Missouri & K. I. Ry. Co. v. Edson

224 F. 79, 139 C.C.A. 561, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1850
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 12, 1915
DocketNo. 4225
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 224 F. 79 (Missouri & K. I. Ry. Co. v. Edson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri & K. I. Ry. Co. v. Edson, 224 F. 79, 139 C.C.A. 561, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1850 (8th Cir. 1915).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

This case presents a single question. May a court of equity lawfully allow and pay out of the trust funds in the hands of a receiver it has appointed his necessary counsel fees for defending himself against baseless charges of malfeasance in the discharge of his duties as receiver, which, if they had been well founded, would have entailed liabilities upon him as an individual and no liabilities against the trust estate ? The question arises in this way:

The parties in interest are the Missouri & Kansas Interurban Railway Company, a corporation, the Strang Land Company, a corporation, J. A. Edson, the receiver, and William B. Strang, who owned the majority of the stock 'of the Railway Company and all the stock of the Land Company and had a judgment against the Railway Company. In June and July, 1908, Strang, as judgment creditor of the Railway [80]*80Company, caused the court below to appoint Mr. Edson receiver of the property of the Railway Company and to authorize him to issue receiver’s certificates to an amount not exceeding $350,000 for the purpose, among other things, of equipping the railroad, which had been operated by gas electric motor cars, with an overhead trolley system including cars for its operation by electricity. One of the conditions, which was complied with, of the issue of the certificates, was that as security for their payment all the capital stock of the Earid Company should be indorsed in blank and delivered to the receiver, with free power to vote it. After the indorsement and delivery thereof Edson elected himself president of the Rand Company and as receiver of the Railway Company availed himself of options, due to' expire November 10, 1908, to purchase at specified prices four 40-acre tracts of land near the railway which the Rand Company held, and failed to avail himself of like options to purchase at specified prices two 40-acre tracts of land held by the Rand Company, which his wife bought at the option prices when they were worth more than those prices. These transactions of the receiver became known to Strang as early as December, 1908, but he made no complaint or objection regarding them until November 4, 1909. Meanwhile Edson, as receiver, had issued receiver’s certificates, had substituted for the unsuccessful motor car-system of operation the overhead trolley system, had provided the requisite cars and equipment for it, and had put the railway in active and remunerative operation; the Railway Company had, on September 24, 1909, filed its petition for the restoration of its property; and the court, on October 21, 1909, had entered its decree that the properly of the Railway Company be restored to it, and that the stock of the Rand Company be returned to Strang, that the receiver be allowed $17,000 for his.services and $8,000 for the services of his counsel and that he file his final account within 30 days thereafter. The receiver immediately restored the property and the stock, and on November 15, 1909, filed his final account. On the same day Strang filed a petition for an order on the receiver to show cause, if any there were, “why he should not be adjudged guilty of a breach of trust and malfeasance in the performance of his duties as receiver, and why he should not be punished as and for a contempt of the authority of the court” because he had failed as receiver to avail himself of the options to purchase the two 40-acre tracts of land which he had permitted his wife to purchase at the option prices. Such.an order was issued, the.receiver answered, the issues presented were heard and decided on their merits in favor of the receiver by the court below/Strang appealed to this court, the decree in favor of the receiver- was affirmed on the grounds (1) that Strang was estopped by his knowledge of the transaction in December.. 1908, and his failure to object to it prior to November 4, 1909, to insist upon his claim, and (2) that he was only a stockholder of the Rand Company, which was the party injured, if any one was, and that he could not maintain any claim on account of that injury until he first made an unsuccessful effort to induce the Rand Company to prosecute its claim. Strang filed a petition for a rehearing in this court which was denied. Strang v. Edson, 198 Fed. 813, 117 C. C. A. 455. He ap[81]*81plied to the Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari to review the action of this court, and the Supreme Court refused to grant it.

On December 11, 1909, the Railway Company filed exceptions to the final report of the receiver, whereby (1) it sought to compel him to pay $14,500 because, as it alleged, he had compelled it to pay that amount to obtain an extension of a note, by failing to borrow the full amount of $350,000 and to issue the receiver’s certificates for that amount, and by issuing a smaller amount under a contract that the certificates so issued should be prior and senior to any other certificates that should be subsequently issued, and whereby (2) it sought to compel him to pay $3,933.64 because, as it alleged, he paid Arnold & Co. that amount more than they were entitled to receive under their contract for installing the overhead trolley system. The receiver denied liability for any of these amounts. The issues regarding the claims were heard and decided in the receiver’s favor upon their merits in the court below and on appeal in this court. Missouri & Kansas Interurban Ry. Co. v. Edson, 198 Fed. 819, 117 C. C. A. 461.

After the litigation of the claims of Strang and the Railway Company against the receiver which have been described was concluded, the receiver filed a petition for his final discharge, which had been delayed during this litigation, and for an allowance to pay the fees of his counsel and his own expenses in defeating these claims. The parties stipulated that the reasonable value of the services of counsel was $2,500, but the Railway Company opposed any allowance on account thereof, or on account of the receiver’s expenses in the litigation of those claims, on the grounds (1) that those services and expenses were not for the defense or benefit of the trust estate, but for Edson’s personal defense against charges of personal malfeasance in the administration of the trust, on account of which he personally would have been liable and the trust estate would not have been liable, if they had been sustained, and (2) that his allowance of $8,000 for counsel fees was adequate compensation for all the services of his counsel before and after that date. Testimony was taken on the issues thus made, and the court below decreed an allowance to the receiver of $2,500 for his counsel fees and $107 for his expenses. From this decree the Railway Company has appealed.

[1] In support of their appeal counsel for the company contend that the allowances of $17,000 for services of the receiver and $8,000 for the services of his counsel by the decree of October 21, 1909, were in full payment of all services and expenses of the receiver and his counsel thereafter rendered, as well as of those theretofore rendered, and that, if this were not so, those allowances gave adequate and ample compensation for all their services before and after the date of that decree, so that no more should have been allowed. But neither the receiver nor the court below had any knowledge or notice on October 21, 1908, when that decree was rendered, of the long and strenuous litigation against the receiver which Strang and the Railway Company instituted in the November and December following. The District Court was of the opinion that the allowances of October 21st were not made in.payment of the subsequent services of counsel for the re

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 F. 79, 139 C.C.A. 561, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-k-i-ry-co-v-edson-ca8-1915.