Van Schaick v. McCarthy

116 F.2d 987, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4482
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1941
Docket2109-2112
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 116 F.2d 987 (Van Schaick v. McCarthy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Schaick v. McCarthy, 116 F.2d 987, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4482 (10th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

*989 PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge.

The Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad Company 1 is the owner of certain lines of railroad located in Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico. Its main line extends from Denver, Colorado, southerly to Pueblo, Colorado, and thence westerly to Rifle, Colorado, and from Grand Junction, Colorado, northwesterly through Salt Lake City, Utah, to Ogden, Utah. The main line between Rifle and Grand Junction, Colorado, is owned by the Rio Grande Junction Railway Company 2 and is operated under lease by the Rio Grande, which owns all the Junction Company’s outstanding stock. The Rio Grande also owns a line extending southwesterly from Pueblo through Walsenburg and Alamosa, Colorado, to West Willow Creek, Colorado. It also owns certain branch lines extending from the lines above referred to, in Colorado, Utah and New Mexico.

The Denver and Salt Lake Railroad Company 3 owns and operates a line of railroad extending westerly from Denver through Orestod, Colorado, to Craig, Colorado.

The Rio Grande’s main line between Denver and Ogden is circuitous, and on October 15, 1928, the Rio Grande entered into a trackage agreement for the joint use of the Salt Lake line between Utah Junction, near Denver, and Orestod, to take effect upon the construction of the Dotsero Cutoff extending from Orestod on the Salt Lake line in a southerly direction to Dotsero, Colorado, on the Rio Grande line, a distance of approximately 38 miles.

The Dotsero Cutoff was completed in June, 1934, by the Denver and Salt Lake Western Railroad Company, 4 a wholly owned subsidiary of the Rio Grande. The stock of the Salt Lake Western is pledged to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation - as security for a loan to the Rio Grande.

Since the completion of the Dotsero Cutoff, the Rio Grande has operated a substantial number of its freight and passenger trains between Ogden and Denver over its main line extending from Ogden to Dotsero, over the Dotsero Cutoff, under its lease from the Salt Lake Western and over the Salt Lake line through its joint trackage agreement. The Rio Grande also operates its original line through Pueblo, where it interchanges with the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company. The line from Denver to Ogden via the Salt Lake and the Dotsero Cutoff is approximately 173 miles shorter than the main line from Denver through Pueblo to Ogden.

Between the years 1930 and 1934, the Rio Grande acquired all but 460 shares of the outstanding 50,000 shares of the Salt Lake, all of which it pledged to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation as security for loans. On December 4, 1939, 3,651 shares of the Salt Lake stock owned by the Rio Grande were released from the pledge and sold.

Substantially all of the Colorado and New Mexico lines of the Rio Grande are covered -by a divisional first mortgage executed by a predecessor of the Rio Grande on July 15, 1886, and thereafter assumed by the Rio Grande, wherein the United States Trust Company of New York is trustee. The main line in Utah is covered by another divisional first mortgage executed by a predecessor of the Rio Grande on July 1, 1889, and thereafter assumed by the Rio Grande, wherein Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company is trustee. Subject to the last-mentioned mortgage, the main line in Utah is covered by another divisional mortgage executed by a predecessor of the Rio Grande on April 1, 1899, and thereafter assumed by the Rio Grande, which also covers as a first mortgage certain branch lines in Utah. In the last-mentioned mortgage the Guaranty Trust Company of New York is trustee. The line of the Junction Company is covered by a first mortgage dated December 1, 1889, in which the Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company is trustee. On December 20, 1924, the Rio Grande assumed and agreed to pay the bonds secured by the last-mentioned mortgage.

There are two system mortgages executed in 1924, the first being the Rio Grande’s Refunding and Improvement Mortgage to the Chase National Bank of the City of New York, as successor trustee, and the second, junior to the first, being the Rio Grande’s General *990 Mortgage to City Bank Farmers Trust Company as trustee. Except for certain immaterial segments and certain liens on equipment which are in controversy, the two system mortgages are junior to the divisional mortgages above mentioned. The stock of the Junction Company is pledged under the system mortgages.

On November 1, 1935, the Rio Grande and the Salt Lake Western filed their separate petitions for reorganization under § 77 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 205. The petitions were approved and shortly thereafter, with the approval of the Interstate Commerce Commission, the court appointed Wilson McCarthy, Esq., and Henry Swan, Esq., as trustees of the Rio Grande, and Raymond L. Sauter, Esq., as trustee of the Salt Lake Western. Immediately thereafter these trustees qualified and ever since have acted as such.

The mortgages above referred to in terms give a lien upon the Rio Grande’s income, and the mortgage trustees, in their several petitions in intervention filed under permission of the court granted between February 8 and April 3, 1936, prayed for sequestration and impounding of the Rio Grande’s income.

On January 3, 1940, the trustees of the Rio Grande, after due notice to all parties, brought on for hearing their petition for approval of the 1940 improvement program, including about 250 separate items. The trustees estimated the total cost of the improvements would be $3,021,762 and the cash requirements $2,-834,503. The Rio Grande’s estimated net income for 1940 was $2,819,195 and was to be used to meet the cash requirements. The District Court entered its order approving various items embraced in the petition, but deferred certain other items until January 29, 1940. The hearing on the deferred items came before the court on February 6, 1940. On that date, appellant Insurance’ Group Committee was permitted to intervene; and filed its answer objecting to the deferred items. Among the deferred items were the following :

Item 75 — Dotsero-Chacra, Colorado, installation of central traffic control, with a charge to Road and Equipment Account of $146,100, Cash Requirement, $174,500.

Item 76 — Installation central traffic control Tunnel-Midwest, Colorado, with charge to Road and Equipment Account of $39,660, Cash Requirement, $46,500.

Item 78 — Installation automatic block signals, Bond to Dotsero, Colorado, with charge to Road and Equipment Account of $104,670, Cash Requirement, $109,850.

Item 141 — Pueblo, Colorado, insulation and weatherstripping yard and A. R. T. offices and installation circulating coolers, with charge to Road and Equipment Account of $695, Cash Requirement, $695.

On February 8, 1940, the court entered its order No. 267, approving 14 items, including Items 75, 76, 78, and 141, and disapproving one item.

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Bluebook (online)
116 F.2d 987, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-schaick-v-mccarthy-ca10-1941.