Meddaugh v. Wilson

151 U.S. 333, 14 S. Ct. 356, 38 L. Ed. 183, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2062
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 22, 1894
Docket10
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 151 U.S. 333 (Meddaugh v. Wilson) 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
Meddaugh v. Wilson, 151 U.S. 333, 14 S. Ct. 356, 38 L. Ed. 183, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2062 (1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The argument in support of the conclusion reached below is a simple one; and may be briefly stated thus : The only promise made by the defendant looking to a payment to Meddaugh & Driggs was conditioned on a sale to the English syndicate; that failed, and, therefore, the promise failed.. The promise made by him. in the second of the .two agree- *342 merits of April 9, 18T7,— that agreement under which the matter was finally disposed of,>— specified certain payments, but among them was none to the plaintiffs. In-other words, he received the stock transferred to him burdened with certain express trusts; the plaintiffs were not named as beneficiaries therein, and, therefore, they can claim nothing by virtue of any express promise. In the foreclosure suits their services were antagonistic to the interests of the mortgage creditors, the parties to the agreements with Wilson. Nothing was charged against the property in their behalf in those suits. The mortgagees were under no obligations to them, because in that litigation they represented adverse interests. Thus, neither by express decree nor upon any principle of equity was the property, when purchased for the, benefit of the mortgagees,’ burdened with a charge in their favor. Hence, not only was Wilson under no express promise to or for them upon which an action at law would lie, but also he received the stock free from any express or implied burdens in their favor. There was no trust attached to the property which they could enforce.

While this reasoning is direct and clear, there are considerations many and persuasive which show that equity will not be satisfied, nor will justice be done, unless and until the plaintiffs are admitted to a share in the stock transferred to the defendants. And first must be considered the situation of the parties at the time the decree was entered. The mortgagor, had been thrown into bankruptcy, and Beaman and Jerome appointed as assignees. As such assignees they represented not merely the mortgage creditors, but all the creditors and all the stockholders in the company. It was no single interest winch was committed to their care, but it was. their duty' as assignees to look after the interests of all having claims upon the property. Acting in good faith, as it must be supposed that they did, they conceived it their duty to defend the foreclosure suits and’ to file a cross-bill looking to the administration of the entire assets of the corporation. Their services in this respect not being to any party or parties but in respect to the property itself, and to *343 secure its proper application among all parties interested, it is clearly in accordance with settled rules of equity jurisprudence, as well as with the practice in bankruptcy proceedings, that compensation for their services, including the pay of their counsel, should be made a direct charge upon the property, and-a charge prior in right to the claims of creditors or stockholders. “ It is a general principle that a trust estate must bear the expenses of its administration.” Trustees v. Oreenough, 105 U. S. 527, 532. It is true that ordinarily the assignees in bankruptcy have possession of the property, and such possession adds to their cares as well as to their compensation. In this case they did not have possession, the property being already in the custody of the court' through its receiver. But the lack of possession did not relieve them from all duty, nor destroy their right to compensation. The duty of looking out for the interests of all was as pronounced as though they had the actual possession, and the lack of possession was only to be considered in determining the amount of compensation. -

It was in this situation of things that a decree was entered for the foreclosure and sale of the properties without any express provision for their compensation. This decree was .entered in pursuance of negotiations which had been for some time pending between the- creditors and the representative of the corporation and its stockholders, in which- the amount that the creditors would take in cash was agreed upon, and out of the difference between that sum and the amount which such representative was hoping to obtain from a proposed purchaser were to be paid all the expenses of the litigation. The representative was sanguine of the success of his proposed sale. The plaintiffs were doubtless affected with his confidence, and so accepted his promise to pay their compensation out of the moneys received from that purchaser, and waived any incorporation of an express provision therefor into the terms of the decree. But while, as it seems, they were unduly sanguine,'is it for a moment to be supposed that they were intending to donate their services in case the proposed sale should not be accomplished, .or that the *344 creditors or defendant understood that they so intended? The question carries its own answer. The case is not such as. would arise if these plaintiffs had accepted an absolute promise from Dickinson or defendant in lieu of a charge upon the property provided in the decree. If, for instance, either had promised them absolutely to pay the $38,000, it might have been argued that they wholly waived any right to look to the property; were willing that provision for a charge thereon should be omitted from the decree, and were content to take the responsibility of - such promisor. But here the promise was only a conditional one, that, if a proposed sale was accomplished, out of its pi’oceeds payment should be made. Evidently, confidence in the accomplishment of the proposed sale was so great that it was deemed unnecessary to-provide for the contingency of its failure. But the unexpected did happen. The sale failed. But their equitable right to have their charges paid out of the proceeds of the property did not cease. They would have been entitled at any time before the final consummation of the foreclosure proceedings to have had the decree modified, or an order entered making their fees a charge upon the property. These mortgage creditors and the defendant knew of the existence of the claims of the plaintiffs, and the amount thereof, and must as a matter of law be presumed to have known that they were properly charges against the property, and could, if need be, by express order be made a prior lien thereon. In this situation the trustees named in the creditors’ agreement, one of whom was the defendant, become the purchasers of the property. They purchase it at the master’s sale, knowing that these charges of plaintiffs, rightfully existing against the property, were only conditionally provided for. If the condition happened, and. the contemplated sale to the English syndicate was made, then defendant, out of the moneys that would come into his hands, would pay tlieir charges.- This he had expressly covenanted to do. If the property was bought and the condition never happened, can it be that he took the property free in equity from the burden of such charges ?

*345 Suppose that the case was relieved from the embarrassment of conflicting testimony, and that the facts as claimed by the defendant were free from dispute.

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Bluebook (online)
151 U.S. 333, 14 S. Ct. 356, 38 L. Ed. 183, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meddaugh-v-wilson-scotus-1894.