United States Trust Co. v. Western Contract Co. Echols

81 F. 454, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 1875
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 24, 1897
DocketNos. 445-448
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 81 F. 454 (United States Trust Co. v. Western Contract Co. Echols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Trust Co. v. Western Contract Co. Echols, 81 F. 454, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 1875 (6th Cir. 1897).

Opinion

TAFT, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The decree of the circuit court in dismissing the intervening petition of the receivers of the Chesapeake Company, in so far as it sought a lien on either statutory or equitable grounds for their claim against the Valley Company prior to that of the mortgage bonds on the corpus of the Ohio Valley Railroad, was clearly right. The Chesapeake Company was not the supplier of materials or a contractor. By its agent and lessee, the Newport News Company, it assumed the operation of the railroad of the Valley Company. All the earnings of the Valley Company and of the Newport News Company were deposited in a common fund, which, for convenience, was designated as the bank account of tlie latter company. Out of this common fund wages were paid and supplies were purchased generally in the name of the Newport News Company, but really for the benefit of both. By proper charges upon the books, it was made to appear how much more money out of the common fund was devoted to the operation of the Valley road than was received from its operation, and the balance struck doubtless correctly showed the amount due from the Valley Company to the Chesapeake Company, but the balance shown was not really for supplies and labor furnished, but was for money advanced, and for that no lien exists either by the Kentucky stat[464]*464ute, or on principles of equity. The case at bar is in this respect very much like that of Morgan’s L. & T. R & S. S. Co. v. Texas Cent. Ry. Co., 137 U. S. 171, 11 Sup. Ct. 61. In that case the complainant was the assignee of a large claim of the Houston Company against the Texas Central Company, and the bill was filed to establish the priority of the claim as a lien on the railroad of the Texas Company over that of the two mortgages on the ground that the claim arose for supplies and labor furnished to the Texas Company. One paragraph of the opinion of the Chief Justice in delivering the judgment of the court shows clearly the likeness of the case to that at the bar, and the true ground for denying the lien sought. After referring to Fosdick v. Schall, 99 U. S. 235, and subsequent authorities upon the question of equitable liens for supplies, the chief justice said:

“In tbe light of these decisions, the inquiry before us is whether these bondholders are to be postponed in respect to the proceeds of the sale of the corpus of the property upon which their lien is first and paramount, to this claim of the Houston Company, upon the ground of the particular application of these moneys, or that they supplied a diversion by the officers of the Texas Company equitably binding as such upon the bondholders. Now, if these advances were made generally, as needed by the Texas Company, it matters not whether they were devoted to the payment of running expenses or not. Tie relation of debtor and creditor existed, and no equity could arise in favor of the creditor as against other creditors holding security prior in time, by reason of the voluntary application the debtor might make of the money borrowed. We repeat that, so far as appears, the money advanced to one road by the other was simply a loan. The account between the companies was a running account, and the balance was only a balance for cash advances made from time to time. Moneys received from the operation of the Texas road and moneys received from the Houston Company all went into a common fund, from which payments were made for expenses, taxes, and so on. It is also shown that the Texas Company and the Houston Company had the same fiscal agent in New York, who paid the coupons of both; that the management of the Texas Company was, during its entire existence, in the hands of the same officers and directors who managed the Houston Company; that these officers derived their compensation from the Houston Company; that all receipts from the Texas Company were first received by the Houston Company, and then transferred on the books to the treasurer of both companies as treasurer of the Texas Company; that whenever there was a deficit of funds on the part of the Texas Company, such deficit was made up by the Houston Company; and that the latter company received and disbursed everything. Under such circumstances it cannot be maintained, against the first mortgage bondholders, that a balance of such a running account of five years’ duration represents money so applied to the Current expenses of the road, or so diverted therefrom to the payment of interest on the bonds, as to carry with it a superior equity for repayment.”

The case cannot be distinguished from the one at bar.. The decree of the circuit court in this regard is affirmed.

We think that no error can be predicated on the failure of the circuit court to enter a decree for money in favor of the receivers of the Chesapeake Company against the Valley Company. The main action was the foreclosure of a mortgage, and the intervening petition of the receivers was allowed to be filed because it asserted a lien on the property of the railroad prior in right to that of the foreclosing mortgagee. If they had no lien, the receivers were entitled to no relief, whatever. There is little or no analogy between this case and that in which a foreclosing mortgagee is allowed a judgment for the deficiency on his claim after the application to his debt of [465]*465the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property. In such a case, a court of equity acquires jurisdiction by reason of the necessity for the foreclosure proceedings, and the judgment for the deficiency is a mere incident, necessary to a complete adjustment of the rights of the parties. Until especially conferred by one of the equity rules, n federal court of equity had no power to enter judgment for a deficiency, even in case of a foreclosure. In the case at bar, there is found to he no lien at all, and there is, therefore, no deficiency of assets in the sense in which that term is understood in a foreclosure suit. If a decree had been rendered for money only, it would seem that the court’s jurisdiction to render the decree could hardly have been sustained, because the right to a trial by jury upon such an issue would thus have been denied to the debtor company. Without deciding more, however, we hold that it was at least within the discretion of the circuit court, after finding that the receivers of the Chesapeake Company were not entitled to a lien for their claim, to decline to enter a decree for money only.

We come now to consider the second count of the intervening petition of these receivers. They thereby seek to subject certain of the mortgage bonds issued by the Valley Company, and included in the foreclosure proceeding which belong to the Contract Company, and are on deposit with the Columbia Finance & Trust Company, to the satisfaction of a claim made by the receivers against the Contract Company under the contract executed March, 1891, by and between that company and the Chesapeake Company. Had objection been made to the petition on the ground that it'was multifarious, it might have presented some difficulty; hut no such objection was made, and, as the court undoubtedly had jurisdiction of both causes of action stated in the petition, the defect in the petition, if any, was clearly waived, as the circuit court held.

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Bluebook (online)
81 F. 454, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 1875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-trust-co-v-western-contract-co-echols-ca6-1897.