Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Bloom's Administrator

164 U.S. 636, 17 S. Ct. 216, 41 L. Ed. 580, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1695
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 4, 1897
Docket88
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 164 U.S. 636 (Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Bloom's Administrator) 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
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Bloom's Administrator, 164 U.S. 636, 17 S. Ct. 216, 41 L. Ed. 580, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1695 (1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shiras,

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

The plaintiff’s original petition in the District Court of Lamar County disclosed that the injuries complained of were received in August, 1888, while the railroad was in the hands of John C. Brown, receiver, and alleged that the property of the. Texas and Pacific Bail way Company was placed in the hands of said John C. Brown as receiver, at the instance of the said railroad company and for its own benefit, and for the purpose of avoiding its traffic liability in the carrying of passengers and freight. The petition further alleged that the property of the. said railroad company was never sold by said receiver to pay its debts, and was never contemplated to be sold, and that the entire earnings and current receipts of the said railroad while- in the hands of the receiver, amounting to more than two millions of dollars, were applied to the payment of mortgage debts and in the betterment of the property of the company. It also alleged *638 that by an order made on January 2, 1889, by the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, John C. Brown was directed to make delivery unto the said Texas and Pacific Railway Company of all property, funds and ássets in his hands as such receiver, and that he be directed to account to said company according to his account filed and approved up to June 1, 1888, and for all receipts and expenditures by him received and made since the said June 1, 1888, —such delivery to be made as of October 31, 1888; and it was further ordered that said receiver be discharged on said October 31, 1888, from his receivership, on payment of all' costs legally taxed, ‘ and thereupon his bond vacated and cancelled. The said order, a copy of which was attached as an exhibit to plaintiff’s petition, contained the following further provisions:

“ It is further ordered that said property, nevertheless, shall be delivered to and received by said Texas and Pacific Railway Company, subjected to and charged with all traffic liabilities due to connecting lines and all contracts for which said receiver is or might be held under or in any way liable, and subject also to any and all judgments which have heretofore been rendered in favor of intervenors in this case, and which have not been paid, as well as to such judgments as may be hereafter rendered by the court in favor of intervenors, while it retains the cases for their determination, or intervenors now pending and undetermined, or which may be filed prior to February, 1889, together with needful expenses of defending said claims, and upon the condition that such liabilities and obligations of the receiver, when so recognized and adjudged, may be enforced against said property in the hands of said company or its assignees to the same extent they could have been enforced if said property had not been surrendered into-the possession of said company, and was still in the hands of the .court, and with the further condition that the court may, if needful for the protection of the receiver’s obligations and liabilities so recognized by this court, assume possession of said property. The bills in these cases will be retained for the purpose of investigating such liabilities and obligations, and *639 for such other purposes as may seem needful. It is ordered that all claims against the receiver as such, up to said October 31, 1888, be presented and prosecuted by intervention, prior to February 1, 1889, and if not so presented by that date, that the same be barred and shall not be a charge on the property of said company. It is further ordered that the said receiver advertise in a daily newspaper in New Orleans and in Dallas the fact of his said discharge and a notice to said claimants to make claim within the time aforesaid, to wit, before February 1, 1889, and that he post a printed notice of similar purport in the station houses of said railway.”

The first contention on behalf of the plaintiff in error is that, as whatever claim plaintiff acquired by reason of her injury was one not against the defendant company but against the receiver operating the road at the time under the orders of the court appointing him, and as it Avas within the power of such court, on terminating the receivership, to make and provide for settlement of all claims of parties against such receiver growing out of his operation of the road, and as, in the present instance, by its order, the Circuit Court had made such provision by directing that all claims against the receiver should be presented and prosecuted by intervention prior to February 1, 1889, and, that if not so presented by that date, that the same be barred and shall not be a charge on the property of said company, and that as the plaintiff did not so present or prosecute her claim, she Avas thereby precluded from maintaining an action against the company.

Undoubtedly, if this Avere a controversy between a party Avhose claim originated Avhile a railroad was in the control' of a receiver appointed during a foreclosure suit and a purchaser at a judicial sale decreed under that proceeding, the plaintiff’s proposition would be a sound one. If the property sequestrated had gone to sale and a fund had been thus realized for distribution, then, upon notice appropriate to procéedings in rem, such a claimant Avould, in the absence of special and unusual circumstances, have been bound by the disposition so made.

But the present case is one in Avhich no judicial sale was *640 made and no fund realized for distribution by final decree after notice to and a hearing of those having claims against the fund. It was not the ordinary case of a sale and purchase in which compliance with stipulated conditions forms part of the consideration, and in which the extent of the burdens assumed is defined. Here, the railroad and its appurtenances, whose value was largely enhanced during the pendency of •the receivership, were,returned to the possession of the railroad company ; and while it was proper for the court, in order to protect its receiver, to make an order for those who had claims against him to bring them forward for disposition, it by no means follows that the company took back its property free from all- claims that may have originated during the receivership. Such-might be the case if the claim originated in some personal delinquency of the receiver, for which he and his bondsmen could be held responsible.- But where the claim was incidental to the ordinary management of the railroad, not attributable to personal misconduct of the receiver, and where the court which had appointed the receiver had not been put in possession of a fund by a foreclosure sale, but had, at the request of the company and its mortgage creditors, restored its property to the railroad company, while such a claim was .pending, we are unable to concede that an order of the kind that was made in this case precluded the plaintiff from enforcing her claim. There is present no element of estoppel in favor of the railroad company; for the plaintiff’s judgment, obtained after a trial in which the company’s defence on thé merits was fully heard, would have to be paid, and it would be a matter of indifference, so far as the pecuniary result is concerned, whether the claim was satisfied by the action of the court when discharging its receiver, or by remedial proceedings against the company after the foreclosure suit had been abandoned.

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Bluebook (online)
164 U.S. 636, 17 S. Ct. 216, 41 L. Ed. 580, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-railway-co-v-blooms-administrator-scotus-1897.