Western Division of Western N. C. R. v. Drew

29 F. Cas. 747, 3 Woods 691, 36 Leg. Int. 328, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2255
CourtUnited States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Florida
DecidedMay 31, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 747 (Western Division of Western N. C. R. v. Drew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Division of Western N. C. R. v. Drew, 29 F. Cas. 747, 3 Woods 691, 36 Leg. Int. 328, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2255 (circtndfl 1879).

Opinion

BRADLEY, Circuit Justice.

These cases involve vital questions relating to the title of and incumbrances upon two railroads, namely, that called the Florida Central Railroad, extending from Jacksonville to Lake City, and that called the Jacksonville, Pensacola & Mobile Railroad, extending from Lake City to the Chattahoochee river, including the branches from Tallahassee to St. Mark’s, and that leading to Monticello. It is conceded by all.the parties that both roads were duly sold by the trustees of the internal improvement fund, under the internal improvement act. in 1868 and 1869, and those sales constitute a starting point upon which all the claimants rely. The Florida Central was thus sold on the 4th day of March, 1868, to William E. Jackson and his associates; and the Pensacola & Georgia Railroad, being the road from Lake City to Quincy, and the Tallahassee Railroad, being the road from Tallahassee to St. Mark’s (which two roads constitute the greater part of the Jacksonville, Pensacola & Mobile Railroad), were sold on the 20th day of March, 1869, to Franklin Dibble and his associates. Conveyances were made to the purchasers in pursuance of . these sales. No question is made about the title acquired by the purchasers of the Florida Central Railroad, nor of its subsequent devolution to the present company, called the Florida Central Railroad Company. The legislature of Florida, by an act passed on the 29th day of July, 1868, on the application of the purchasers, incorporated them into a body politic by the name aforesaid, and as purchasers and owners of the road. As such purchasers and owners they were made a corporation, and authorized to organize as such, and “to declare the amount of which the stock in said Central Railroad Company should consist, and to divide the same into shares.” They did organize, and created capital stock to the amount of 5,500 shares, took possession of their road and commenced to operate it. It is not denied that the greater portion of the capital stock was subsequently purchased by George W. Swepson, of North Carolina, who had the same transferred to Milton S. Little-field. At least as early as the early part of 1870, Svrepson and Littlefield, or one of them, held nearly all the stock of the road, and controlled and managed the company. The Western Division of the Western North Carolina Railroad Company has since claimed that it was the money of that company which Swep-son and Littlefield used in the purchase of this stock, and that they misappropriated the same in making such purchases, and therefore became the holders of said stock for the use and benefit of said company. This has been conceded by Swepson and Littlefield, and the stock is now understood to be held for the use and benefit of the Western North Carolina Railroad Company, which has been substituted to the rights of the said Western Division. Thus far, therefore, we are not met by any controversy which calls for the adjudication of this court.

The history of the Jacksonville, Pensacola & Mobile Railroad Company, and the roads which it claims to have acquired, is more complicated. As before stated in that case, there were two roads purchased by the same parties, that of the Pensacola & Georgia Railroad Company, extending from Lake City to Quincy, with the branch at Monticello, and that of the Tallahassee Railroad Company, extending from Tallahassee to St. Mark’s. Each of these companies had issued bonds under the internal improvement act, which were guarantied by the internal improvement fund. Default in paying the interest on these bonds, and the installments due to the sinking fund, was the occasion of the roads being sold by the trustees. The sales were for amounts nearly equal to the principal of these outstanding bonds. The amount bid for the Pensacola & Georgia Railroad was $1,220,000. and the amount bid for the Tallahassee Railroad was $195,000, and the purchasers were allowed to pay the purchase money, if they could, in the said guarantied bonds. They did bring in and surrender such bonds to the amount of $806,600 of the Pensacola & Georgia Railroad Company, which were received at par, and 8153,700 of the Tallahassee Railroad Company, which were received at ninety-four and ninety-five cents to the dollar. It is conceded that a balance remained still to be paid of $472,005, and that that amount of the bonds of the said two companies [751]*751are still outstanding. For this amount a draft or check was given, which was never paid, and which the parties giving it did not intend to pay. But by giving this check as cash, the purchasers prevailed upon the agents of the trustees to deliver deeds for the property. It was a sheer fraud, and a lien for the balance of the purchase money, amounting to $472,065, immediately arose in favor of the trustees, and lias ever since attached to the property.

The holders of the outstanding bonds referred to are interested in this lien, because the purchase money which it represents is the fund on which the trustees rely for the payment of said bonds in relief of the internal improvement fund itself, so far as it is liable therefor; and, also, because the said purchase money is the proceeds of the property which constituted the security of the said bonds. The holders of the said outstanding bonds have, in divers ways, attempted to enforce their indirect claim to this purchase money, and to the lien for its payment; but the supreme court of the United States, in the case of Florida v. Anderson, 91 U. S. 667, decided that in view of all the complicated rights of the .parties, the lien must be enforced by the state, or the trustees of the internal improvement fund, which the latter have endeavored to do, and which they seek to do in the suits now under consideration. As against the Jacksonville, Pensacola & Mobile Railroad Company, the existence of this vendor’s lien was adjudicated by the Duval county circuit court, by a judgment rendered, on the second day of April, 1874, and a recovery was had by the trustees for the principal and interest then due, amounting to $661,-845.55. This judgment was rendered in a suit brought by the state of Florida and the trustees of the internal improvement fund, against the Jacksonville, Pensacola & Mobile Railroad Company and Milton S. Littlefield; and although that judgment was subsequently reversed in part, yet, in a subsequent report of the same case in 16 Fla. 708, the supreme court declare that, on this point, the judgment of the Duval county circuit court was final, and that the matter was res judicata. But if it were not so, I have no hesitation in saying that the vendor’s lien for the said unpaid purchase money, with interest and costs, was valid and binding on the Jacksonville, Pensacola & Mobile Railroad Company. The purchasers, Franklin Dibble and his associates, clearly held the railroads subject to the lien. They became incorporated as purchasers and owners of the property, by an act of the legislature of Florida, passed the 24th day of June, 1869, by the name of the Tallahassee Railroad Company; and this company, therefore, being constituted of the same persons, only clothed with corporate powers, received the property subject to the same lien. On the 25th day of May, 1870, the Tallahassee Railroad Company became consolidated with the Jacksonville, Pensacola &

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 747, 3 Woods 691, 36 Leg. Int. 328, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-division-of-western-n-c-r-v-drew-circtndfl-1879.