Sage v. Central Railroad

99 U.S. 334, 25 L. Ed. 394, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1546
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 18, 1879
Docket175
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 99 U.S. 334 (Sage v. Central Railroad) 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
Sage v. Central Railroad, 99 U.S. 334, 25 L. Ed. 394, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1546 (1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Strong

delivered the opinion of the court.

This proceeding was commenced by a bill filed at the suit of Charles Alexander and others, holders of bonds secured by a first moi-tgage or deed of trust of the Central Railroad Company of Iowa, praying for an account, for the appointment of a receiver,'and fora foreclosure of the mortgage. The bill was filed to October Term, 1874, in the Circuit Court. It made the railroad company, and the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company of - New York, who were the trustees named in the mortgage, parties defendant. Subsequently, at the same term, the trustees, who were also trustees under second and third mortgages, filed their original bill, as well for the benefit of the complainants in the first bill as for all other' bondholders, praying also for an account, for a receiver, and for a foreclosure. *336 By order of the court, these two bills were consolidated, and the hearing of the case proceeded until the 22d of October, 1875, when a final decree was made, directing, inter alia, a sale of the mortgaged premises. On the 15th of January, 1876, Russell Sage, James Buell, and N. A. Cowdrey, on their petition, representing themselves to be holders of some of .the mortgaged bonds secured by the first mortgage, were permitted to intervene as parties, to prosecute an appeal to this court, for the protection of their-several interests, against the decree of Oct. 22, 1875. They have accordingly appealed; and as their appeal was not-made a supersedeas, and the decree was executed by a sale, they have entered a second appeal from the confirmation of that sale.

Directing our attention first to the appeal from the decree of Oct. 22,1875, it is observable that it raises no question respecting the validity or amount'of the debts due by the mortgagors and secured by the several mortgages, nor any respecting the order in which they are entitled to payment. There is some complaint that the court, before the final decree was entered, directed certain payments to be made by tlie receiver for locomotives and rent of cars used upon the road, either by the receiver or before his appointment. Whether these orders were correct or not, we will consider hereafter. The appellants do not complain that the decree of the court has not determined correctly the amounts due upon the several mortgages, and marshalled them in their proper order of priority. Nor do they insist that it was not proper for the court, in view of the facts as they appeared, to order a sale of the mortgaged property. Their complaint is rather respecting the disposition which the court decreed to be made of the property, in case the trustees of the mortgage should become the purchasers. To understand those dispositions, and' the reasons why they were ordered, it is necessary to observe carefully tbe provisions of the deed upon which the bill was founded, and which, therefore, pr-operly affected the decree. Some of them are quite peculiar. The first mortgage was given to the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company of New York, to secure the payment of bonds of the railroad company to the amount of $3,776,000, with interest thereon. It covered the entire corporate property of the mort *337 gagor, constructed or to be constructed, and all its franchises and privileges, — all its property that, might thereafter be acquired, including machinery, locomotives, rolling-stock, tools,' and-supplies, as well as the net income of the mortgagor. It contained also the usual stipulation made in railroad mortgages, that in case of default in the payment of interest the principal should fall due; that the trustee, on the written request of a majority of the holders of the bonds, should be authorized and empowered to take possession of the property, and sell it at public auction. It is unnecessary to refer to the other provisions, except the following, which are special and unusual, and have a material bearing upon the decree of which the appellants complain. These we quote at large : —

“ And it is further covenanted, and agreed by and between the parties hereto, that in case of any judicial foreclosure sale, or other sale o'f the premises embraced in this mortgage, under the decree of any court having jurisdiction thereof, based upon the foreclosure of this mortgage, and the holders of a majority of the then outstanding bonds secured by this mortgage -shall in writing request the said trustee or their successor, they are authorized to purchase the premises embraced herein for the use and benefit of the holders of the then outstanding bonds secured by this mortgage. And having so purchased said premises, the right and title thereto shall vest in said trustees, and no bondholder shall have any claim to the .premises or the proceeds thereof, except for his pro rata share of the proceeds of said purchased premises, as represented in a new company or corporation to be formed for the use and benefit of the holders of the bonds secured hereby, and the said trustee may take such lawful measures as deemed for the interest of said bondholders, to organize a new company or corporation for the benefit of the holders of the bonds, secured by this mortgage. Said new company or corporation shall be organized upon such' terms, conditions, and-limitations, an4 in such a manner, as the holders of a fnajority of said outstanding bonds secured by this mortgage shall, in writing, request or direct, and said trustee so purchasing shall thereupon reconvey the premises so purchased by them to said new company or corporation.”

It was a mortgage containing these stipulations that th'e Circuit Court was called' upon to enforce. And the several *338 bondholders claiming under the mortgage held their interests subject to this controlling power given to the majority of all the holders.

There were two subsequent mortgages of the same property, 'given''by the railroad company to the same trustee, to secure the payment of other bonds. These were set forth in the bill; and when the consolidated case was ripe for a decree, it appeared that there was due from the company for principal and interest of the first-mortgage debt the sum of §4,623,334.99 in gold, with interest'from Oct. 15, 1875; upon the second mortgage, §1,136,246.86; and that there were §420,000 of bonds, secured by the third mortgage, outstanding. The court therefore decreed that the mortgagors should pay within ten days the sum due to the bondholders under the first mortgage; and if they failed to pay, that the mortgagees under the second and third .mortgages and the judgment creditors, or any of them, in the order of their respective liens, should pay the sanie; and that in default of said payment by any of said parties, their equity of redemption in the premises should be foreclosed.

Had this been all, the result would have been a strict foreclosure. The master to whom the case had been referred had found and reported that the property would not sell at the date of his report (Oct. 11, 1875) for more than forty cents on the dollar of its indebtedness, and this report had been confirmed. It was therefore .manifest that neither the railroad -company nor any of the lien creditors subsequent to those holding under the first mortgage could or would pay the §4,620,334.99 thereby secured. But a strict foreclosure was undesirable for all the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
99 U.S. 334, 25 L. Ed. 394, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sage-v-central-railroad-scotus-1879.