Wetmore v. St. Paul & Pacific R.

3 F. 177, 1 McCrary's Cir. Ct. Rpts 466, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2534
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota
DecidedJune 28, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 F. 177 (Wetmore v. St. Paul & Pacific R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wetmore v. St. Paul & Pacific R., 3 F. 177, 1 McCrary's Cir. Ct. Rpts 466, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2534 (circtdmn 1880).

Opinion

Miller, G. J.

{orally.) This case, which has been very fully argued before us, and which we have taken into consideration as thoroughly as we are able at this term, is, [178]*178one of very great importance, considering the sum involved in the controversy. The purpose of-the petition is no less than to set aside the sale of a .railroad which is perhaps worth $20,000,000, or more; a road which has been reorganized since the purchase, with a new set of directors, a new set of stockholders, very largely and above all, a new set of bond holders. The road was purchased under a decree of this court, the purchase was confirmed, and a new company organized, which has been • in possession of the road over a year, and has issued, as I say, some $10,-000,000 or $15,000,000 of new bonds, held all over the world; and now original bond holders in the old company, representing $1,500,000, come and ask that all these proceedings be set aside, and that we proceed de novo to sell the road. These petitioners were not parties to that suit in the sense in which they now seek to be made parties. The first thing that they ask in the present proceeding is that they may be made parties. If they were parties at all — as in some sense they were, and represented by their trustees in the proceedings of foreclosure —they were not parties in such a sense as would enable them to control the litigation, or come forward now as parties originally engaged in the litigation; and they,'therefore, seek, very properly, if they are to have any relief in this proceeding, to be made parties in the first instance. The first question that presents itself is whether they can be made parties.

Taking all to be true that they say in their petition, the case stands that, during the proceedings of foreclosure, these petitioners ought to have been represented, and were legally represented, by the trustees, plaintiffs in the foreclosure suit. The foreclosure was manfully resisted by the corporation for three or four years. It was obvious that the mortgage ought to be, foreclosed, and the road sold, as the interest had not been paid for years. The present applicants state that the road, at that time, was worth say $8,000,000. Fifteen million dollars of bonds were liens upon it, with whatever other claims there may have been against it, besides the interest coupon's, so that the road had a bonded debt of - twice the amount these petitioners say it was then worth. It was, therefore, obvious [179]*179that it was just and right to foreclose the mortgage, and soli the road, for the payment of those debts. •

During this litigation it became apparent to the court that this road had to be sold. They finally entered a decree for the sale. It has been said in the argument that that was a consent, and, therefore, was something of an ex parte proceeding, but the record does not show any such state of the ease as that. It shows very clearly that the parties were present, and although there is, in some parts of the record, a preliminary statement that such and such parties were present in court, and consented to the decree, or submitted a decree which they desired to have entered, the record goes on further to state that the court did not enter that decree, but that it took the paper and entered a decree upon its own consideration. It was, therefore, a decree on a full consideration by the court — one which met its approval, upon an examination of the merits — and it ordered the sale. The sale was had. A. part of the original bond holders were, under a special organization, according to the laws of Minnesota, purchasers. That did not settle the controversy or the rights of the partios absolutely. The master who made that sale was required to report it into court. He did report it, and the sale was confirmed.

Now, that sale being confirmed, a deed made by the master, property turned over and delivered to the purchasers, those purchasers having reorganized under another corporatename, doubtless a great deal of the stock that they held passed into the hands of other men — certainly the bonds that they issued upon the strength of that new organization, to the extent of $8,000,000, having passed into the hands of other men — these parties now, for the first time, come into this court and ask that they be permitted to upset all this transaction, to do that which they did not seek in the five years of litigation, namely, to be made parties to this suit, and then to be treated in the double aspect of persons who are parties to the suit and having all the rights of parties from the beginning, and, also, in the aspect of persons who were not [180]*180parties to the suit, and whose rights have not been foreclosed.

No authority is shown, no precedent is shown, and I do not believe any can be shown, for such a proceeding. It is so .anomalous, so unusual, so much out of the way, that I think it requires express authority in the way of precedent or statute to show that such a thing as that can be done. The counsel, apparently, seeing this difficulty, have made an order accompanying the confirmation proceedings the foundation, to a large extent, of this application. There is a single sentence at the end of the long order concerning the confirmation. The first part of that confirmation is: “That the said report, the said foreclosure sale, and all proceedings thereon, be and the same' are, hereby, in all things, confirmed.” There are several orders relating to the distribution of the proceeds, and what the master should do with the money, and so on, and then it winds up: “This order is made by and with the consent and at the request of the trustees, the complainants, and with the consent of the parties defendant shown above, and the right to make any further order is reserved.”

The argument in favor of opening this case by these petitioners, who are not parties, is that we will permit them to be made parties; that this order is sufficient to open up everything. First, that it is sufficient to go back and open up the original decree; but, if not, that it is certainly sufficient to allow the court, upon such representations as they here make, to set aside the order of confirmation, then to set aside the sale, and then to order a resale, or take such steps as may be just to the parties.

The language of that order differs but little from the ordinary language made use of in decrees, to the effect “that further orders may be made upon a footing of this decree;” and I cannot believe that when it was made it was in the contemplation of the court who was confirming this sale that the “further orders” there spoken of was such an order .as would set aside the sale. That was the thing they were passing upon. Who has ever heard of a decree which dis[181]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 F. 177, 1 McCrary's Cir. Ct. Rpts 466, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wetmore-v-st-paul-pacific-r-circtdmn-1880.