Mercantile Trust Co. v. Baltimore & O. R. Co.

89 F. 606, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3101
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland
DecidedOctober 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 F. 606 (Mercantile Trust Co. v. Baltimore & O. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercantile Trust Co. v. Baltimore & O. R. Co., 89 F. 606, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3101 (circtdmd 1898).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judge

(orally). I am asked by the Presiding Judge to announce the decision of the court, but, preliminary to that, I desire to recall the circumstances under which the restraining order was passed. At that time it seemed that the question which the court was called upon to decide was a narrow question. It was, in substance, whether or not the court, in the administration of this receivership, should direct that certain mortgage interest should be paid, in order to prevent a default, — a thing the court might do, irrespective of other claims upon the receivership funds. It is a discretion constantly exercised by courts, in the administration of receiverships of such properties as this, to make certain creditors wait, in order that time may be given to evolve some scheme of reorganization, or some method of payment, or that some expectation may be realized which may pay all the creditors; the court in the meantime paying only those creditors the nonpayment of whose claims would lead to a sale of the property. That question was a comparatively narrow one, — one that frequently arises in the administration of receiverships. A chancellor is always anxious that, pending the hearing of a question of that sort, no adverse action may be taken, and that the parties may be kept in statu quo; and for that reason it seemed to me at that: time equitable that the restraining order should be passed, although I passed it against the protest of counsel representing the mortgagee, and notwithstanding their statement of the very great loss of interest which was occurring from day to day upon what we may well term enormous sums of money.

Now the question comes up before us in a somewhat different shape. It appears from the amended petition which has been filed this morn[608]*608ing in this litigation that the questions which the court will be called upon to decide have taken a very much wider range, that answers will be required which will certainly take time to prepare, that testimony will have to be taken which probably cannot be com'pleted within a month or more; so it does not seem possible that the case can be heard on the day which was fixed for the final hearing of these petitions. Now, it would be futile to undertake to hear one petition or two petitions, and dispose of them, and leave undecided the amended petition filed this morning, which may be of much more importance than any of the others. It therefore seems to us that we should rescind the restraining order, and not let it continue in the shape in which it was granted.

It is quite apparent that, some day or other, this property must, in some way or other, be gotten out of this court. It is not within the scope of a court of equity to continuously run a great' railway system, such as this is. A sale, or a settlement with creditors, or a reorganization, it is certain, must come to pass in this case. Therefore it seems to us that it will not be doing more than the court should do towards aiding that final result, to allow the petitions of foreclosure to be filed. It was provided in the order that was passed that no such petitions -should be filed, and no further proceedings for foreclosure taken, except upon special application to the court. Special application was made to the court subsequently, but believing then that the narrow question which was presented would remain the question to be decided, and could be shortly disposed of, I declined to give the leave that was asked; but it seems to me that, in view of the probably protracted nature of the controversy as now developed, the court should not prevent the filing of the foreclosure proceedings.

Now, this decision of the court does not mean at all that the petitioners are to be shut out from any rights that they may be able to establish. The final decree of foreclosure and the sale will be within the control of this court. In the other districts of this circuit the presiding judge will have control, and here we will sit together; so that it is a fact — and it is a fact upon which we now act — that the final terms of the foreclosure decree are within the control of this court, and the terms of that decree will be molded so as to do justice to all parties; and if it is necessary, to protect the rights of the present petitioners, to impose terms upon the purchaser, such terms can be put in the decree. For these reasons, we think it is proper that the restraining order should be modified,, if not entirely rescinded. I think what I have said disposes of the matters now before us, unless Judge GOFF desires to add something to what I have said.

GOFF, Circuit Judge.

Only that I suggest to counsel to now come to some understanding as to when this petition shall be answered and testimony taken, so that these matters can be disposed of. As to the motion to compel certain witnesses to answer the questions propounded before the examiner, it may be that the questions are not material under the first and second petitions, and yet proper under the third, and therefore it seems to me that the whole matter should be prepared for hearing. Now that counsel' understand, from what [609]*609•Judge MORRIS has stated, that the restraining order entered in the ease, so far as it restrains the trustees of the mortgages of 1872 and 1874 and 1887 from declaring the default and proceeding for a decree of foreclosure, will be rescinded, an order may be drawn to that effect.

Mr. CARTER.

May 1 inquire whether it sets aside the order restraining the trustees from declaring the principal due? The; reason I ask this is’that on the mortgage of .1887 the annual interest fell due on the 1st of August. I think there is a clause in that mortgage for a 90-day default, continued, authorizing a formal declaration forienting the property, Hie mortgage on which is not due for 90 year's. Does your honor' simply mean to allow an amendment or modification as to suing, and proceeding with the foreclosure suit, or do you also rescind the order restraining the trustees from making the 90-year principal due?

GOFF, Circuit Judge. The trustees have a right to so act under the mortgage itself.

Mr. JOHNSON.

May I read your honors just three lines from the consolidated mortgage?

“If die pr.ny of tlie first part shall at any time hereafter make default, or refuse, neglect, or omit for any period exceeding 90 days, to pay the semiannual interest on the consolidated mortgage bonds hereby secured, or any of them, or any part thereof, as it might become due, then the said party of tbt' second part may, and, on the written request of the holders of oneíourüi in amount of the said bonds then outstanding, shall, declare the whole print ipal sum thereof due and payable; whereupon the whole principal sum of eac-h and all of said bonds then outstanding shall forthwith be due and payable, notwithstanding the time limited for the payment thereof may not then have elapsed; and such principal, as well as the arrears of luleros! thereon, shall bear interest at the rafe por cent, per annum fixed in said ilends respectively, payable semiannually from the date of such default.”

MORRIS, District Judge. We do not undertake now to determine any of the rights of the trustees under the mortgages.

Mr. CARTER.

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Bluebook (online)
89 F. 606, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercantile-trust-co-v-baltimore-o-r-co-circtdmd-1898.