Las Vegas Railway & Power Co. v. Trust Co.

126 P. 1009, 17 N.M. 286
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1912
DocketNo. 1445
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 126 P. 1009 (Las Vegas Railway & Power Co. v. Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Las Vegas Railway & Power Co. v. Trust Co., 126 P. 1009, 17 N.M. 286 (N.M. 1912).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

PARKER, J.

This case was before the Territorial Supreme Court, and. is reported in 15 N. M. 634, 110 Pac. 856. IJpon that appeal two propositions were determined, viz: First, that there was nothing in the record authorizing the vacating of the final decree of foreclosure, and,. Second, that by reason of the circumstances stated in the opinion, the sale under the final decree should be vacated and a resale of the property had. A resale of the property was had and the case is now before this court upon an. appeal by the same parties who prosecuted the former appeal. The objection of the appellants in the former'appeal, who were the minority bond holders of the defendant corporation, to the final decree, was based upon an alleged fraud of the majority bond holders in causing the foreclosure proceedings to be instituted, and in securing the final decree of foreclosure, and upon the proposition that the foreclosure proceedings were improvidently and illegally instituted by the trustee under the mortgage. The-objection to the sale was based upon the ground of inadequacy of purchase price. The objections to the decree-were not sustained, but the sale was set aside for the reason that it did appear that the purchase price was inadequate. It is apparent from the record that in so far as the attack upon the decree of foreclosure is concerned, the attitude of the appellants has been adverse to the appellees throughout. The charge of fraud against the majority bond holders was-not sustained and, therefore, no benefit resulted to anyone from the .attempt to vacate the decree. At the second sale the Las Vegas Light and Power Company became the purchaser of the property at an advance price of $61,500 more than the property brought at the first sale. This last purchaser used the same 262 bonds of the Las Vegas Railway & Power Company in the purchase of the property, that Dr. Cunningham used at the first sale. The minority bond holders now seek to have allowed and paid out of the common fund their counsel fees for services, rendered in securing the resale.

1 Appellants base their claim upon the proposition that, having created a fund by increasing the original fund from $65,000, the purchase price at the original sale, to $126,-500, the amount of the purchase price at the second sale, and having brought the same within the jurisdiction of the court for distribution, they are equitably entitled to allowance out of the fund for reasonable counsel fees.

The doctrine upon which the claim is founded is well established. Thus in Trustees v. Greenough, 105 U. S. 527, a leading case, it is said:

“It is a principle that a trust estate must bear the expenses of its administration. It is also established by sufficient authority, that where one of many parties having a common interest in a trust fund, at his own expense takes-proper proceedings to save it from distribution and to restore it to the purposes of the trust, he is entitled to reimbursement, either out of the fund itself, or by proportional contribution from those who accept the benefits of his efforts.-”

See also, McCourt v. Singer-Bigger, 145 Fed. 103; R. R. Co. v. Pettus, 113 U. S. 116.

The application of the doctrine to the facts in this case is denied by7- appellees, upon the ground that the proceedings by appellants were at all times adverse to them, and they received no benefit from the same.

2 The proceedings, in so far as they sought to vacate the-decree on the ground of alleged fraud, were evidently adverse to the majority bond holders who had secured the-decree. In so far as the proceedings were directed to securing a resale of the property, in a sense they were not antagonistic to the majority, as such, because the latter must necessarily share in the benefits of an increased selling-price of the property. But from another point of view,, they were adverse. It is to be borne in mind that at the time these proceedings were begun the majority bond holders had ceased to be, in any substantial sense, bond holders, and h^d become purchasers of the property. Their common interest with the minority had ceased, and they were interested in having the sale confirmed, not in having it vacated. It was not in their interest that the proceedings were brought, they having elected to take the property over in substitution for the bonds. It was in fact in the sole interest of the minorit}7, that a larger sum might-be realized on tlieir bonds, that the sale was sought to be set aside, and a resale obtained. The benefit to the majority, if any resulted, was incidental and formed no part of the basis for the proceedings. Nor can we see how the majority received any" benefit from the proceedings. The property was mortgaged for $300,000, and the majority owned 262, and the minority owned 38 of the bonds. None of the parties contemplated that the property was worth half the amount of the bonded debt. It had sold for $65,000. at the first sale, and sold for $126,500 at the last sale. The majority, after surrendering bonds in the amount of $126,500 in the purchase of the property by the Las Vegas Light & Power Company, a corporation organized in their interest, still retained worthless bonds in the amount of $135,500. It was immaterial to them whether the property sold for $65,000 or $262,000 the amount of their bonds, except as the amount payable to the minority in cash for their bonds, might thereby be increased or diminished. So the alleged swelling of the fund was, so far as the majority was concerned, a mere form, realizing nothing of 'substance to them. Indeed, the majority were injured by the proceedings. Beside the expense of resisting the resale, they were compelled to pay the minority several thousand dollars more than they had to pay under the first sale. It is to be remembered in this connection that the charge of fraud was not sustained against any of the majority, the sale having been vacated by reason of the conduct and activities of one Garrels who, until just prior to the sale, had been a bond holder, and who had sold his bonds without the knowledge of the min•ority.

Under these circumstances, the minority have no right to charge the fund with their expenses for counsel fees. The principle upon which expenses of one are chargeable upon a fund belonging to others, is the principle of representation or agency. In cases of trustees, the right to charge the fund arises out of the relations of the parties, and is necessarily contemplated in the eyes of the law, when the relation of trustee and beneficiary is created. In cases of creditors’ bills and the like, the agency of one for others having a like interest and situation is implied from the acceptance of the fruits of the litigation. But where a proceeding is prosecuted adversely to another’s interest, or is solely in the interest of the person or persons prosecuting-the same, or is fruitless, no implication of agency arises, even though the persons whose fund is sought to be charged with the expenses may be incidentally benefited. This is simply the law of contract, founded in reason and justice, and finds sanction in the reported cases. Thus in Hand v. R. R. Co., 21 S. C. 162, 178, it is said:

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Bluebook (online)
126 P. 1009, 17 N.M. 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/las-vegas-railway-power-co-v-trust-co-nm-1912.