Sioux City, O. & W. RY. Co. v. Manhattan Trust Co.

92 F. 428, 34 C.C.A. 431, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2153
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 20, 1899
DocketNos. 505 and 661
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 92 F. 428 (Sioux City, O. & W. RY. Co. v. Manhattan Trust Co.) 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
Sioux City, O. & W. RY. Co. v. Manhattan Trust Co., 92 F. 428, 34 C.C.A. 431, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2153 (8th Cir. 1899).

Opinion

THAYER, Circuit Judge,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

It is manifest, we think, that the appeals which were taken in this case are without merit, in so far as they are predicated upon the action of the lower court in refusing to permit ■ E. H. Hubbard, assignee of the Union Loan & Trust Company, to intervene in the case, and in so far as they are predicated upon the action of the lower court in striking out those allegations of the defendant’s answer which attempted to show that the assignee above named had a better title to the bonds in controversy than J. Kennedy Tod & Co., who claimed- to own them. The facts alleged in the motion for affirmance which has recently been filed in this court by the appellee are not disputed, and must be taken as conceded. From this source it appears that the assignee of the trust company has not exercised his right to redeem the bonds in controversy from the superior lien of J. Kennedy Tod & Co. by the payment of $1,500,000 and interest, which right of redemption was secured to him by the decree rendered in the Iowa case (Manhattan Trust Co. v. Sioux City & N. R. Co., 65 [431]*431Fed. 559-568), which decree was recently affirmed by the supreme court of the United States (171 U. S. 474, 19 Sup. Ct. 14); that, under the X»rovisions of said decree, the assignee is at the present time barred of all interest in the bonds; and that the controversy heretofore existing between him and J. Kennedy Tod & Co. as to their respective rights to the bonds has been settled finally in a suit between them, where that was the sole question at issue. It results from these facts .that the action of the lower court in refusing to permit the assignee to intervene in the case at bar is now immaterial. Such leave was sought by the assignee for no other purpose than to inject into the foreclosure suit, to which the firm of J. Kennedy Tod & Co. was not a party, the same controversy between the assignee and the last-mentioned firm concerning' the ownership of the bonds which was then pending in the Iowa case, and has since been determined adversely to the claim of the assignee.. Besides, the order refusing the assignee leave to intervene was not a final order, from which an appeal-would lie, as this court has recently decided. Credits Commutation Co. v. U. S., 91 Fed. 570. It is equally clear that, by reason of the adjudication in the Iowa case, the defendant company cannot be heard at the present time to complain because the trial court expunged those parts of the defendant company’s answer in which it attempted to inject into the foreclosure suit the pending controversy between the assignee of the Union Loan & Trust Company and J. Kennedy Tod & Co., concerning the ownership of the bonds. That issue having been determined as between the parties who are primarily interested in its determination, it cannot be reliti-gated in the case at bar by (he defendant company.

Moreover, we are of opinion that the lower court properly expunged that part of the defendant’s answer, and that its order to that effect was a proper one when, the same was made. The issue sought to be raised by the defendant company concerning tlie ownership of the bonds was one which, in the orderly progress of the cause, would necessarily have been tried and determined as between the rival claimants of the bonds, when the trustee in the mortgage was called upon to distribute the proceeds of the foreclosure sale, and it was wholly unnecessary to consider it until that time had arrived. For this reason, therefore, the lower court properly rejected the proposed issue at the time it was tendered by the answer, as well as for the reason that the same issue was being tried in a proceeding between the proper parties in another jurisdiction.

This leaves for consideration the single question whether the lower court erred in expunging that part of the defendant’s answer in which it sought to show that: the bonds in controversy were void under section 5, art. 11, of the Nebraska constitution, quoted above in the statement; and there was no error in this regard, unless the answer was clearly sufficient to establish such invalidity. It is a notable fact that, on the first submission of the case to this court, little or no attention was paid to the constitutional question, either in the brief or on the oral argument of appellant’s counsel; but, on the last hearing, it was given great prominence, and becomes the question of chief importance.

[432]*432Tbe material allegations contained in tbe defendant’s answer wbicb tend to establish tbe invalidity of tbe bonds are, in substance, these: That tbe railroad of the defendant company was formerly tbe property of tbe Nebraska & Western Eailway Company, and cost to construct and equip, in the year 1890, a sum not to exceed $2,000,000, as tbe defendants are advised and believe; that two persons, George W. Wickersham and A. S. Garretson, who bought tbe property of tbe Nebraska & Western Eailway Company at a foreclosure sale, as trustees for tbe benefit of its bondholders, causc-d tbe defendant company, tbe Sioux Gity, O’Neill & Western Eailway Company, to be formed, with a capital stock of $3,600,000, and .a bonded indebtedness of $2,340,000, for tbe presumed purpose (because tbe defendant has been so advised) of evading tbe constitutional provision of tbe state of Nebraska above quoted; that tbe par value of tbe stock and bonds issued by tbe defendant company, to wit, $5,940,000, as defendant is advised and believes, is three times tbe actual cost or intrinsic value of its property; that no substantial part of either said stock or bonds was ever paid in cash to tbe defendant company, or applied to tbe construction or equipment of said property; and that all of tbe stock, save a few shares, came to the hands of A. S. Gar-retson, and was deposited with tbe Union Loan & Trust Company of Sioux City, Iowa. On tbe other band, tbe defendant’s answer and tbe exhibits thereto show that tbe Nebraska & Western Bailway Company was a corporation wbicb bad a capital stock of $2,500,000, and an outstanding mortgage indebtedness somewhat in excess of that sum; that it was organized with a view of constructing a through line of railroad from Sioux City, Iowa, to a junction with tbe Central Pacific Eailroad at Ogden, Utah, to be termed tbe Pacific Short Line; and that tbe road from Sioux City, Iowa, to O’Neill, Neb., formed one of tbe divisions of tbe proposed road. There is no allegation in tbe answer that either tbe outstanding stock or bonds of tbe old company, tbe Nebraska & Western Eailway Company, bad not been paid for in full, or that tbe same were, for any reason, either void or voidable. Tbe answer further shows that tbe bonds and stock of the new company, the Sioux City, O’Neill & Western Eailway Company, in the reorganization scheme, took tbe place of tbe stock and bonds of tbe old company, tbe bonds going to J. Kennedy Tod & Co. in exchange for tbe old bonds, and tbe stock to tbe Union Loan & Trust Company of Sioux City, Iowa. No allegation is found in tbe answer wbicb shows who’ tbe officers and directors of the new company were at tbe date of tbe reorganization, and no allegations are found wbicb will serve to impeach tbe good faith of such officers and directors in issuing its securities at tbe time of tbe reorganization, since their names and functions are not disclosed.

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Bluebook (online)
92 F. 428, 34 C.C.A. 431, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sioux-city-o-w-ry-co-v-manhattan-trust-co-ca8-1899.