Kuykendall v. Union Pac. R. Co.

163 F. 819, 90 C.C.A. 125, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4582
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 10, 1908
DocketNo. 2,576
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 163 F. 819 (Kuykendall v. Union Pac. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuykendall v. Union Pac. R. Co., 163 F. 819, 90 C.C.A. 125, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4582 (8th Cir. 1908).

Opinion

PHILIPS, District Judge.

This is an appeal from the decree of the Circuit Court dismissing the bill of complaint. The bill is a maze of verbiage. So confused and involved are the allegations and recitations, that it proved somewhat difficult to extract the actual substance. Briefly stated, the claim for relief is that of the original first mortgage bonds issued by the Union Pacific Railroad Company, under the organic act of Congress of July 2, 1864, there Vere $27,229,000, which became the property of one Charles Durkee, and were owned by him at the time of his death; which occurred in the state of Wisconsin in 1870. The complainant, John A. Kuykendall, was appointed administrator of his estate May 9, 1896, by the probate court of Salt Lake county, state of Utah, who instituted this suit, February 7, 1903, in the United States Circuit Court for the District of Utah, to have said bonds declared a first lien, under said mortgage, on the properties of the defendant, Union Pacific Railroad Company, a corporation of the state of Utah, the alleged successor of the original mortgagor company and the consolidated company, of the same name, which, it is asserted, succeeded to the rights and obligations of the original company.

The bill charges that Edwin D. Morgan and Oakes Ames were the original trustees named in said first mortgage to secure the payment of said bonds; that, they having died, E. Gordon Dexter and Oliver Ames were appointed as their successor trustees. It is then charged that a large number of persons, and some corporations, named as parties defendant, entered into a conspiracy to wrong and injure the estate, represented by said Kuykendall as administrator, by falsely [820]*820pretending that they were the owners of a larg'e portion of the first mortgage bonds so issued by said original Union Pacific Railroad Company. To effectuate the conspiracy, and to exclude the said estate from participation in the fruits of the proceeding, the conspirators caused the said trustees to institute in the United States Circuit Court of Nebraska a suit to foreclose said mortgage, which resulted in a decree of foreclosure, under which the property of said railroad companies was sold, and bought in by the said defendant Company, corporation of the state of Utah, which was organized for such purpose, and a deed, in due form, was made and delivered to it therefor by the special master in chancery. The proceeds of the sale, not sufficient to satisfy the debts, were distributed pro rata among such of the bondholders as presented their bonds for such purpose. Before decree the complainant dismissed the bill as to all the defendants except the said Union Pacific Railroad Company of Utah.

The prayer of the bill is for an accounting to the complainant on account of said '$27,229,000 bonds and interest, and for the enforcement of the mortgage lien for payment, etc.-

As the ownership of the bonds in question by Durkee, at the time of his death, was put in issue by the answer, it was a primary issue of fact, lying at the threshold of the complainant’s right to any relief. Unless he owned the bonds at the time of his death, and they passed by devolution of law to the complainant as administrator, the latter has no standing in court to assert any of the matters set forth in the bill. This was so self-asserting that at the opening of the argument by counsel for the complainant on this appeal we insisted that they point out to the court, in the record, the proof touching this foundational fact before they proceeded to the discussion of other matters in contestation. This was manifestly embarrassing to counsel. After some delay and search through the record, containing a mass of testimony on relevant and irrelevant matters, they referred the court for this essential proof to the deposition of one Ueonard C. Blaisdell. He married a niece of said Charles Durkee. As there were left surviving no immediate heirs of Durkee, this niece, and, perhaps, others of like degree, would be the sole distributees of the large fortune in question.

The reading of this witness’ testimony furnishes ample evidence that he is quite visionary and impractical, if not mentally unbalanced. His statements are incoherent, disjointed, and pointless. He refers to incidents occurring about 1882-83-84. It is, perhaps, inferable from his straggling statement that Durkee at some ungiven times was surety on the bond, or bonds, of some persons having contracts for the construction work on the Union Pacific Railroad. Inferentially, without direct assertion, the witness had a theory, but without proof to sustain the fact, that Durkee had put up with the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States some of said Union Pacific Railroad bonds as collateral security on said contracts. Being interested in the Durkee estate, the witness claimed to have had considerable correspondence with the Secretary of the Treasury, and perhaps the Comptroller of the Treasury, respecting this matter. But he neither made proferí of any such letters, nor showed that they had been lost or destroyed, nor was any effort disclosed to ascertain by inquiry whether or not his [821]*821letter or letters were on file in the Treasury Department, where it is a well-known fact all such business correspondence is carefully preserved. He further testified that by "special arrangement he visited Washington City, and in the office of the Comptroller of the Currency he met on this business Judge Folger, then Secretary of the Treasury, where were present every member of the President’s Cabinet, save the Secretaries of the Army and the Navy. His version of what occurred, what was said, and what was the exact subject-matter of discussion is so vague and disjected as to mystify rather than enlighten. But the crux of it all is that Judge Folger then and there spread out on tables something over $64,000,000 of Union Pacific Railroad mortgage bonds, saying:

“I have hero upon these tables the bonds of all these respective railroad companies duly executed as first mortgage bonds of a lien prior and paramount to that of the United States, and also a collection of bonds deposited by the companies with the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States, to secure interest upon the first mortgage bonds aforesaid.”

After some colloquy with Attorney General Brewster, Judge Folger turned to the witness, and said:

“What do you want done with these bonds? And I answered: T want to have the protection of the bonds, interest bonds and principal, as provided by the acts of Congress.’ He then proceeded to give me the instructions T asked for to proceed intelligently with himself in an adjustment of this particular obligation of said Pacific Railroad Companies.”

The witness then digressed into something about Judge Folger asking his opinion about an act of Congress looking to refunding bonds, etc., quite as unintelligible and impertinent as most of his discursive statement. He did not read the bonds claimed to have been thus displayed over many tables, outside of the treasury vaults, in the office of the Comptroller; but stated that Judge Folger read them aloud, as payable on their face to Charles Durkee.

It must be conceded that this is mere hearsay testimony, no more competent in this action, to which Judge Folger is not a party, than would be a statement made by him in pais to some third party that he had seen in the vaults of the treasury Union .Pacific bonds payable to Charles Durkee. The claim of this witness that Secretary Folger read the bonds, as made payable on their face to Charles Durkee, discredits his whole story.

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Related

McCrocklin v. Fowler
285 F. Supp. 41 (E.D. Wisconsin, 1968)
Stearn v. United States
18 F.2d 465 (Fourth Circuit, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 F. 819, 90 C.C.A. 125, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuykendall-v-union-pac-r-co-ca8-1908.