Merriman v. Chicago & E. I. R.

66 F. 663, 14 C.C.A. 36, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2677
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 66 F. 663 (Merriman v. Chicago & E. I. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merriman v. Chicago & E. I. R., 66 F. 663, 14 C.C.A. 36, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2677 (7th Cir. 1895).

Opinions

BAKER, District Judge.

Counsel in their brief in support of the petition for rehearing say:

“In the opening statement of the court it is said that the appellants concede that ‘unless the original bill was a creditors’ bill, which created a lien on $500,000 of bonds of the Eastern Illinois Company, which it was about to issue to certain officers of the Danville Company, and which it did issue before the filing of the amended and supplemental bill,’ the cause was properly dismissed as to the Eastern Illinois Company. This statement is, we think, somewhat broader than that made in our argument, but we are not prepared to say that it is not warranted by it The view we now present is in conflict with the course of our original argument, in that we now distinctly claim that, when the original bill was filed, the lien was created upon the value of the equity of redemption,. while we formerly stated it as a lien upon these bonds which the Eastern Illinois Company had agreed to furnish as a substitute for that equity of redemption.”

The counsel for the appellants, therefore, in effect concede that the question which they formerly argued and submitted was correctly decided; and they now ask a rehearing on grounds which are in conflict with the course of their original argument. Aban[664]*664doning as indefensible the grounds on which they sought a reversal of the decree in the first instance, they now ask the court to grant them a rehearing, so that they may for the first time seek a reversal on grounds in conflict with their former contention. When the court has correctly decided the questions upon which its judgment has been invoked by the appellants, they cannot, as a matter of right, require the court to consider any other questions upon a petition for a rehearing. If such a practice were permitted, the case might be presented in parcels, and the litigation would, in this manner, be needlessly protracted. And this principle applies with peculiar force where, as in the present case, counsel ask a rehearing to enable them to present the case upon a theory in conflict with the course of their original argument. Fuller v. Little, 61 Ill. 22; Yater v. Mullen, 24 Ind. 277; Brooks v. Harris, 42 Ind. 177, 180. It is, by the well-settled principles of the law, too late to present a question for the first time on a petition for a rehearing, and, in consenting to consider that question in the present instance, we do not mean to make an innovation which shall be regarded as a precedent in future cases.

The present contention of the appellants is that the original bill created a lien upon the equity of redemption of the Danville Company in the railroad and property in the possession of the Eastern Illinois Company, and that the bonds became, upon their issuance, • a substitute for such equity of redemption. Counsel state their claim as follows:

“We view tiie case presented on the record as establishing beyond dispute that the Eastern Illinois Company, after having by collusion procured an apparent release of the Danville Company’s equity of redemption in this property, and after an equitable lien had been created on that equity by the original bill herein, obtained from the debtor an effective release of this equity, and thereby substituted its $500,000 of bonds for the value of that equity, and converted them into an asset of the Danville Company.”

Shortly stated, the claim now is that the Eastern Illinois Company is chargeable with the value of the $500,000 of bonds issued by it to the officers of the Danville Company, on the ground that by issuing them they were converted into an asset of that company.

The Eastern Illinois Company had become by mesne conveyances the owner of the railroad and property of the Danville Company under a judicial sale made pursuant to a decree of foreclosure and an order of sale. The sale so made was confirmed by a decree of the court. On an appeal taken from such decree to the supreme court of the United States, such proceedings were there had as resulted in a reversal of that decree. Thereafter, on July 7, 1882, Fosdick and Fish filed in the United States circuit court for the Northern district of Illinois an amended and supplemental bill against the Danville Company, the Eastern Illinois Company, and others, for the foreclosure of the mortgage or trust deed executed by the Danville Company, and for other relief. The Eastern Illinois Company filed in said cause a cross bill, setting up a title to the mortgaged premises and property under a judicial sale made, by virtue of the decree in the suit on the original bill. [665]*665The appellants herein were not parties to the above-mentioned proceedings. They made an application for leave to intervene and become parties to that suit, but their application was denied by the court. The parties of record to the above-mentioned proceedings settled the litigation between themselves, which resulted in a release of errors, and a decree confirming the title of the Eastern Illinois Company to the railroad and property of the Dan-ville Company acquired under the above-mentioned decree and sale, upon the issue and delivery by it to certain officers of the Danville Company of the $500,000 of bonds in question. If the appellants' original bill created a lien upon anything, it was a lien upon the equity of redemption of the Danville Company. Tire contract for the settlement of the suit of Fosdick and Fish against the Danville Company, the Eastern Illinois Company, and others in no way affected the rights of the appellants, if they had acquired any by their original bill, because they were not parties to that contract, nor to the suit thereby settled. As to the appellants it was res inter alios acta. Counsel in argument concede this. They say:

“They [the appellants] could only seek to reach the equity of redemption, and could not reach the bonds. The Danville Company, their debtor, was not a party to the Eastern Illinois Company’s contract. It had no right or equity in the bonds, and, as a matter of fact, could not have complied with the terms of the contract made by .Unison, because it did not own its own stock which was a part of the nominal consideration for that contract; the comply inants, as its creditors, could not have enforced a specific performance of Hurt contract, or acquired any right to the bonds. They could not even control the Danville Company to make it confirm the decree.”

It is insisted, however, that by the contract and decree the bonds were substituted for the equity of redemption. If such substitution was thereby effected, it was contrary to the understanding and intention of the parties. There was no agreement to buy the equity of redemption of the Danville Gompany. The Eastern Illinois Company at all times denied that the Danville Company ha.d any equity of redemption. It agreed to the contract of settlement, and to tlie issuance of its bonds, to procure a decree whose effect was to deny that the Danville Company had any equity of redemption in the railroad and property acquired by it at the judicial sale. So far as the appellants are concerned, the contract of settlemeni: and the decree did not affect their rights. If they ever acquired any enforceable lien on the equity of redemption, it remained in all its integrity after, the same as before, the settlement was made and the decree was entered. Iso legal or equitable right of theirs entered into or formed any part of the consideration of the bonds in question. • Besides, the bonds never had any legal inception while they remained unissued in the hands of the Eastern Illinois Company.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Kenneth C. Gordon
253 F.2d 177 (Seventh Circuit, 1958)
Bassick Mfg. Co. v. Adams Grease Gun Corp.
54 F.2d 285 (Second Circuit, 1931)
Merriman v. Chicago, D. & V. R. Co.
120 F. 240 (Seventh Circuit, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 F. 663, 14 C.C.A. 36, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 2677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merriman-v-chicago-e-i-r-ca7-1895.