5 F. 833 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1881
The defendants, citizens of Vermont, are trustees and representatives of trustees under the first mortgage of the Vermont Central Railroad, who have been in possession, after a default of payment, of that and the Vermont & Canada Railroad, (subject to a prior lien upon the income of both roads,) to secure the payment of rent to the Vermont & Canada Railroad Company.
The orators, citizens of Massachusetts, are holders and
The defendants who are representatives of Joseph Clark, deceased, have demurred to the bill because the Vermont & Canada Railroad Company, as prior lienholder upon the funds, and the subsequent lienholders are not made parties. The other defendants have pleaded the pendency of proceedings in a court of chancery of the state to the jurisdiction of this court. The orators have set the plea down for argument, and the cause has been heard upon the demurrer and plea.
The proceedings in the court of chancery were brought to enforce the lien for rent, and resulted in the appointment of these trustees of the first mortgage, ydiile so in possession, receivers to raise funds to pay off the rent before applying the income to these mortgage bonds. Afterwards an agreement was made between the parties changing the basis of the rent, and providing for certain things to be done and specific payments to be made, and tliat.then the trustees should pay, first, the rent; second, the first mortgage bonds; third, the second mortgage bonds, and then the mortgagor; and that there should be a decree in the cause to be binding on all parties in interest in both roads. A decree was made accordingly, founded on this consent, but which went further than the agreement, and provided also for a settlement of the accounts of the trustees and receivers by a committee of bondholders, and (on objection) by the court, and that the cause should be retained in court, with liberty to the parties to apply to the court for further orders therein as they might be advised. It was while the trustees were in possession under this arrangement that the trustees received the money sought by the orators. Afterwards they were, at their own request, discharged from the possession of the property by an
Important questions concerning the jurisdiction of the stale court and this court arise upon these pleadings, and their consideration has been approached with such care, examination, and circumspection as their gravity has seemed to demand. The jurisdiction of the two courts as to these matters is concurrent, as is expressly provided by the law of congress providing for this court, and which on this subject is paramount. U. S. Rev. St. § 629; Act of March 3, 1875, § 1; 18 ü. S. St. at Largo, 470.
In creating the circuit courts and providing for their jurisdiction care has always been taken to prevent any conflict between them and state courts, and generally the courts themselves have been diligent each to so keep within the prescribed hounds that there should he no appearance even of interference by one with the other. To that end, when either court has, by its process or its officers, taken any property or subject of litigation into its custody, the other has carefully refrained from interfering with the custody or the litigation in which it was taken, ' When one court has possession the other will not take any proceedings which will interfere with the possession, and when one has cognizance of any litigation the other will not take cognizance of the same litigation. Stanton v. Embrey, 93 U. S. 548, cited for the orator to the contrary of this, was not in the same state with the state court, and therefore did not come within the provision as to concurrent jurisdiction; and Cook v. Burnley, 11 Wall. 668, was not between the same parties as the suit in the state court.
It is the interference with the possession of another court which would ensue, that prevents taking jurisdiction in that class of cases; and the pendency of the same identical con
An examination of some of the most prominent eases upon these subjects shows these distinctions:
In Slocum v. Mayberry, 2 Wheat. 1, it was held that property seized by custom officers could not be replevied by process from a state court.
In Harris v. Dennie, 3 Pet. 292, that’ goods in like situation could not be attached upon such-process.
In Hogan v. Lucas, 10 Pet. 400, that property in custody of a state sheriff could not be taken by a United States marshal.
In Wiswell v. Sampson, 14 How. 52, that property in the hands of a receiver of a state court could not be levied upon by the United States marshal in behalf of a j udgment creditor.
In Taylor v. Caryl, 20 How. 583, that a vessel in custody under proceedings of foreign attachment in a state court could not be taken by the marshal under process in admiralty from a United States district court.
Still, in Buck v. Colbath, 3 Wall. 334, it was held that the principles of these cases did not prevent maintaining a suit in a state court, in favor of the owner of property, against a United States marshal for attaching it as the property of another on process from a United States circuit court. Mr. Justice Miller, in delivering the opinion of the court, said it was “a principle which is essential to the dignity and just authority of every court, and to the comity which should regulate the relations between all courts of concurrent jurisdiction. ” “ This principle, however, has its limitations; or, rather, its just definition is to be attended to. It is only when property is in possession of the court, either actually or constructively, that the court is bound or professes to protect that possession from the process of other courts.”
The property out of which this litigation arises is not now in the possession of the defendants, either as receivers of
So, if this receivership covered the period of the accounting now sought, that court has the claim of the orators to the funds realized pending before it, that litigation is so far identical with this litigation here, and that court, and not this, has jurisdiction of it. In Peck v. Jenness, 7 How. 612, Mr. Justice Grier said: “It is a doctrine of law too long established to require citation of authorities that when a court has jurisdiction it has a right to decide every question which occurs in the cause, and, whether its decision be correct or otherwise, its judgment, till reversed, is regarded as binding in every other court.”
