Langdon v. Vermont & Canada Railroad

54 Vt. 593
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 54 Vt. 593 (Langdon v. Vermont & Canada Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langdon v. Vermont & Canada Railroad, 54 Vt. 593 (Vt. 1882).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Redeield, J.

This case, in essence and principle, comes now before the court for the third time; but has been presented and treated during the argument as if nothing yet had been decided, and nothing done by the court. It is certain that many words have been spoken by the court, many pages printed. The magnitude and anomalous condition of the case, and the immense amount of property at stake, is perhaps a full apology and explanation. A1J the minute detail of facts, both historical and otherwise, are fully and carefully stated by Judges Barrett and Royce, in their opinions reported in the 50th and 53d Vermont; and it is not deemed needful that they should be repeated here.

In the 53d Vermont this court decided and announced, that: “As between the bona fide holders of the bonds so issued, and those that have been exchanged for them, and the Vermont Central Railroad [598]*598Company, the mortgage bondholders, and the Vermont & Canada Railroad Company, the former have the superior right, and must be first paid.” In other words, it was decided that a Court of Equity would charge the property, which was the subject of the receivership created by the court in 1861, in behalf of the bona fide holders of such bonds, with an equitable lien, and cause it to respond in payment of such debts, and that this equitable charge upon said property was and should be held superior to the antecedent rights or claims of any parties growing out of the contract of lease or the mortgages. So far the law( of this case has been established. But it is said the court below erred in making this equitable charge upon the corpus of the property, rather than upon its income, as provided by the lease. This legal question has not been decided by this court, and has been properly discussed at the bar in this hearing. It should be observed that this equitable charge does not arise from, or in any way depend upon the contract relations of the parties, but arises solely from the act of the Court of Equity. The court, by its prerogative right and power with the parties, and the subject-matter of controversy within its jurisdiction, lays its judicial hand upon the property, which is the subject of claim and controversy, and brings into court and holds, controls and administers the property. The receiver or manager of such property is the agent, or rather instrument of the court; the possession and acts of such instruments are the possession and acts of the court. What was the property thus seized, possessed and administered by the court? The Vermont and Canada Railroad and the Vermont Central, each having its corporate entity and franchise, were so bound together by mutual and perpetual-covenant that they had become one road. The Vermont Central road was the owner of the whole line, including the two roads, subject to certain rights and interests in the property of its mortgage bondholders, and the rent-claim of the Vermont and Canada road. The Vermont and Canada Railroad held and owned the right to a fixed annual rent, as a first charge on the income arising from the use of said line of roads, and a right to compel the application of such income in extinguishment of such rents, in case they were in arrear. The property of the [599]*599Vermont Central Railroad was its roads and incidents, subject to certain fixed burdens. The property of the Vermont and Canada was a leasehold estate, and susceptible of valuation and alienation, like other property. If it was a leasehold estate in land, it might be seized, appraised and set off on execution, to pay the debt of a creditor, like other property. It was said by this court, Barrett, J., in the 50th Vt., and repeated by him in the 53d Vt., that: “We do not understand it to be controverted that the expenses properly incurred are to be paid before the beneficiaries of the trust are entitled to partake of the earnings that: “ their office (receivers and managers) as such, embraced the roads and railroad property as fully and effectually as it did the income realized from the use of said roads and property.” 50 Vt. 544 ; again, page 574: “ It was designed by the decree, and it has been the purpose of the administration under it, and such has been the substantial result, that all the property embraced in the original receivership, under the mandate of the Supreme Court, should be pooled (to use a modern term), and placed in the management of those who had been receivers under the mandate, to be thereafter held and managed in the interests of all concerned, according to the agreements from time to time of the parties in interest. That administration was going on for the behoof of the primary parties. It was, therefore, according to this reasoning, essentially a trust administration of property and its income for the behoof of the primary parties.” It was the administration of a property “ pooled ” for a common purpose, in which administration there were, necessarily, large daily expenses to work out specified ends, “ by managing agents,” appointed at the instance of the primary parties. And whether they were strictly the managing agents of the primary parties, or the agents and officers of the court, with enlarged scope of administration accorded to them by the court, at the instance and request of all the parties in interest, is not.of importance here to discuss. This court have held, and now hold, that the primary parties subjected the property which they put into this enterprise to a direct ■ liability for the debts legitimately incurred in the administration. The general doctrine upon this subject was stated with point and clearness by [600]*600Barrett, J., in Rensselaer & S. R. R. Co. v. Miller & Knapp, 47 Vt. 146. “The expenses of a trustee in the execution of a trust are a lien upon the estate ; and he will not be compelled to part with the property until his disbursements are paid. Perry 909 ; Hill 578. If the trust fund is insufficient for such reimbursement he may call upon the cestui que trust, in whose behalf and at whose request he acted, and recover of him personally compensation for the time and trouble and money expended. Trus tees have an inherent equitable right to be reimbursed all expenses which they reasonably incurred in the execution of the trust, and it is immaterial that there are no provisions for such expenses in the instrument of trust. If a person undertakes an office for another in relation to property, he has a natural right to be reimbursed all the money necessarily expended in the performance of the duty. Perry, 910.” It is said that no decree can be made charging the burden of those debts upon income or the corpus of the property, because of the statute of frauds and the statute of conveyancing; and because it is an attempt to seize property “ without due process of. law.” If a man buys a farm in whole or in part with his neighbor’s money, and takes a deed of it to himself without conveyance or a scrap of writing, a Court of Equity, to use Mr. Colby’s terse expression, “ will tear the seals off the deed,” and charge the farm and conscience of him who holds the title, with a trust, and compel him to return the money or the title. If a purchaser of land omits to pay the purchase money, a Court of Equity will charge the property with a lien for the unpaid purchase money; and by foreclosure compel the payment of the purchase money or to extinguish the title to the property. Manly v. Slason, 21 Vt. 271. Ib. 28 Vt. 346.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Vt. 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langdon-v-vermont-canada-railroad-vt-1882.