half of the receiver’s certificates be paid, and the balance to go to the second mortgage (or deed of trust) bondholders.

The appellants, Earn k Hickson, first, mortgage bondholders, assign Ararious errors in the proceedings in the lower court. Their first objection is that the amount of compensation allowed the receiver—namely, $3,375—for tAventy-one months’ service is excessive. As to this objection, it is sufficient to say that the sum alloAved Avas reported by the 'master as fair and [758]*758reasonable, and Ms finding is abundantly sustained by the uneontradicted evidence of Joseph H. Sands, general manager of the Norfolk & Western railroad company, and other competent and experienced men in such matters, whose testimony on the point was taken.

The next objection is that no part of the receiver’s certificates or the cost of the condemnation proceedings ought to have been charged against the fund derived from the sale of the property conveyed by the first deed of trust, because, as is contended, the proceeds of the certificates were used in the improvement of the property acquired by the defendant company after the execution of that deed.

This objection, also, is fully met and obviated by the evidence upon which the lower court acted. By the destruction of its railroad bridge the properties of the company were-separated, thus rendering it impossible, until the bridge was replaced by another, to operate the'mines or to transport the ores taken from the mines to a point from which they could be marketed or utilized in any way. The evidence shows, moreover, that without the railroad the mineral property had no marketable value. Indeed, that the two properties were mutually dependent—that the one had no “commercial value” without the -other, and that both were equally benefited by the expenditures that wore made in rebuilding the bridge and in acquiring a perfect title to a part of the road-bed by the condemnation proceedings that were had.

As to the receiver’s certificates, we do not doubt that it was-competent for the court to authorize their issue and to make-them a lien paramount to the deeds of trust. It was necessary to raise money in some way to preserve the property from destruction or serious injury, and to put it- in saleable condition, and the only- practicable mode of accomplishing that object was by issuing receiver’s certificates. No* objection to the granting of the authority to issue the certificates was made in the court below,' although, as we have seen, the bill prayed [759]*759that such authority be granted.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E. 431, 86 Va. 754, 1890 Va. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/karn-hickson-v-rorer-iron-co-va-1890.