Meloy v. Wabash Railway Co.

2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 342
CourtIllinois Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 342 (Meloy v. Wabash Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meloy v. Wabash Railway Co., 2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 342 (Ill. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This suit is brought by the complainant, a resident of the District of Columbia, to. enforce the payment to him of bonds amounting to the sum of ten thousand dollars, which he avers it is the duty of the Wabash ailway Company to pay, and it further avers that the Wabash Railway Company, has not nor any one for it, paid the Company’s bonds nor any interest thereon, since November 1, 1874, and that said Company is now denying its liability for either principal or interest upon said bonds owned by complainant. And the bill sets out with great care and elaboration the organization and history of the various railroad corporations which ultimately terminated in one consolidated, continuous line of road extending .across three states, from the city of Toledo, in Ohio, to the Mississippi river in Illinois, making in all over six hundred miles of continuous railway, and now known as the “Wabash Railway Company;” and it is alleged in the bill, and admitted by defendants, that in 1862 the Toledo and WabashRailroad Company, for the purpose of enabling it to meet the demands made upon it for transportation, issued six hundred thousand dollars of bonds, known as “Equipment Bonds,” and placed them upon the market without any security beyond the maker’s promise to pay thereon. These bonds are made payable in 1883, with seven per cent, interest, payable semi annually.

It is averred that in February, 1867, the Toledo, Wabash and Western Railway Company resolved to, and did issue its bonds to the extent of fifteen millions of dollars, to be known as its consolidated bonds, and at the same time made and recorded a mortgage on all its property securing the payment of these new bonds when they should be issued. The object of this action on the part of the company seems to have been to take up the various outstanding obligations against the small section of road composing the new consolidated company and fund them and issue new bonds, to take their place as fast as the owners of the old bonds would come forward and surrender them. The right to fund the old bonds, of course, was optional with the holders. It appears, from one of the exhibits shown by the defendant, that 96.5 of all the outstanding indebtedness has been funded under this scheme. The exhibit shows that none of these equipment bonds have been funded, and it is averred in the bill that the holders of the equipment bonds have not been invited to fund their bonds and thus share the benefit of the consolidated mortgage bonds. It is alleged that the present corporation, the Wabash Railway Company, came into possession of all the property rights and franchises of the Toledo, Wabash and Western Railway Company, by purchase at a judicial sale, and that it holds the property subject to the rights of the consolidated bond-holders, and of those who hold the equipment bonds. The .respondents deny that they hold the property subject to any supposed rights of the owners of the equipment bonds, among whom is the complainant in this suit. The complainant charges that the defendant is neglecting and refusing to apply all its net revenues to the payment of the interest accruing on the bonds secured by the consolidated mortgage and especially to that class of bonds known as the equipment bonds, and charges that the defendant is applying a part of its resources to the payment of the Seney mortgage, which it alleges to be junior to the complainant’s bonds. The bill, prays for an account and that the bonds held by complainant may be declared a lien on the property of the defendant, and the defendant required to pay the same; that the said mortgage be foreclosed, and that pending proceedings for foreclosure, a receiver for the property of the defendant be appointed.

The respondent denies that the complainant’s bonds are secured by the consolidated mortgage, and denies any liability to him whatever, and resists the appointment of a receiver,, and the propriety of granting or refusing the prayer of this bill is the only question upon which I am now called to pass, and in doing so I shall assume for the purpose of this motion, that the complainant’s bonds are secured by. the consolidated mortgage, and that the Wabash Bailway Company holds and owns its roads and franchises subject to the superior lien of the complainant, as he claims in his bill. In other words, upon his own showing, is he entitled to the appointment of a receiver? In the appointment of a receiver the court always exercises its extraordinary powers. The remedy is harsh and summary in the extreme. The court before ascertaining the right or to whom the property in controversy belongs, upon substantially ex parte proceedings (for they can be but little better when even both parties are before the court) lays a strong hand upon him who is in possession of the property and compels him to surrender it to the possession of a stranger and engage in long and vexaatious litigation for its recovery. This sword of justice with which courts are armed, ought to be sheathed except in cases of extreme necessity. No ordinary occasion should justify its use. In Baker v. The Administrator of Backus, 32 Ill. 79, 115, the supreme court say that: “A receiver is not usually appointed unless fraud is clearly proved by affidavit, or when it is shown that imminent danger would ensue, if the property is not taken under the care of the court, before an answer is put in. There must be a strong special ground to induce the court to interfere in this way before an answer. ’ ’

And in First National Bank of Sioux City v. Gage, 79 Ill. 207, 209, the court say that: “A receiver should be appointed in no case,- unless it is made to appear there is an imperative necessity for the step; to preserve some particular property for such parties as shall be entitled to the benefit. ’ ’

In High on Receivers, at section 365, it is said that: “While the jurisdiction of equity over railway corporations, as enlarged by the statutes and practice of the various states, is based upon and exercised in accordance with substantially the same principles which govern its jurisdiction over other corporations, the courts are more reluctant to lend their extraordinary aid by the appointment of receivers over railways than over other corporate bodies. The importance of these corporations, as being quasi public bodies, and the peculiar nature of their property and franchises, sufficiently explain the reluctance with which equity interferes with their management, and in general the courts proceed with extreme caution in placing them in the hands of receivers and whenever the ordinary remedies provided by law are open to the creditors of such corporations for the enforcement of their demands, the appointment and continuance of a receiver in office for a long period of years is the exercise of a judicial power which can only be justified by the pressure of an absolute necessity.”

These are sound and wholesome doctrines of the law, and are but examples of the language of all the books, and it seems to me to be a matter of regret that the courts have not been always as careful, and more especially in recent times, to keep within the prescribed limits of this extraordinary jurisdiction as would seem to have been required by private and public rights. It is' a matter of public notoriety that millions of dollars of property have been wasted and squandered in the state of Illinois alone, and men delayed and hindered in the assertion of the plainest rights, by the free use of this arbitrary and monstrous power.

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Related

Milwaukie & Minnesota Railroad v. Soutter
69 U.S. 510 (Supreme Court, 1865)
Baker v. Administrator of Backus
32 Ill. 79 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1863)
First National Bank v. Gage
79 Ill. 207 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1875)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ill. Cir. Ct. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meloy-v-wabash-railway-co-illcirct-1879.