Wabash Railroad v. Adelbert College of Western Reserve University

208 U.S. 38, 28 S. Ct. 182, 52 L. Ed. 379, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1421
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 6, 1908
Docket40
StatusPublished
Cited by249 cases

This text of 208 U.S. 38 (Wabash Railroad v. Adelbert College of Western Reserve University) 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
Wabash Railroad v. Adelbert College of Western Reserve University, 208 U.S. 38, 28 S. Ct. 182, 52 L. Ed. 379, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1421 (1908).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Moody

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1862 the Toledo and Wabash Railway Company owned . and operated a railroad in Ohio and Indiana, and was incorporated under the laws of both States. That part of the property situated in Ohio was then incumbered by two mortgages, one to. the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company for $900,000, and one to Edwin D. Morgan, Trustee, for $1,000,000. That part of the property situated in Indiana was then incumbered by two mortgages, one to the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company for $2,500,000, and one.to Edwin D. Morgan, Trustee, for $1,500,000. In that year the company issued and sold unsecured sealed negotiable notes to the amount of $600,000, called equipment bonds. In 1865 this company consolidated with certain Illinois railroad corporations, thus creating the Toledo, Wabash and Western Railway Company. This consolidation was authorized by and in part effected under a statute of Ohio. The holders of the equipment bonds have contended that the result of this consolidation was to give to these hitherto unsecured obligations an equitable lien upon the property of the corporation which issued them, and that the equity of -redemption of that property,went into the hands of the consolidated corporation hi cumbered by that lien. Upon this *44 question this court and the Supreme Court of Ohio have, in the past, arrived at opposite conclusions; this court holding (Wabash, St. Louis & Pac. Ry. v. Ham, 114 U. S. 587), that the equipment bonds remained unsecured, and the Ohio court holding (Compton v. Railway Co., 45 Ohio St. 592), that the effect of the consolidation was to create the lien claimed. This suit was brought by the defendants in error, holders of some of the equipment bonds, in the courts of Ohio for the purpose of enforcing the lien stated. They prevailed by the judgment of the Supreme Court of the State, which affirmed a decree of a lower court establishing the indebtedness upon the bonds, declaring a lien to secure the payment of that indebtedness upon the property owned, subject to the mortgages hereinbefore stated, by the Toledo and Wabash Railway Company in 1865, and directing a sale of such of that property as was within the State of Ohio in satisfaction of the lien.

The case is here upon a writ of error to the Supreme Court of . Ohio to review this judgment. ■ There are two Federal questions, it is contended, which were erroneously decided in the court below. The plaintiff in errbr insists: First, that the Ohio court had no jurisdiction to render the decree entered in the case, because the property affected by that decree was in the possession of a Circuit Court of the United States, and the questions litigated in- this case were within the exclusive jurisdiction of the latter court. Second, that the decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Indiana in the case of Ham v. Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railway Company was a-final adjudication of the issues in the case at bar, binding upon the defendants. in error,- and conclusive against their right to maintain this suit. The defendants in error contend that these questions were not properly raised in the court below, or, if properly raised, that they are so unsubstantial as.to be frivolous, and therefore move that the writ of error be dismissed. But the questions were clearly presented by- the. answer in the Ohio courts, the decree rendered could not have been -made without deciding them against the contention of the railroad *45 company, and we think that they are substantial and important.. The motion to dismiss is therefore overruled, and we proceed to the discussion of the merits of the questions.

1. The first question is whether a Circuit Court of the United States had exclusive jurisdiction of the issues determined by the Ohio court in the case at bar. Before beginning the discussion of that question it is necessary to state the facts out of which it arises. The Toledo, Wabash and Western Railway Company, whose property was incumbered, as we have seen, by mortgages of the Toledo and Wabash, for $5,900,000, and by the claim of lien of the equipment bonds, and by other mortgages upon the property of other corporations which entered into the consolidation, itself executed two mortgages upon all its property. By the foreclosure of one' of these mortgages the property became vested in the Wabash Railroad Company. This company, after executing a mortgage on its property, consolidated with another railway company, creating the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway Company. This company executed in 1880,a mortgagé on its property to the' Central Trust Company of New York and James Cheney for $50,000,000. ■ On May 27j 1884, the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway Company, having fallen into financial diffi-' culties, filed a bill in the Federal courts in six States, alleging its insolvency and asking'the appointment of receivers. Thereupon receivers were appointed, qualified and took possession of the property. Thereafter the Central Trust Company and Cheney began proceedings' in several state courts for the foreclosure of their mortgage of $50,000,000. These proceedings were removed to the Federal courts, and upon them a sale, under the direction of those courts, was made in 1886 to a purchasing committee. Before this sale, however, on October 17,. 1884, the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western Division of the Northern District of Ohio dismissed the bills for receivership and for the foreclosure of the Cheney mortgage as to all parties who claimed liens prior to that mortgage. After the sale upon the foreclosure of the Cheney mortgage, *46 proceedings for foreclosure of several other mortgages prior to it were begun in the Circuit Courts of the United. States, consolidated, and resulted in decrees for foreclosure and sale under all' the mortgages; These decrees were entered in the various Circuit Courts on March 23, 1889. .In the meantime the property, remained in the possession of the Circuit . Courts through its receivers. The sale under these decrees was made to a purchasing committee, by whom it was conveyed to a new corporation, the Wabash Railroad Company, the plaintiff in error. By order of the Circuit Court for. the Northern District of Ohio, .made on June 18,1889; possession of the property was delivered by the receiver to the -purchasing committee, and he was discharged.. Since August, 1889, the plaintiff in error, the Wabash Railroad Company, has been in possession of the property under the terms of the decrees of March 23, which presently will be stated. None of the defendants in error were parties'to the-proceedings in the Circuit Courts of-the.Uni-, ted States, and an attempt to remove this case from the'Ohio courts to'the Circuit Court of the United States, resisted by the defendants in error, failed. Joy v. Adelbert-College, 146 U. S. 355.

It appears -from this statement that the, railroad property affected, by this controversy was in the actual possession, through receivers, of Circuit Courts of the United States from date of the appointment of receivers, May 27, .1884, to the date of their discharge and the. delivery of the -property to the purchasing committee, which was ordered on June ,18, 1889, and was accomplished about July 1, 1889.

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Bluebook (online)
208 U.S. 38, 28 S. Ct. 182, 52 L. Ed. 379, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wabash-railroad-v-adelbert-college-of-western-reserve-university-scotus-1908.