Platt v. New York & Sea Beach Railway Co.

63 N.E. 532, 170 N.Y. 451, 8 Bedell 451, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1080
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 8, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 63 N.E. 532 (Platt v. New York & Sea Beach Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Platt v. New York & Sea Beach Railway Co., 63 N.E. 532, 170 N.Y. 451, 8 Bedell 451, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1080 (N.Y. 1902).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The questions involved in this appeal arose upon a series of facts with respect to which there is no dispute, and when these facts are clearly understood there is little difficulty in stating the legal principles which control the controversy. It is important to state. the events which culminated in the order appealed from in the order of time.

On the first of April, 1885, the New York & Sea Beach Bailway Company, a railroad corporation, executed and delivered to the plaintiffs as trustees a mortgage to secure a series of bonds then about to be issued and negotiated. This mortgage covered all the corporate property existing at the time of its execution, and also such property as the company should thereafter acquire, including the rents, income and profits of the company from the operation of its railroad or otherwise. In the year 1896, an action was pending in behalf of the plaintiffs for the foreclosure of this mortgage, default having been made by the corporation in the payment of interest upon the bonds, and on the sixteenth of January, 1896, one Nelson, who was then the treasurer of the company, .was appointed receiver in the foreclosure action. The form of the order appointing this receiver was very broad and general. It recited that he was appointed receiver of all the property of the railroad of whatever kind, including money, book accounts, contracts of every kind due to the corporation, things in action, rents, profits and income accruing *455 and to accrue to the company. In pursuance of this order he took possession of all the real and personal property of the company, iriclnding money in bank and cash on hand, amounting to something over $3,700. This money was derived from the income or earnings of the railroad prior to the time of his appointment.

On the fourteenth of April, 1896, judgment of foreclosure and sale was entered in the action, which authorized the plaintiffs as trustees to bid in the property for the benefit of the bondholders, continued Nelson as receiver until the purchasers should take possession under the deed and ordered him thereafter to account. This judgment was followed by a reorganization of the company and the transfer of the property to the new company. On the eighteenth of February, 1897, ‘the ■ court made an order, based upon the report of a referee, stating and passing the accounts of Nelson as receiver, in which the money on hand by the company at the time of his appointment was included with other income which accrued during the operation of the railroad by the receiver. After deducting the expenses of the receivership, this order directed Nelson as receiver to pay the balance in his hands to the plaintiffs for the benefit of the bondholders, and it is admitted that he complied with the order and paid over the money in pursuance of its directions.

Subsequently a general judgment creditor brought an action against the railroad for the purpose of sequestrating all its assets and appropriating the same to the payment of the judgment, and in this action the defendant Joseph was appointed receiver of the defendant’s property. In May, 1899, this court decided that the earnings of a corporation, prior to the time that a receiver in such a foreclosure action took actual possession of the mortgaged property, in equity belong to the general creditors in preference to the bondholders. (N. Y. Security & Trust Co. v. Saratoga G. & E. L. Co., 159 N. Y. 137.)

In August, 1899, Joseph, the receiver in the sequestration action, made a motion to the court at Special Term in which *456 he asked the court to, (1) Declare the order appointing Nelson as receiver of the moneys of the company in the foreclosure action void ab initio/ (2) that the judgment in the foreclosure action be amended by an entry at the foot of the decree that the mortgage foreclosed was not and never had been a lien upon the rents and profits that had accrued 'prior to the entrance and possession of the foreclosure receiver; (3) that Nelson, the foreclosure receiver, be ordered to pay to Joseph, the sequestration receiver, the amount of the money on hand by the company at the time of the appointment of the former as foreclosure receiver; (4) that Nelson be ordered to deliver the books of account and all other books of the company and all his vouchers to Joseph. The court at Special Term, after a hearing, denied the motion, and on appeal to the Appellate Division this order was substantially reversed, and the' relief demanded in the motion granted. From this order the plaintiffs, as trustees, and Nelson, as receiver, - have appealed to this court.