The counsel for the orators insist that the receivership did not continue after the compromise, agreement, and decree, so as to cover the period in question, and that there was no proceeding pending in the state court during that time which would involve this question between the bondholders and their trustees; and the counsel for the defendants insist that there was such .a judicial administration of this property during all that time as to involve this claim of the orators, and preclude the jurisdiction of all other courts. The deter-* mination of this question depends upon the true construction
The Central Cermont Railroad Company, a corporation created by the legislature of the state, with express power, among others, “temporarily to operate said roads, subject to .the order ef the court, in the case of the Vermont & Canada Railroad' Company and others against the Vermont Central Railroad Company and others, pending in Franklin county in chancery,” by order of that court, succeeded the defendants in the possession and management of the roads, and applied to the court by petition in that cause for leave to sell the roads and property for the payment of trust debts contracted by the defendants, claiming that they were receivership debts, chargeable as such as a first lien upon the property. The petition was denied, and that decision on appeal was affirmed. V. & C. R. Co. v. V. C. R. Co. 50 Vt. 500.
The court, after an elaborate examination of all the proceedings, and authorities bearing upon them, appears to have held, that, after the compromise agreement and decree, the relations between the parties towards the property, in respect to its managment, became changed so that a management for the parties through their own agreement took the place of a management by order of court.
In the opinion of the court, Barrett, J., speaking of the compromise decree, said: “It was devised and put in form as the outcome of the mind and will of the parties as the mode of consummating into validity a mutual arrangement by the parties as to their respective rights and interests, and ’ as to the mode and means by which the property was tp be held and used in serving and satisfying those rights and
In Langdon v. V. & C. R. Co. a hill was afterwards brought by these security holders for the purpose of ascertaining the priority of .the debts, with reference to security upon the property as receivership debts. After another very elaborate and exhaustive examination of those proceedings, it appears to have been determined that, as the lessor, as holder of the lien for rent, and the first mortgage bondholders and other security holders, suffered the persons in possession to be hold out as receivers, acting under the authority of the court, and as such authorized to contract these debts, those who advanced money upon the faith of that authority would have a right to the same priority that regular receivership debts would have created. Royce, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, (pamphlet, page 51,) said: “The rights and liabilities of the parties are not dependent upon the rules of law as understood and administered in a strict receivership. The Vermont & Canada Railroad Company has so conducted that it is estopped from denying that the acts of the receivers, while acting as such, are as binding upon it as the acts of strict receivers would have been; hence the payment of the rent claim of the Vermont & Canada Railroad Company must he postponed to the payment of the bonds issued by the receivers. As between the bona-fide holders of the- bonds so issued, and those that have been received in exchange for them, and the Vermont Central Railroad Company, the mortgage bondholders, and the Vermont & Canada Railroad Com
These cases do not settle definitely whether, in the opinion of the state court, the proceedings have so drawn the litigation in respect to the property into the court of chancery as to exclude all other courts. To exclude other courts that court should be so administering the property, by virtue of its prerogative and functions as a court, as to draw the control of the property and its avails to the court as such, and to make the decision of questions respecting it necessary in order to award it to the rightful claimant and put it out of court. These cases tend strongly in the direction that there was not such an administration as this, and certainly fall far short of showing that there was.
The compromise agreement itself did not • provide for any further proceedings in court beyond such a decree in the pending cause as should render the agreement legal and binding on all parties interested in the roads. The petition on which the decree was made did not purport to be for anything further than carrying out the agreement. The decree was founded upon the consent contained in the agreement, the want of objection by parties appearing, and the default of those not appearing. It provided for the settling the accounts of the trustees and receivers by a committee of bondholders, and, on objection, afterwards by the court; and that the cause should be continued on the docket of the court, with liberty to any party to apply to the court, from time to time, for further orders in the premises, as he or it might be advised. There was no judgment of the court beyond the consent, and this part of the decree had no consent to rest upon, other than that of those who participated in making it ready for the signature of the chancellor. The putting the agreement in the form of a decree added nothing to the force and effect which the agreement would otherwise have. V. & C. R. Co. v. V. C. R. Co. 50 Vt. 500.
This agreement, standing on its own evidence, or so authen
In Erwin v. Emery, 7 How. 172, while an estate was in process of settlement in a state court, proceedings to foreclose a mortgage upon it were taken in the federal circuit court. Objection was made that the state court had first acquired jurisdiction over the property, and all claims upon it, to the exclusion of the other court; but the objection was overruled.
In Suydam v. Broadnax, 14 Pet. 67, it was held that proceedings for the settlement of an insolvent estate, in a state probate court, before commissioners of which all claims were by the state law to be proved, would not prevent a suit in favor of a claimant, a citizen of another state, against the administrator in the circuit court of the United States. Mr.
