New Orleans Pacific Railway Co. v. Parker

143 U.S. 42, 12 S. Ct. 364, 36 L. Ed. 66, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 3053
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 1, 1892
Docket137
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 143 U.S. 42 (New Orleans Pacific Railway Co. v. Parker) 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
New Orleans Pacific Railway Co. v. Parker, 143 U.S. 42, 12 S. Ct. 364, 36 L. Ed. 66, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 3053 (1892).

Opinion

Me. Justice BeowN

delivered- the opinion of the court.

(1) The.motion of the plaintiff Parker, to dismiss the appeal as to him upon the ground that less than five thousand dollars is/involved, demands our first consideration. His position is .that the suit-embraces two separate and distinct conti’oversies: one-.between-Parker'and appellants, and one between Hamlin and appellants-; ‘ that there .-were séparáte decrees in these'several causes; that these decrees cannot be aggregated for the purpose of sustaining the jurisdiction of this court, nor can the appeal be sustained as to him by reason of the fact that, as to Hamlin, more than the requisite jurisdictional amount is at isjiie. It is true that the amount, of Parker’s decree was but twenty- ■ four hundred dollars and interest, but his bill' was filed nof only for himself, but for all the other bondholders under the mortgage, and the cross-bill avers that he actually represented upwards of tw.o hundred of the bonds issued under this mortgage, (an averment admitted by his demurrer,) and prayed for a decree declaring the invalidity of the entire mortgage as to these *51 lands. Had the bill been filed by the trustee under this mortgage for the foreclosure of the whole amount of the debt, and a similar cross-bill had been-filed for its cancellation, there could be no doubt of the appealable character of any decree rendered upon these pleadings. This mortgage, however, contained- a provision permitting a foreclosure by any holder of an overdue bond or coupon. Parker’s bill was filed practically for the benefit of the entire number of -bondholders, and the cross-bill could not be sustained except upon the theory that the entire mortgage was invalid as a lien upon these lands. While a decree in favor of the cross-plaintiff might not have been binding upon any defendant to the cross-bill who did not appear, it certainly would have been binding upon Hamlin as well as Parker, since Hamlin, on being made a plaintiff, expressly stipulated that, the cause should be considered as if be had been one of the original plaintiffs; that Parker’s pleadings should be considered as his; and that the pleadings of the defendant’s-should apply equally to him. If Parker’s argument in this connection be sound, it would necessarily follow that if- every bondholder of this mortgage had intervened, and a cross-bill had been filed against them all, praying a cancellation of the entire mortgage, our jurisdiction to review-a dismissal of this bill could not be" sustained as to any of such bondholders whose decrees were not more than five thousand dollars, notwithstanding it would be sustained as to others whose decrees were larger. The result would be that the land might be sold for the benefit of the larger bondholders, and freed'from the lien of the smaller.

Where several plaintiffs claim under the same title, and the determination of the cause necessarily involves the validity of that title, this court has jurisdiction- as to all such plaintiffs, though the individual claims' of none of them exceed five thousand dollars. Thus in Shields v. Thomas, 17 How. 3, 4, where a bill was filed by several.distributees of ah estate, to compel the payment of money alleged to be due them, and a decr.ee was rendered in their favor, it was held-that this court-had jurisdiction-over an appeal,-although the amount payable tp each individual was less than two-thousand dollars. It was *52 Held, that $ie matter in controversy was the amount due- the representatives of the deceased collectively; and not the partic: ular sum to which each was entitled, when the amount was distributed among them. Said the court: “ They all. claimed under one and the same title.' They had a common aüd-undi-vided interest in the .claim; and it was perfectly.immaterial to the appellant how if was-to be shared among them.” The case of Rodd v. Heartt, 17 Wall. 354, is still more nearly, analogous. In this case, which ivas in admiralty, a fund exceeding the jurisdictional amount paid into the registry'of the court was claimed on the one hand by several creditors secured by one mortgage, and on the other by a number of mariners and material men. A decree having been made adverse" to the mortgagees, ah appeal was taken by them to this court, and,it’ was held that although no one of the Claims under the mortgage equalled the jurisdictional- amount, yet as the claim of the appellants, which was disallowed, exceeded that sum, an appeal would lie. In The Connemara, 103 U. S. 754, it was held that where salvors united in a claim.for a-single 'salvage service, jointly rendered by them, the owner of the property was entitled to an appeal where the sum decreed exceeded $5000, though in the division among the several parties sharing in the recovery several were awarded less than $5000. In-line with these cases are those of Davies v. Corbin, 112 U. S. 36, and Handley v. Stutz, 137 U. S. 366.

The true distinction is between cases in which there are several plaintiffs interested collectively under a common title, and those wherein the matters in dispute a/e separate and distinct, and. are joined in one suit for convenience or economy. • Of the latter class are those relied upon by the plaintiff Parker in this case, and his motion to' dismiss must, therefore, be denied. Indeed the cross-bill to set aside the whole mortgage as to these lands is sufficient of itself to remove all difficulty with regard to our- jurisdiction.

(2) The case upon the. merits depends upon the question whether the mortgage of 1870 should be construed to cover a land grant made by Congress'the following year to the Patón. 'Rouge Company, in aid of the construction of its road. To, *53 answer this question, satisfactorily it is necessary to consider the power of this company under its charter, and the manner in which it attempted to exercise this power.

The act of 1869 of the legislature of Louisiana, incorporating the Baton Rouge Company, authorized it (sec. 13) to obtain from any parish or other municipality any rights, privileges or franchises that such municipality might choose to grant in reference to the construction of the road : and by section 14, it was authorized to borrow money. or to purchase property for the purpose of constructing the road, to issue its corporate bonds, and, to secure the payment of such bonds, to mortgage its road, etc. By section 15, provision was made for a second mortgage guaranteed by the State, and for bonds to be issued and made payable to the State or bearer. By section 16, the - first mortgage that should be given was declared to be a prior lien upon the railroad within the State, including all the “ real and personal estate within the State of Louisiana, appurtenant to,-or necessary for the operation of said main line of railroad, owned by'the company at the date of said mortgage, or which may be acquired by it thereafter; arid upon the corporate franchises and privileges of said company, granted by the. State of Louisiana, relative to the construction, operation and use of said main line of railroad within the State of Louisiana,” etc..

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Bluebook (online)
143 U.S. 42, 12 S. Ct. 364, 36 L. Ed. 66, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 3053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-pacific-railway-co-v-parker-scotus-1892.