74 F. 335 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nebraska | 1896
The Denver, Leadville & Gunnison Railway Company has 324 miles of railroad which connect with the railroads of the Union Pacific Railway Company at Denver in the state of Colorado,- and extend into the mining districts west of that city. The Union Pacific Railway Company has 1,827.59 miles of railroads, and, among these, it has a main line, extending from Council Bluffs, in the state of Iowa, to Ogden, in the state of Utah, and another extending from Kansas City, in the state of Missouri, to Denver, in the state of Colorado. Prior to October, 1893, the Denver, Leadville & Gunnison Railway Company, hereafter called the “Gunnison Company,” was a corporation which had issued its stock to the amount of $3,000,000, and its bonds to the amount of
The order of the court under which this report was made, and under which the five receivers surrendered possession of this properly to the receiver appointed under the bill to foreclose the first-mortgage, who succeeded them, provided that the master should report what, if any, portion of the deficiency which had resulted from the operation of this property of the Gunnison Company by the five receivers should constitute a lien upon its property, superior to that of the mortgage of August 1,1889, and that the surrender and delivery of the property by these receivers was made subject to the lien and charge; of any such deficiency as should be adjudged to exist upon the final hearing upon his report. The trustee for the bondholders appeared and litigated the questionable items of the accounts of these receivers before the master, and has filed several exceptions to the allowance of specific items in that account. These exceptions have been carefully considered, but the court is of the opinion that, with two exceptions, they ought not to be sustained. One of these exceptions is fhe judgment for $2,422.75 in favor of Ella Kelly for negligence of tlie Gunnison Company, which the receivers paid and charged to that company. Under Trust Co. v. Riley, 79 Fed. 32. 16 C. C. A. 610, that charge cannot be made a lien upon the property of the railroad company superior to the first mortgage upon it. The other exception is this: The testimony shows that the five receivers allowed to the Gunni-son Company a credit of only one-half a cent per ton per mile for the transportation of ties over its roads for the benefit of other railroads in their hands; that this allowance wras less than the
The main contention of the counsel for the trustee, however, is that the claim of these receivers to be reimbursed for the deficiency which resulted from their operation of this property for 10-months. for the taxes upon it which they paid, and for the materials and supplies which they delivered to their successor, ought not to be preferred to the claim of the bondholders secured by the mortgage of August 1, 1889, and, indeed, ought not to be paid out of the property of the Gunnison Company at all, because these receiver's were not appointed at the request or with the consent of the holders of these bonds, but at the suit and on the motion of stockholders of the Union Pacific Company. They insist that the five receivers were appointed for the purpose of preserving as a unit, and of operating as an entirety, the Union Pacific System for the benefit of the Union Pacific Company, and that any loss which resnlied from operating any railroad which was a part of that system simule! be borne, not by that part, but by the property of the Union Pacific Railway Company. Their argument runs in this way: If (he Union Pacific Company had operated the railroads of the Gunnison Company during this period, and had incurred and paid the deficiency now in question, it could not have enforced a preferential claim upon its property against the bondholders of that company. The five receivers were appointed at the insí anee of the stockholders of the Union Pacific Company, and primarily for ihe benefit of that company and its stockholders. Therefore, they stand in the shoes of the Union Pacific Company, and they can enforce no claim for a deficiency against the property of the Gunnison Company which the Union Pacific Company could not have enforced, if it had incurred and paid the deficiency. Let us consider this argument. Do its premises warrant its conclusion? Do receivers of an insolvent corporation, appointed at the
“It is well settled that the receivers of an insolvent railroad corporation, appointed by a court of chancery, to preserve its property and operate its railroads, do not stand in the shoes of the corporation. They are neither the representatives of the insolvent corporation, nor of its creditors or stockholders. They are the officers and representatives’ of the court, the hands of the court, in which it holds the property while it operates the railroads of the insolvent corporation for the benefit of those ultimately entitled to the property and the income.” Ames v. Railway Co., 60 Fed. 966, 969.
In Union Bank of Chicago v. Kansas City Bank, 136 U. S. 223, 236, 10 Sup. Cf. 1013, the supreme court said:
“A receiver derives his authority from the act of the court appointing him. and not from the act of the parties at whose suggestion or by whose consent he is appointed.” Railroad Co. v. Humphreys, 145 U. S. 82, 97, 12 Sup. Ct. 787.
