Swann v. Wright's

110 U.S. 590, 4 S. Ct. 235, 28 L. Ed. 252, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1720
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 3, 1884
Docket162
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 110 U.S. 590 (Swann v. Wright's) 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
Swann v. Wright's, 110 U.S. 590, 4 S. Ct. 235, 28 L. Ed. 252, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1720 (1884).

Opinion

MA Justice IIarlaN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a final decree dismissing a bill filed by John Swann against the executors of John S. Wright and the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company, a corporation created under the laws of Alabama. Swann was the assignee of Wilder and McMillen, who were the purchasers at the sale in a foreclosure suit' instituted on the 30th of May, 1872, by the trustees for the holders of bonds of the Alabama and Chattanooga Railroad Company, secured by a first mortgage upon its road, rights, franchises and property. With the assent of Wilder and McMillen, Swann ivas reported as purchaser, and the sale being confirmed a deed was made to him. Subsequently he conveyed all his right, title and interest to the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company.

The complainant seeks to reopen the long-protracted contest hi the foreclosure suit, between the first mortgage bondholders and the executors of John S. Wright, as to whether certain claims of the latter were liens upon the mortgage security. Appellees urge as a controlling consideration that the first mortgage bondholders acquiesce in the allowance of the Wright claims as having priority of lien over them; and they also contend that, in view of the several orders in the foreclosure suit, particularly the decree under which the sale o.f the mortgage property was had, and under -which Swann claimed and received a deed, he has no standing in a court of equity to question the allowance of the Wright claims as superior liens upon the property. This proposition is controverted by appellant.

In order that appellant’s relations to the property may be understood, and the questions involved in’ this appeal clearly comprehended, it is necessary to examine, somewhat in chronological order, the various steps taken in the foreclosure suit:

*592 By an order made, in that suit, on the 26th day of 'August, 1872, Lewis Rice and W. J. Haralson were appointed.receivers, with authority to put the Alabama and Chattanooga railroad and other property embraced in the first mortgage in repair; to complete' any uncompleted portions thereof; to procure rolling stock, machinery, and other necessary things for operating ' the road; and to manage it to the best advantage, ,so as hot only to prevent the property — then in a dilapidated condition, and being recklessly wasted — from further deterioration, but to preserve it for the benefit as 'well of the first mortgage bondholders as of all others having an interest in it. It was also ordered that all claims on account of moneys raised through the receivers by loan, or upon advances for the foregoing purposes, not exceding $1,200,000, “ shall be a first lien, prior to all others, on the said railroad and other property, and to be paid for, before the said first mortgage bondholders, out of the proceeds of said property.” The receivers were directed •to issue certificates for moneys so raised, the loan to be made upon such terms as they might deem expedient:'

“ Provided, that said certificates shall not be disposed of for less than ninety cents-to the dollar of their face, and, also provided, that interest thereon -shall not be allowed at a greater rate than eight per cent, per annum, payable half-yearly; and such certificates shall not be issued until the same shall be countersigned by a majority of the trustees for said first mortgage bondholders, without which countersigning they shall not be entitled to the lien and priority aforesaid.”

On the 23d day of January, 1874, a decree was passed for a sale of all the mortgage property as an entirety — the purchaser, upon confirmation of the sale and payment of the purchase money, to receive a conveyance, in fee simple, of all the right, title, and interest of the company, and of all persons claiming under it, in the railroad, premises, franchises, and property covered by the mortgage, and free from the claim of the defendants in that suit.

- ■ It was further decreed that the proceeds to arise from the sale, and which had arisen or should arise, in the hands of the *593 receivers, from the prosecution of the business of the company, or which.had arisen or might arise in any other way from the property, are in law and equity, liable to be applied in the following order: First. To the necessary expenses incident to the execution and due> preservation of the trust created by the mortgage, including reasonable compensation to trustees and their counsel, and to the receivers, and all legal and necessary expenses then remaining unpaid, which had been properly incurred, with the authority of the court, in relation to the property. Second. To the payment of all taxes, charges, assessments, and liens prior in law to the lien of the mortgage; all sums expended in perfecting the title to the right of way, or to any property formerly claimed by the company and then claimed to be embraced by the mortgage; and “ all liabilities incurred by the receivers, including such receivers’ certificates or other receivers’ indebtedness as may be sanctioned or ordered to be paid by this court, in accordance with the provisions hereinbefore contained.” Third. To the payment of such of the first mortgage bonds, with their interest warrants, as may be reported by the master to have been bona fide issued and to be outstanding and unpaid. Fourth. The residue to be subject to such order and priority in distribution as the court should establish and decree, reserving for future consideration certain described bonds.

By the same decree it was declared:

“ that all moneys which have been raised by said receivers by loan, or which may have been advanced by them for the purposes aforesaid, and which shall be ascertained by the decretal orders of this court'to have been expended, or which may be expended, for the purposes contemplated by and in accordance with the said orders of this court, not exceeding the sum of $1,200,000, shall be a first lien prior to all others on the said' railroad and other property, and to be paid before the said first mortgage bonds out of the proceeds of said property; and nothing in this decree . . . shall impair the claims or right's of the creditórs of the receivers appointed under either of said orders, or the owners of certificates issued by said receivers under said orders, or the holders of said certificates under. *594 hypothecation to the extent of money loaned and advanced on the same for the purposes aforesaid,- with the intérest and expense added thereto.” '

. The cause was referred to Joseph W. Burke, as special commissioner, with directions to report all amounts necessary and proper to be paid out of the proceeds of sale as indicated by the decree.

On the 25th of April, 1874, an order was entered, upon the ■petition of the bondholders, suspending the sale of the property until the matters involved and under reference should be reported on and settled by «the court .; and allowing bondholders to appear in their own right before the commissioner and the court, and to contest any and all demands embraced by the . order of reference, or that might arise before the court touching the property to be sold,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 U.S. 590, 4 S. Ct. 235, 28 L. Ed. 252, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swann-v-wrights-scotus-1884.