McEwen v. Harriman Land Co.

138 F. 797, 71 C.C.A. 163, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 3831
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 1905
DocketNo. 1,367
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 138 F. 797 (McEwen v. Harriman Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McEwen v. Harriman Land Co., 138 F. 797, 71 C.C.A. 163, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 3831 (6th Cir. 1905).

Opinion

COCHRAN, District Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree rendered in a case within another case. That case is this: Prior to November 18, 1893, the East Tennessee Land Company, a Tennessee corporation, organized in the year 1889, with its principal place of business at Harriman, in the Eastern District of that state, became insolvent. On that day six of its creditors, noncitizens of Tennessee, filed against it in the lower court a general creditors’ bill. Two days later receivers were appointed to take charge of its assets. March 23, 1894, a bill to foreclose a mortgage upon a large quantity o'f real estate in five certain counties in said Eastern District, given by it August 28, 1891, to secure bonds to the amount of $1,000,000, was filed in said court by the Central Trust Company of New York, the trustee in the mortgage. On the same day the former suit was consolidated with the latter, and the receivership therein was extended thereto. Thereafter certain proceedings were had in said consolidated causes, and on February 27, 1897, a final decree was entered therein. By said decree the entire indebtedness proven against the corporation was adjudged. It consisted of said mortgage bonds, balances of purchase money due for certain portions of said real estate, secured by vendors’ liens, most of which were superior to said mortgage, but some of which were inferior thereto, obligations secured by pledges of personal property, and obligations unsecured in any way. The indebtedness so adjudged exceeded the sum of $1,750,000. Some of it, however, was a duplication, owing to the fact that one kind of indebtedness, principally, if not entirely, said bonds, had been pledged as collateral security for other kinds thereof. In view of this it is difficult to state the exact amount of the real indebtedness of the corporation as thus adjudged, but this fact is not material to any question raised by this appeal. The decree further adjudged the liens upon the assets of the corporation and their priority, a sale of said assets, and a distribution of the proceeds thereof, after payment of the costs and expenses of the proceedings, in discharge of said liens to the extent thereof and in accordance with their priority. Under this decree a [799]*799sale was had on July 20, 1897, which was shortly thereafter duly confirmed. At said sale those portions of real estate covered by the vendors’ liens which were superior to the mortgage were purchased by the holders of said liens at amounts considerably less than the balances due them, which were thus left unpaid to this extent. The rest of the real estate was purchased by Linus S. Freeman, James E. Rodes, and William Beverly Winslow as trustees for the parties to certain agreements by which funds were subscribed to pay the purchase price bid therefor. They purchased it for the sum of $70,000, the upset price named in the decree, which exceeded by the sum of $380 pnly the amount necessary to defray the costs and expenses of the litigation other than those incidental to the prosecution of the foreign suits hereinafter referred to. It does not appear what sums the personal assets pledged to secure certain obligations brought, but evidently they did not bring much. This exhaustion of the assets of the corporation left its indebtedness largely unpaid. With the sale of said.assets and the distribution of their proceeds this much of the litigation spent its force. In the course, however, of the proceedings prior to the making of said decree, to wit, on May 22, 1895, an order was made directing the receivers to institute suits in the state of Massachusetts against Joseph R. Lee-son and John Hopewell, Jr., residents of that state, and two out of sixteen individual promoters of said corporation, the East Tennessee Land Company, to recover secret profits made from said corporation at the time of its organization, which, if recovered, would constitute assets of the corporation for distribution in said consolidated causes upon its indebtedness. Pursuant to said order, in May, 1895, two separate suits against said individuals were brought in the state court of Massachusetts having original jurisdiction of them. December 19, 1895, an order was made in said consolidated causes directing a temporary suspension of the suits in Massachusetts until it should be ascertained that it was necessary to collect said assets to pay the indebtedness of the corporation. In June, 1897, this fact having been ascertained, and the receivership being represented by a single individual, the order of suspension was revoked, and the receiver was directed to proceed with said suits. On April 11, 1898, an order was made upon application of the Central Trust Company of New York, trustee under said mortgage, absolving it thereafter from any liability for costs of the receivership, and providing for the continued prosecution of said suits in the 'following words, to wit:

“It Is ordered that the receiver continue the prosecution of said suits only in the event that creditors of the East Tennessee Land Company, who are parties to these causes, shall provide security for the costs of such suits, including the expenses of the receiver and his counsel, for such sums and in such form and amount as the clerk of this court may deem adequate and satisfactory, and to be sufficient to protect the Central Trust Company from being charged or liable for any such expenses from the date of the entry of this order. It is further ordered that the creditors so indemnifying the receiver as aforesaid, and who shall elect to further continue the prosecution of said suits or actions, shall be entitled to the proceeds or benefits thereof to the extent of their respective claims, and to the proceeds of all property and assets héreafter coming into the hands of said receiver, to the exclusion of [800]*800other creditors and persons who do not within 30 days after notice to the solicitors for the respective parties of the entry of this order join in providing security for the payment of further costs and expenses as hereinafter required.”

June 24, 1898, the time within which indemnifying bonds might be given under said order, was extended 20 days thereafter. Under these orders the Harriman Land Company, a New Jersey corporation, organized in 1897, and, claiming to be the assignee of the bulk of the creditors of said East Tennessee Land Company, whose claims against it had been proven in said consolidated causes, and adjudged by the decree of February 27, 1897, J. E. Rodes, assignee of one of such creditors, and Claude E. Hendricks, assignee of four or five of such creditors, executed bonds as required by said order. No other such creditor or assignee thereof executed any bond in compliance therewith. Thereafter the receiver, at considerable cost and expense to said indemnifiers, prosecuted said suits against said Leeson and Hopewell to a successful determination, and recovered from them for distribution in said consolidated causes as a part of the assets of said insolvent corporation the sum of $89,173.26, which is now held by him for such purpose. The proceedings had in said suits and the basis of the recovery therein are fully set forth in the following reported decisions of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, to which said suits were carried by said Leeson and Hopewell on four separate occasions, to wit: Hayward v. Leeson, 176 Mass. 310, 57 N. E. 656, 49 L. R. A. 725; East Tennessee Land Co. v. Leeson, 178 Mass. 206, 59 N. E. 639; Same v. Same, 183 Mass. 37, 66 N. E. 427; Same v. Same, 185 Mass. 4, 69 N. E. 351. This, then, is the case within which is the case in which the decree appealed from was rendered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 F. 797, 71 C.C.A. 163, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 3831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcewen-v-harriman-land-co-ca6-1905.