In Union Bank v. Jolly, 18 How. 503, the same was held as to a claimant who had brought a bill to reach a residue of an estate remaining in the hands of the administrator for distribution, without proving his claim before the commissioners. Green v. Creighton, 23 How. 90, was between two sets of administrators, and the pendency of proceedings in insolvency in the state court, upon the estate of which the defendants were administrators, was pleaded to the jurisdiction of the federal circuit court. The case was elaborately argued, and the previous cases were referred to and reviewed by the court. In conclusion, Mr. Justice Campbell said: “Thus it will be seen that under the decisions of this court a foreign creditor may establish his debt in the courts of the United States against the representatives of a decedent, notwithstanding' the local laws relative to the administration and settlement of insolvent estates, and that the court will interpose to arrest the distribution of any surplus among the heirs. ”
Shelby v. Bacon, 10 How. 56, was in favor of a non-resident creditor against assignees of an insolvent debtor under the laws of Pennsylvania, who pleaded to the jurisdiction of the United States circuit court that the court of common pleas of the city and county of Philadelphia had" ample power to enforce the trust in regard to the rights of all parties claiming an interest therein; that the defendants had at different times filed their accounts, duly verified, of their receipts and disbursements, with the prothonotary of that court, which were sanctioned by the court; and that under its direction they had invested large sums of money to await the result of pending litigations. This plea was set down for argument, and passed to the supreme court on a certificate of division,
The situation of these defendants, as to accounting to tlio court of chancery, is very much like that of those there as to accounting to the court there. When the compromise agreement was made the trustees were, as has been before stated, in possession, and were also .receivers to raise the rent' due the lessor from the income. That agreement made nrovision for all rent then due, and provided a new basis for it thereafter, for certain specific payments, and for the application of the residue of the net income; and then that “all claims and demands between the parties hereto, not herein otherwise provided for, shall be waived and abandoned, and no further claim or proceeding shall be made or had in respect thereto.” The agreement was carried into effect, but the trustees were not otherwise formally discharged as receivers, and because they were not formally discharged it is said that ’ the receivership continued. But a receiver is the hand of the court, and whatever property he holds is held for the court. After that agreement there was no property left in the custody of the court for a receiver to have. The parties had provided for the custody and disposition of the property, and left nothing for the court to do about it. There was no occasion for the court to discharge them, for the parties them
In Davis v. Duke of Marlborough, 2 Swanst. 113, a receiver of the rents of an estate to raise funds to keep down an annuity, on the acceptance by the annuitant of the price of the annuity, was refused to be continued at the request of other parties. R. Co. v. Soutter, 2 Wall. 510, is to the same effect.
Unless the court of chancery had jurisdiction of this matter, because these funds were in the custody of that court, the accounting being had is not, upon any mode of procedure, to bind those not expressly parties to it. Courts must act according to established modes of procedure in due course; and outside of these modes their judgments and decrees are not binding as such. Windsor v. McVeigh, 93 U. S. 274.
The original bill is the only proceeding, according to the established mode of procedure, affecting this part of the case in the court of chancery, and the scope of that bill did not include payment to the bondholders. V. & C. R. Co. v. V. C. R. Co. 50 Vt. 500.
These bondholders bring this bill against the defendants as their trustees, alleging the receipt of moneys belonging to the bondholders not accounted for to them. That they are accounting to some other person elswhere does not seem to be any good reason for not answering this bill.
The principal ground of demurrer appears to be that the lessor, the Vermont & Canada Railroad Company, is not made a party to the bill. As the claim of the orators is now understood, there seems to be no ground for joining that party. The orators do not set up any claim in opposition to ' those of that company. They admit its prior right to the rent to the full extent, but set up that, after yielding to that right and satisfying it, these sums have remained in the hands of the trustees of the orators belonging to the orators, and they ask an accounting only for the amounts so remaining. The case in this respect, as well as in some others, is like Payne v. Hook, 7 Wall. 425, where a non-resident distributee of an estate brought a bill in the circuit court of the
This court has been urged, with much persuasiveness, not to retain this bill, on account of a comity towards the state court beyond the effect of the plea. Such comity, if it exists, is not mentioned in the books treating upon this subject, so far as has been observed. The decisions referred to, and the language of the courts and judges stated, show that courts of one jurisdiction respect those of another jurisdiction, in taking cognizance of causes, only so far as not to interfere with them or their judgments. If they should withdraw from the bounds of their jurisdiction, and the others should do the same, there might be parties and cases in the space between not recognized by either. It can bo no disrespect to either for the other to maintain its own jurisdiction, if it does no more. This court would not trench in the slightest degree upon the prerogatives of the state courts, for which it holds the highest respect. No decision which this court can make upon this case, either one way or the other, will do so. That court has no case between these bondholders and their trustees before it, so far as this ease shows. It will have no occasion to decide whether the trustees or the bondholders are entitled to these moneys without the bondholders before it. This court has no one but the bondholders and the trustees, or their representatives, before it, and upon this case will have no occasion to decide upon any question except between them. These causes—one between the bondholders and their trustees, and the other between the trustees and still other persons— are quite distinct, and may well bo pending in different courts.
Demurrer overruled and plea disallowed.