Ludlow v. Clinton Line R.

15 F. Cas. 1099, 1 Flip. 25
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio
DecidedJanuary 15, 1861
StatusPublished

This text of 15 F. Cas. 1099 (Ludlow v. Clinton Line R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ludlow v. Clinton Line R., 15 F. Cas. 1099, 1 Flip. 25 (circtndoh 1861).

Opinion

WILLSON, District Judge.

This case was referred to a master in chancery, to inquire and report, whether the defendant, Patrick Lavin, by his judgment rendered in this court, at the July term, for $24,640 and .costs, against the Clinton Line Railroad Company, obtained a lien upon the lands of said company, and if so, to what extent. The master, on the ótli of January, 1861, filed his report, in which', without giving any reason for liis conclusion, he says that the judgment of said Lavin is not a lien upon any part of the lands of said railroad company.

To this report the counsel for Lavin have filed exceptions, on the ground that the finding of the master is erroneous and contrary to law, in this: 1st — In finding and declaring said judgment not to be a lien on said company’s land; and 2d — In his failing to find [1100]*1100anti declare said judgment to be a lien, prior and superior to the complainant's mortgage upon all of said company’s land, situate in the counties of Portage, Geauga and Trumbull.

It appears from the record in this ease, that tbe cause of action upon which Larin recovered his judgment against the company, was for work and labor in grading the roadbed; for constructing culverts and furnishing materials for the same, and generally, for labor and materials furnished in preparing the road of said company for its iron track.

The judgment was rendered in July, 1S5G, and execution issued on the 19th of April, 1S39. and was levied upon lands belonging to the company, situate in the counties of Portage, Geauga and Trumbull. The complainant has brought this suit in equity to foreclose a mortgage given by said railroad company to him as trustee for the security of certain creditors, holders of the bonds of the company, which bonds are accurately described in the trust deed. This mortgage covers, in its terms, the road and real estate of the corporation. It was recorded in the county of Summit, on the 3d day of October, 1S55. But it was not received for record, or recorded in the counties of Trumbull, Geau-ga and Portage, until 1837, and after the rendition of said judgment in favor of Lavin.

The Clinton Line Railroad Company is a corporation organized under the act of the general assembly of Ohio, passed May 1, 1S52. Its terminii are fixed and established in the town of Hudson, in the county of Summit, and a point in the Ohio and Pennsylvania state line, in the county of Trumbull. The road has been surveyed and located on a route running through the counties of Summit, Portage, Geauga and Trumbull. Only a portion of the entire line of the road-bed has been graded; no iron rails have been placed upon it. and no equipments have been acquired by the company for operating the road. It seems to be admitted by all parties, that the corporation has abandoned the 'project of completing the road; that it is insolvent, and that its property must be sold to pay its debts.

This, then, is a contest between creditors for a priority in the distribution of the fund to arise from the sale of the property belonging to an insolvent railroad corporation, whose road cannot be finished and operated by a receiver. And the question is. does the judgment of Lavin operate as a lien upon' the lands acquired by the company, for the construction and operation of its road, and upon the road itself?

In determining this question of lien, we are to be governed by the laws of the state of Ohio, and the construction given to those laws by the supreme court of the state. The four hundred and twenty-first section of the Ohio Code of Civil Procedure, provides, that “the lands and tenements of tne debtor within the county where the judgment is entered, shall be bound for the satisfaction thereof, from the first day of the term, at which judgment is rendered.” Swan, St. 675.

The limits of a federal judicial district, (in the exercise of the jurisdiction of the U. S. circuit court,) is, as the limits of the county to the local courts. The principles of the state law are adopted, but the instruments which give effect to those principles are necessarily different, as they are made to operate throughout a more extended jurisdiction. In Sellers v. Corwin. 5 Ohio, 400, the supreme court of Ohio decided that the lien of a judgment in the circuit court of the United States, was co-extensive with the territorial jurisdiction of the circuit court. This effect and extended operation of judgment liens in the federal courts, is equally as well established in other states. Lombard v. Bayard [Case No. 8,469]; Koning v. Bayard [Id. 7,924]; Shrew v. Jones [Id. 12,818].

The lien, therefore, of a judgment rendered in this court, has the same effect and operates to the same extent upon the debtor’s land throughout the Northern district of Ohio, as the lien of a like judgment, rendered in the state court, operates upon the debtor's land in a county. The language of the statute is clear and explicit, that the land and tenements of the judgment-debtor shall be bound for the satisfaction of the judgment.

Ordinarily such lien attaches only to lands in which the debtor has the legal title. But. by the judgment of the highest judicial tribunal of the state, a railroad and the lands necessary for its operation, (by whatever title such lands are held) together with the franchise of maintaining the road and demanding compensation for the transportation of passengers and property, constitutes real estate — possessing the unity and character of a tract of laud, and as such, is-subject to appraisement and the other incidents of a judicial sale of land. If this doctrine is correct, we do not see why the judgment-lien is not effectual on such property, and secures to the creditor a right equal to that of a mortgagee, whose security on such railroad property is obtained by the voluntary act of the debtor corporation.

It has. however, been urged by counsel, that insolvent railroad corporations furnish exceptional cases, not by reason of any general law of the state, or by virtue of any exemption in the law of their creation, but. solely upon considerations of public policy. And the case of Coe v. Columbus, P. & I. R. Co. [10 Ohio St. 372], decided last April by the supreme court of Ohio, is cited by counsel as an authority for the doctrine.

When a statute of Ohio has been interpreted or construed by the supreme court of the state, such interpretation or construction is followed and adopted by this court, if not in conflict with the constitution and laws of [1101]*1101the United States. The case of Coe v. Columbus, P. & I. R. Co., involves the con.struction of the act of the Ohio legislature of February 11, 1848, in relation to the powers and liabilities of railroad corporations ■organized under its provisions.

The Clinton Line Railroad Company derives its powers from the act of May 1, 1852. The fifteenth section of this law provides that “such company may acquire by purchase or gift any lands in the vicinity of said road, or through which the same may pass, so far as may be deemed convenient or necessary by said company to secure the right of way, or such as may be granted to -aid in the construction of such road, and the same to hold or convey in such manner as the directors may prescribe,” etc. And the third section of said act, among other things, provides that said railroad company shall have power to contract and be contracted with, to sue and be sued, to acquire and convey at pleasure all such real and personal estate as may be necessary and convenient to carry into effect the objects of the incorporation.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 1099, 1 Flip. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ludlow-v-clinton-line-r-circtndoh-1861.