Trustees Corp. v. Kansas City, M. & O. Ry.

26 F.2d 876, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3796
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 1928
DocketNo. 7987
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 876 (Trustees Corp. v. Kansas City, M. & O. Ry.) 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
Trustees Corp. v. Kansas City, M. & O. Ry., 26 F.2d 876, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3796 (8th Cir. 1928).

Opinions

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

Appellants complain of an order of the District Court fixing the compensation to be paid to the receiver of the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company and his counsel for their services rendered from April 16, 1917, to January 1, 1927. At the time the matter was being heard below appellants’ counsel said to the court the allowance should be “fair and reasonable.” They say in their brief hare that the amount allowed, $1,068,750, is “grossly exorbitant,” “that there has been the grossest kind of abuse of trust by the receiver and his counsel. The effect, of such conduct on their compensation might be to forfeit it entirely. We do not ask that; we are not attempting to get the benefit of their services for nothing; we doubt that a beneficiary is entitled to demand it.” And this is followed by a suggestion that this court might exercise its prerogative and deny them anything. The District Judge was not impressed with like strictures. We will take them up later.

Much of the history of this litigation and facts relevant to the present controversy will be found in our opinion in Trustees Corporation, Ltd., et al. v. Kansas City, M. & O. R. Co. et al., 18 F.(2d) 765, to which we refer.We had occasion there to comment on the extraordinary services rendered by Mr. Kemper, the receiver, and Mr. Histed, his counsel. They pulled the road out of the mire when the task seemed hopeless, and all beneficiaries had declined to give help. The receiver and his counsel, as the foreclosure decree permitted them to do, made the accepted but hazardous bid when the sale came on — in fact the only one, the benefits of which were tendered to the Gold Note owners, including appellants here. Matters then stood quiescent in court for a year. The bidders had assumed a heavy and unusual burden. In addition to raising the $3,000,000 bid they were obligated, morally if not legally, to the United States to keep the road going. Within the year they had made advantageous arrangements for the road’s immediate future — see our opinion in 18 F.(2d) — and an oil field had been opened in the territory traversed; so when the sale came up for eopfirmation and approval of the proposed plan of reorganization, Gold Note owners had been inspired with some hope. Before that they had done about everything to indicate an abandonment of their interests. They came in as objectors, but without offering to do anything or presenting any plan for the road’s future. They wanted both the sale and the proposed plan of reorganization disapproved and rejected as unfair to them. The court had long been insistent that the receivership must be terminated and all note-holders had been so advised repeatedly. It had been in receivership the greater part of its history and the court was of opinion it could never be operated successfully, that it was not worth more than its indebtedness to the United States and that the plan of reorganization was a fair and just one to all concerned. We considered the order made on that hearing on the appeal of these appellants in 18 F.(2d) 765. On the admission of the bidder that he bid at foreclosure sale for the note-holders, we held that his bid .was their bid and they were still entitled to take the benefit of it. But they had delayed taking their appeal until the six months had almost expired, there was no supersedeas, the new company had been organized and in our mandate we directed the procedure below by which, and the conditions under which, the rights of the note-owners should be eared for in stock ownership in the new company; awarding to them, if they eared to take it on the conditions named, all of the issued stock. The paragraph of our mandate, entered by the court below, on which the note-owners were to exercise the option to take all of the issued stock reads thus:

“The Gold Note owners, or as many of them as are desirous of doing so, may take to themselves within four months from the date of mandate all of the company’s issued stock by paying to the holders of the 20,001) shares that were sold, in such manner as the District Court may direct, the sums at which said shares were purchase^ with interest thereon at six (6) per cent, per annum, from dates of purchase and by paying to Kemper and Histed respectively the respective sums to be allowed to them by the District Court for their services during receivership; whereupon, all of the 35,000 issued shares shall be delivered for cancellation and reissue to the Gold Note owners proportionately to the [878]*878sums paid therefor by them: Provided, the whole sum paid for the 20,000 shares and for the services of Kemper and Histed shall be the basis for ascertaining the cost of each of the 35,000 shares as between purchasing note-owners.”

The written proposal of these appellants, note-owners, filed in court before the order here appealed from was entered, by which they sought to exercise their option, did not comply with the mandate. They attached to their proposal the condition that “the allowance and compensation of the receiver and his counsel are deemed by them not unreasonably high.” That was a request for idle litigation, of which in the end they might or might not see fib to avail themselves as they should then choose. But by subsequent orders of the court, brought here by stipulation, it appears that the appellants have paid in on their subscriptions for the 35,000 shares on the basis of the allowance appealed from, and the point has therefore bec.ome immaterial; and there was no objection to the terms of the proposal when it was filed.

We come to the order appealed from. It is this:

• “And thereupon, being well advised in the premises, the court fixes the compensation of William T. Kemper, Receiver, and Clifford Histed, counsel for the Receiver, for their services during the receivership) beginning on the 17th day of April, 1917, and until the 1st day of January, 1927, the sum of $1,068,-750. The allowance here made is to said Kemper and Histed jointly, to be divided between them in such manner as they agree.”

As to form it is not in compliance with the mandate — “and by paying to Kemper and Histed respectively the respective sums to be allowed to them.” As to the manner of reaching the amount allowed, we think the court adopted an improper and wrong basis. In passing on the issue the court said:

“The value of the stock will be fixed at 62% cents on the dollar for the 15,000 shares, for services to March 31, 1925, and they will be allowed from that time up until the first day of January, 1927, at the rate- of $75,000 a year.”

The way in which the 15,000 shares came to be considered will appear from our former opinion, tinder the plan of reorganization approved March 24, 1925, Kemper and His-ted were to take that for their services and the remaining 20,000 issued shares were to be sold for $62.50 per share. The 15,000 shares ■at $62.50 per share amounted to $937,500, and $75,000 per annum for the remaining one year and nine months covered by their services brought the total to the amount fixed by. the court. We said when the ease was here before that under the facts the value of the shares was wholly problematical. That has always been the opinion of the court below, as shown by the record. It was not a proper guide in arriving at the value of the services and made the total sum greatly in excess of an allowance of $75,000 per annum for the whole time.

We will later express our views as to the allowances that should be made. We now take up the grounds of the criticisms which counsel think should have some bearing on the subject.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 876, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-corp-v-kansas-city-m-o-ry-ca8-1928.