Kennedy v. I., C. & L. R.

3 F. 97
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 3 F. 97 (Kennedy v. I., C. & L. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. I., C. & L. R., 3 F. 97 (uscirct 1880).

Opinion

Baxter, C. J.

The defendant, a railroad corporation, issued a large number of bonds, and executed a mortgage on its road, franchise, and property, to secure their payment; and, having failed to pay the interest as it accrued, a bill was filed in this court to foreclose the security. On complainant’s application a receiver was appointed to preserve and operate the prop[98]*98erty pendente Ute. One of his trains ran over and killed a Mrs. .Cork, whose husband, after administering on her estate, sued therefor in a state court; but, at the instance of the receiver, he was ordered to dismiss his suit, with leave to be heard in this court. He thereupon filed his petition here, set forth his cause of action, and demanded a trial thereof by a jury.

These questions have been definitely settled by repeated adjudications. A receiver represents the court. There can be no interference with money or property in possession of a receiver without the permission of the court appointing him. Jones on Eailroad Securities, §§ 502-3; Story’s Eq. § 831. The power to appoint receivers is of great utility. Ship v. Harwood, 3 Atk. 564. A receiver is an officer of the court appointing him, and is entitled to its protection. He can do nothing except as he is authorized by the court; and when in possession of money or property, under the orders of the court, it is a contempt of the court to disturb his possession. No suit can be prosecuted against a receiver in any other forum without leave of the court under3 whose order he is acting, as the latter will not allow itself to be made a suitor in any other tribunal. Story’s Eq. § 833. Such a practice would lead to inextricable confusion, and subject the fund in the custody of the court to the judgments and decrees of other and different courts.

But an injured party is not without a remedy. He may apply to the court having the custody of the property or fund for appropriate relief; and upon such application he will be permitted to go before a master or sue in a court of law. Story’s Eq. §§ 831-833.

A court appointing a receiver, although not compelled to assume jurisdiction of all controversies to which the receiver may become a party, but is at liberty to leave their determination to any court of appropriate jurisdiction, may, nevertheless, assert its right to take all such controversies to itself. Its power is unlimited for purposes of protection, and it may restrain the prosecution of suits against the receiver in other courts, and punish, as for contempt, any interference with its [99]*99officers by force or by suit. Jones on Eailroad Securities, § 503.

Tlio court will not permit any person to interfere either with money or property in the hands of its receiver without leave, whether it is done by consent or submission of the receiver, or by compulsory process against him. All moneys coming into the hands of a receiver by the order of the court are moneys belonging to the court, and the receiver is hound to distribute in obedience to tbe orders and directions of the court. Kerr on Eeceivers, 168.

The receiver’s possession being the possession of the court from -which he derives his appointment, he is not subject to the process of garnishment as to the funds in his hands, or subject to his control, and such process will he regarded as a nullity. The court, being in the actual custody of the property or fund, will not yield its jurisdiction to another court and permit the right of property to be there tried. It will not permit itself to become a suitor in an other forum concerning the property in question. If a receiver’s liability to be sued in another court was recognized it would defeat the very ends for which he was appointed, since a judgment in another court, upon the garnishment, would, if recognized and sustained, divest the jurisdiction having custody of the land. High on Eeceivers, 151.

In Wiswall v. Sampson, 14 How. 65, the supreme court of the United States say; “When a receiver has been appointed his possession is that of the court, and any attempt to disturb it, without the leave of the court first obtained, will be a contempt on the part of the person making it. When, therefore, a party is prejudiced by having a receiver put in Ms way, the course has either been to give him leave to bring an ejectment, or other appropriate action, or permit him to he examined pro interesse suo; and the doctrine that a receiver is not to be disturbed extends to cases in which he has been appointed without prejudice to the rights of persons having prior legal or equitable interests. The individuals having such prior interests must, if they desire to avail themselves of them, apply for leave to sue or to he examined pro inter[100]*100esse SUO; and this, though their right to the possession, is clear.”

And in the case of Davis v. Gray, 16 Wall. 203-218, Justice Swayne says: “A receiver is not appointed for the benefit of either of the parties, but of all concerned. Money or property in his hands is in custodia legis. He has only such power and authority as are given him by the court, and must not exceed the prescribed limits. The court will not allow him to be tried touching the property in his charge, nor for any malfeasance as to the parties, or others, without its consent; nor will it permit his possession to be disturbed by force, nor violence to be offered to his person while in the discharge of his official duties. In such cases the court will vindicate its authority, and, if need be, will punish the offender by fine and imprisonment for contempt. Where property in the hands of a receiver is claimed by another, the right may be tried by proper issues at law, by reference to a master, or otherwise, as the court in its discretion may see fit to direct.”

Such has been the uniform holding of the courts until recently, since which modifications of the rule have been attempted by a few exceptional adjudications, and by legislative enactments in some of the states. A statute of the kind exists in Ohio. But this statute cannot control the action of this court. Jones on Railroad Securities, § 503; 7 Cent. Law Jour. 146; and Thompson v. Scott, 4 Dillon, 508. Nor can we yield to the modification of the rule adopted by some of the state courts. These decisions have been ably reviewed by Love, J., in the case of Thompson v. Scott, and his refutation of them maintained by a cogency of reasoning that ought, we think, to forever foreclose all further discussion of the question. Mr. High, who advocates (in an article published in the Southern. Law Review) the new doctrine, admits that “the weight of authority is adverse to the exercise of any right of action against a receiver by any court other than that from which he derives his appointment, and to which he is amenable.”

No other theory than that insisted on by us could be prac[101]*101tically maintained, as the facts of this case will sufficiently demonstrate. The defendant is the owner of an important line of railroad. Upon application duly made, this court, in the exercise of its unquestioned jurisdiction, seized the property and put it into the hands of a receiver, to he held, preserved, and operated for the benefit of the parties entitled, until the rights of the parties could be judicially ascertained and declared, and a sale of the property effected.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-i-c-l-r-uscirct-1880.