All the proceedings referred to were entitled in the foreclosure action, and the court below in allowing an appeal to this court has certified the following questions: (1) Upon the facts as disclosed in the record may the Supreme Court in this proceeding lawfully require the receiver appointed in this action to deliver the books of the corporation and to pay over the money in question, or either, to the permanent receiver appointed in the creditors’ action for sequestration ? (2) Does the order of February 18th, 1897, operate to protect the receiver appointed in this action against the claim made herein by the said permanent receiver for the money in question or any part thereof ?

It must be assumed that the money on hand at the time of the appointment of the receiver in the foreclosure action belonged in equity to the general creditors. The question is whether that principle has any application now as against the receiver who received the money, accounted for it and paid it over under the order and direction of the court. The learned counsel for the sequestration receiver meets this diffi *457 culty by the contention that the order appointing the first receiver, as well as the subsequent order passing his accounts and directing the payment of the funds in his hands to the plaintiffs, are both absolutely void as against the sequestration receiver. This court must sustain that contention in order to uphold the order from which this appeal is taken. We think that neither of these orders can be held to be void. They may have been, and probably were, erroneous, and should have been reversed or modified upon appeal, but in a collateral proceeding like this they cannot be attacked except for want of jurisdiction. • There can be no doubt as to the power of the court to appoint a receiver in an action to foreclose a mortgage, to take possession of the mortgaged property and to impound the rents and profits accruing up to the time of the sale. The order which was made in this case in the foreclosure action appointing Nelson as receiver was effective for that purpose, although in its terms it was broader than the facts before the court would warrant. But the fact that the order was so drawn as to appoint a receiver of all the property of the corporation, instead of the mortgaged property, does not render it void db initio. Inasmuch as the court had jurisdiction of the person and of the subject-matter of the controversy, it was at most an error of law in appointing a receiver of the earnings of the corporation then on hand.

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

Related

Harris v. Harris
140 Misc. 2d 275 (New York Supreme Court, 1988)
People v. Schneiderman
136 Misc. 2d 396 (Nassau County District Court, 1987)
People v. Cocilova
132 Misc. 2d 106 (Rochester City Court, 1986)
Cherry v. Koch
129 Misc. 2d 346 (New York Supreme Court, 1985)
Lipton v. Lipton
128 Misc. 2d 528 (New York Supreme Court, 1985)
Prudential Lines, Inc. v. Firemen's Insurance Company of Newark
109 Misc. 2d 281 (New York Supreme Court, 1981)
State v. Creedon
76 A.D.2d 958 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1980)
PSL Realty Co. v. Granite Investment Co.
395 N.E.2d 641 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1979)
In re Jacqueline F.
94 Misc. 2d 96 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1978)
Burgundy Basin Inn, Ltd. v. Watkins Glen Grand Prix Corp.
51 A.D.2d 140 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1976)
110 Manno Realty Corp. v. Town of Huntington
61 Misc. 2d 702 (New York Supreme Court, 1970)
Leumi Financial Corp. v. Wydler, Balin, Pares & Soloway
60 Misc. 2d 1021 (New York Supreme Court, 1969)
George W. Collins, Inc. v. Olsker-McLain Industries, Inc.
22 A.D.2d 485 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1965)
Empire Mutual Insurance v. West
22 A.D.2d 938 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1964)
Commission of Investigation v. Calise
40 Misc. 2d 921 (New York Supreme Court, 1963)
General Crushed Stone Co. v. Central New York Contracting Co.
31 Misc. 2d 440 (New York Supreme Court, 1961)
Kerekes v. Greenwood Properties, Inc.
18 Misc. 2d 84 (New York Supreme Court, 1959)
Fried v. Lakeland Hide & Leather Co.
14 Misc. 2d 305 (New York Supreme Court, 1958)
Dot Mort Holding Corp. v. Town of Mamaroneck
7 Misc. 2d 684 (New York Supreme Court, 1957)
De Windt v. O'Leary
118 F. Supp. 915 (S.D. New York, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 N.E. 532, 170 N.Y. 451, 8 Bedell 451, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platt-v-new-york-sea-beach-railway-co-ny-1902.