These five receivers, then, were tlie custodians of the property of each, of these corporations, the mere ministerial officers of the court, charged with the duty of preserving and operating the railroads of each of these corporations, for the benefit of those who should ultimately be adjudged to be entitled to the income they derived and the proceeds of the property they sold. The coi*porations to which the various properties belonged were insolvent. They were unable to discharge their duties to the public, — their duties of maintaining and operating these railroads. They were unable to discharge their duties to private citizens, — their duties of performing, their contracts and paying their debts. The receivers were, therefore, neither bound by the contracts nor limited by the contractual relations of these corporations. They stood not in the shoes of the corporations nor of the complainants in the suit, but they stood in the place of the court. They were the hands of the court, preserving and operating the properties in their charge under its direction. Moreover, these receivers held the property of the Union Pacific Railway Company, the property of the Gunnison Oompány, and the property of each of the other railroad companies in their hands as receivers in this case, under a trust imposed upon the property of each of these corporations by the law. They held the property of each of these corporations under a trust, separate, distinct, and different from the trust under which they held the property of every other one of these corporations.
The property and income of an insolvent corporation, seized by a court of equity for administration, constitutes a trast fund sacredly pledged — First, to the payment of its debts; and, second,
Counsel for the trustee insist that the deficiency which resulted from the operation of the railroads of the Gunnison Company by the five receivers, the amount paid by them for taxes upon its property, and the $48,870.15 due them for supplies and materials furnished to the succeeding receiver for the railroads of this company, should be paid by these receivers out of the income or out of the property of the Union Pacific Company. But how can this be legally done? Would not such a payment be a violation of the fundamental principles of the law of trusts? Would it not be a diversion of the trust funds which, as receivers of the Union Pacific Company, they hold for the benefit of its creditors and stockholders, to the payment of a debt which, as receivers of the Gun-nison Company, they incurred in preserving, maintaining, and operating the property of that company for its creditors ana stockholders? These receivers are as much bound to a careful discharge of the duties imposed upon them by each of these trusts as they would be if they were the receivers of but one of these corporations. If other individuals had been the hands of the court-in the operation of the railroads of the Gunnison Company, c'ould they have successfully claimed that the receivers of the property of the Union Pacific Company should pay a deficiency which they had incurred in operating the railroads of the Gunnison Company, or in paying taxes upon that property, or in purchasing supplies for the railroads of that company? If, as receivers of the property of the Gunnison Company, these receivers had realized a large net income from the property of its railroads, could they have lawfully diverted that income from its creditors or stockholders to the creditors and stockholders of the Union Pacific Company? Could they have lawfully used that income to pay a loss occasioned by the operation of a railroad of the Union Pacific Company or by the operation of the railroad of any other corporation than the Gun-nison Company? These questions are their own answers, and they are fatal to the claim of this trustee that the deficiency incurred by the operation of the railroads of the Gunnison Company, or the taxes upon its property, or the purchase price of the materials and supplies furnished to the succeeding receiver, may be lawfully-paid out of the trust funds of the creditors of the Union Pacific Company. These expenditures must be charged against the property of the Gunnison Company, — against the property the administration and operation of which caused them. And the only question remaining is, are they superior in equity to the claims of the bondholders secured by the mortgage of August 1, 1889?
The proposition is now too well settled to permit of argument that there are certain claims against a mortgaged railroad company, accruing before the appointment of a receiver in foreclosure, which are entitled to a preference, over a prior mortgage debt, in
Again, this court might well have authorized these receivers to borrow and to issue their certificates for the money required to pay ¡his deficiency, these taxes, and the purchase price of these supplies and materials, and might have made the certificates a lien upon the property of the Gunnison Company superior to that of the mortgage. It might' have done this without notice to the trustee under the mortgage, provided, always, that that trustee had a subsequent opportunity to be heard as to the merits of the order, and as to the application of the funds derived from the certificates. Union Trust Co. v. Illinois M. Ry. Co., 117 U. S. 434, 459, 6 Sup. Ct. 809; Wallace v. Loomis, 97 U. S. 146; Miltenberger v. Railway Co.. 106 U. S. 286, 311, 312, 1 Sup. Ct. 140. The trustee
The receivers must credit the property of the Gunnison Company with $2,422.75 on account of the charge of the payment of the Kelly judgment, and with $12,148.91, in addition to the amount already credited on account of the transportation of ties over its railroads, and to that extent the exceptions to the report of the master will be sustained. All other exceptions are overruled.