McConihay v. Wright

121 U.S. 201, 7 S. Ct. 940, 30 L. Ed. 932, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2038
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 11, 1887
Docket159
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 121 U.S. 201 (McConihay v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McConihay v. Wright, 121 U.S. 201, 7 S. Ct. 940, 30 L. Ed. 932, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2038 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews^

after making the foregoing statement of' the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The first error assigned is, that the case is not one of equitable jurisdiction, it being contended .that the complainant below had a-complete and adequate remedy at law; The bill sufficiently alleges that .the complainant is in possession of the premises in controversy, and in this respect is supported by the proofs. .The prayer of the bill- is, that the defendants may be required to assert and declare the rights and title claimed by them in and to the premises, and that in the meantime they may be enjoined “ from interfering with or hindering or obstructing your orator, his agents, or employes, in any manner in.the use and enjoyment of said way and depot until the further order of said court,’-’ and for general relief. The contention of the appellants, however, is, that by the statute of West Yirginia the complainant might have maintained an action of ejectment. Reference is made in support of this *206 contention to the "West Yirginia Code of 1868, c. 90, to show that an action of ejectment in that state will lie against one claiming title to or interest in land, although not in possession. Admitting this to be so, it, nevertheless, cannot have the effect to oust the jurisdiction in equity of the courts of the United States as previously established. That jurisdiction, as has often been decided, is vested as a part of the judicial power of the United States in its courts by the Constitution and acts of Congress in execution thereof. Without .the assent of Congress- that jurisdiction cannot be impaired or diminished by the statutes of the several states regulating the practice of their own courts. Bills guia timet, such as the present, belong to the ancient -jurisdiction in equity, and no change in state legislation giving, in like cases, a' remedy by action at law, can, of itself, curtail the jurisdiction in equity of the courts of the United States. The adequate remedy at law, which is the test of equitable jurisdiction in these courts, is 'that which existed when the Judiciary Act of 1789 was adopted, unless subsequently changed by act of Congress.

The next assignment' of error is that the proof fails to sustain the title set up by the appellee. That title is based upon. two judicial sales. The first of these was a sale to Henry A. Cram, in a proceeding commenced in 1860 by the Bank of Yirginia and other judgment creditors against the Winifrede Mining and Manufacturing Company, the object of which was to marshal the assets of that corporation and apply them to the payment of its debts. A decree was rendered therein on January 26,1861, ascertaining the debts- of the cpmpaiiy and their priority as liens, and ordering a sale of its property for their satisfaction. That decree directed the sale of “ that ten thousand-acre tract of land belonging to the Winifrede Mining and Manufacturing Company, fully set out and described in the bill and' exhibits and other proceedings in this cause, and lying on Kanawha and Coal rivers and on Field’s Creek, in the counties of Kanawha and.Boone, together with all improvements thereon used in the mining, transporting, and shipping of coal, including railroad iron, picks, shovels, cars, engines, and whatever other tools and implements there *207 may be upon the property belonging to said company.”. The sale to Cram was duly confirmed by the court, and a deed conveying the property made to him by the commissioner. ‘ Subsequently, in 1878, Henry Á. Cram, the purchaser, filed his bill in equity against Edward A. Bibby arid others, in which he alleged that the purchase made by him at. the sale under the decree in favor of the Bank of Yirginia was made in trust on behalf of himself and others. The object- and .prayer of his bill were, that the trusts arising out of the. agreements ..set .forth .therein., in pursuance of which the purchase was made, might be administered and carried out under the direction of the court, and an account taken of Jihe expenditures of the complainant, the-property sold, and the-proceeds divided among the -parties in interest.. By an amendment, the Winifrede Mining- and Manufacturing Company was made a party to the bill; and-in a.second amendment it was alleged that at the-sale madé under the decree in the Bank of.Yirginia case, the railroad track and road-bed leading from the Kanawha River to the ten thousand-acre tract,' some five miles long, more or less, was sold and should have been conveyed by the commissioner in his deed to; the complainant, but by mistake ' was left out and not embraced in the-conveyance. The complainant,. therefore, prayed that the Winifrede Mining and Manufacturing Company, and'all parties named as «defendants in the original bill, be. made defendants to the, amended bill, and that the court would treat the roadway as a part of the property embraced In the deed to the complainant; adding that it was a coal property, that the road and road-bed and rails cost some $300,000, and that'the property was valueless without' this roadway, and the court-was risked to sell thé property;. including the roadway as an entirety. To this amended bill an answer was filed in the name and on behalf óf the Winifrede Mining and Manufacturing Company, admitting the allegations of the bill and amendment's to be true, and particularly that the property, including the road-bed and the; ten thousand-acre tract and rails, was sold as an entirety, and- as such, purchased by Cram, and should have been inpluded in the deed from the commissioner to him as purchaser. *208 In this suit a final decree was passed ordering a sale of the property as prayed for and described. It was declared in that decree that “ the legal title to the tract of 10,180 acres of land, more or less, situated on Field’s Creek and Big Coal Biver, West Virginia, and in the bill and amended bills more particularly described, together with the road-bed and right of way from the same to the Kanawha Biver, including the front property,” was vested in the complainant, Henry A. Cram, and the property as thus described was ordered to be sold. At this sale Theodore Wriglit, the appellee, became the purchaser for the sum of $120,000. This sale was confirmed by the court.and a deed ordered to be made, upon payment of the purchase money.

The objection of the appellants, that these proceedings do not vest in Theodore Wright, the appellee, the title which was in the Winifrede Mining and Manufacturing Company to the premises in dispute, cannot be sustained. It could avail the appellants as a defence only by showing that the legal title was still outstanding in the Winifrede Mining and Manufacturing Company, and that as between that company and Wright the latter was wrongfully in possession; but that question has already been adjudged as between the Wini-. frede Mining and Manufacturing Company and Cram, to whose title Wright succeeds by the decree of the. Kanawha Circuit Court, as.against"'-which that ’ company can no longer assert any title,’ either at law or in equity, to the property in controversy. Wright is now vested by virtue of that" decree with whatever title the W-inifrede ’Mining and Manufacturing Company had to the premises as completely as' if that title had been conveyed to him by the company by a deed under its corporate seal.

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Bluebook (online)
121 U.S. 201, 7 S. Ct. 940, 30 L. Ed. 932, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconihay-v-wright-scotus-1887.