Randolph v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.

44 S.W. 70, 91 Tex. 605, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 322
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1898
DocketNo. 606
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 44 S.W. 70 (Randolph v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randolph v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., 44 S.W. 70, 91 Tex. 605, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 322 (Tex. 1898).

Opinions

DENMAN, Associate Justice.

The Dallas Consolidated Street Railway Company, incorporated under the laws of Texas, conveyed all its property by trust deed, bearing date July 1, 1887, but not really executed, according to the report of the special master hereinafter referred to, until the latter part of July or first of August, 1887, to the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Co., of New York, trustee, to secure its bonds amounting to $250,000, which instrument will be hereinafter referred to as the first mortgage. Subsequently the property of said Company was acquired by the Dallas Consolidated Traction Railway Company, incorporated under the laws of Texas, subject to said mortgage, and this latter Company, on August 1, 1890, conveyed all its property, including the above, to the Fidelity Insurance Trust and Safe Deposit Company of Philadelphia, trustee, to secure its bonds amounting to $750,000, which instrument was expressly made subject to said first mortgage and will be hereinafter referred to as the second mortgage. Defaults having occurred under both, the trustee in the second mortgage, on October 15, 1892, filed its petition in the District Court of Dallas County, Texas, seeking a foreclosure of the lien of said second mortgage and the appointment of a receiver, and said court, on October 17, 1892, appointed a receiver as prayed for, who qualified and operated the property from the date of his appointment until Juné 20, 1895, when he turned it over to the purchaser at the sale under the first mortgage, the trustee therein having intervened September 19, 1894, and secured a decree foreclosing same, and the property having been sold under such degree for $190,000 and such sale having been confirmed by the court May 8, 1895. The receiver from time to time reported to the court the various sums of money received and paid out by him and no question is made as to the correctness of his accounts. In other words it was not contended that he had failed to report any sum received or that any disbursement made by him during the administration of the trust was not authorized by law as far as he was concerned. [609]*609When however the court, on the final settlement of the affairs of the receivership, came to adjust the conflicting claims and equities of the first and second mortgagees and other creditors, it was contended by various creditors of the class mentioned in the following statute, “all judgments, claims, or causes of action when determined, existing against any corporation at the time of the appointment of a receiver, shall be paid out of the earnings of such corporation while in the hands of the receiver, to the exclusion of mortgage action; and the same shall be a lien on such earnings” (sec. 15, Genl. Laws, 1887, p. 121; Rev. Stats., art. 1490), that the receiver had from time to time during the progress of the receivership diverted the “earnings” upon which said statute gave them a superior lien to purposes beneficial to said first mortgagees, and that to the extent of such diversion the “earnings” fund should be reimbursed for their benefit from the corpus of the estate, either by fixing same as a lien thereon prior to the said mortgages, or by requiring same to be repaid out of the proceeds of sales thereof.

The court thereupon referred the receiver’s reports to its Special Master in order to determine whether there were any “earnings” and if so bow much, and to what extent and for whose benefit they had been diverted.

The Special Master by deducting what he considered operating expenses from the earnings of the property found that the net earnings during the receivership amounted to................ §31,909.61
He also found that the following other sums had come into the receiver’s hand:
Proceeds of sales of old material, etc............ 2,881.78
Proceeds insurance policies.................... 27,490.01
Proceeds of unpaid receiver’s certificates........ 11,500.00
Total.......................... §73,781.35

Since none of these funds were used by the receiver in the payment of what the Special Master considered operating expenses, he was of opinion that they were trust funds in the receiver’s hands for the benefit of the persons entitled thereto, and that “if this money was paid out by the receiver either to or for the benefit of the mortgage creditors, then the amount thereof should, upon a final distribution among the mortgage creditors of the proceeds of the foreclosure sale of the mortgaged property, be first deducted from the proceeds of sale and paid over to the parties for whom it was so held in trust by the receiver.” He then found that “§70,789.46 of said sum of §73,781.35 held in trust by the receiver * * * was paid out by the receiver to or for the benefit of the mortgage creditors as follows:

“For the benefit of mortgage creditors.
On property bought prior to receivership........ § 3,245.18
On property bought during receivership.......... 17,137.42
[610]*610On permanent improvements...................$ 7,070.10
On taxes.................................... 12,897.73
On insurance premiums........................ 5,343.27
To mortgage creditors.
Interest on first mortgage bonds................ 23,140.00
To present owners of .property who represent first mortgage creditors.......................... 1,915.76
Deposited with the city and afterwards collected by said present owners...................... 40.00
Total...................................... $70,789.46”

He then found that this $70,789.46 should be paid from the proceeds of the sale, to the following parties:

Holders of said receiver’s certificates............ $11,500.00
Parties entitled to said 1 'proceeds of insurance policies .................................i____ 27,490.01
To reimburse the earnings fund for the benefit of the creditors mentioned in the statute above quoted.................................... 28,917.72
Total..................................... $70,789.46

This last finding is based upon the further fact found by him that the disbursements above referred to as having been made by the receiver, together with another of $2291.89 made in payment of old'claims, exhausted all the monies which came into his hands, and left nothing to be applied to the settlement of the three last mentioned claims except such monies, if any, as should be refunded from the proceeds of the sale.

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87 S.W.2d 307 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1935)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.W. 70, 91 Tex. 605, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randolph-v-farmers-loan-trust-co-tex-1898.