183 F. 250 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine | 1910
This proceeding arises out of the receivership created by the Circuit Court for the District of Maine in certain proceedings against the Metropolitan Steamship Company, wherein an interlocutory receivership was created of all the assets of that corporation by an interlocutory order entered on the 4th day of February, 1908. This order was never litigated in any form. It has always been acquiesced in. The immediate topic is a petition of the receivers for leave to pay two series of certificates of indebtedness known as “series B” and “series C,” issued by the receivers as hereinafter shown. The principal litigation is the bill filed by the American Trust Company to obtain foreclosure of certain mortgages made to it. The only objector to the allowance of the application of the receivers is the American Trust Company, which maintains that the funds in the hands of the receivers should be applied to its own claims until they are liquidated. Series B was an issue of $37,000, according to the following form of one of the certificates:
“Metropolitan Steamship Company.
“Receivers’ Certificate of Indebtedness.
“This is to certify that the undersigned, William T. Cobb, Calvin Austin and Abel I. Culver, uot personally but in their capacity as receivers of the property* of the Metropolitan Steamship Company, are indebted to the bearer hereof in the sum of ten thousand dollars (§10,000), payable six (6) months from the date hereof, or earlier, at the option of the receivers, at the office of the City Trust Company, in the . city of Boston. Massachusetts, together with interest'thereon, until paid, at the rate of six (6) per cent, per annum.
*252 “This certificate is one of a series of certificates of like tenor, but for varying amounts, the aggregate amount of all certificates of this series being limited to thirty-seven thousand dollars ($37,000), and is issued under authority of and by virtue of an interlocutory decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Maine, dated .Tune 29, 1908, made in the consolidated cause resulting from the consolidation of the cause of the Berwind-White Coal Mining Company v. Metropolitan Steamship Company with the cause of American Trust Company v. Metropolitan Steamship Company et als., pending in said court; and by the terms of said interlocutory decree, the said certificates are declared to be a debt of the undersigned and their successors as such receivers, and to constitute a lion on ihe property of the Metropolitan Steamship Company in the custody of said receivers upon the date of said interlocutory decree or subsequently acquired by them or their successors. Said lien, however, to be subordinate and. inferior to the lien of receivers’ certificates now outstanding to the amount of $80,000 and subordinate and inferior to the lien of any mortgages made to the American Trust Company under that name or the name of the American Loan & Trust Company, trustee, and all bonds and coupons secured thereby and all charges and expenses of the trustee thereunder, and subordinate and inferior to any indebtedness of said Metropolitan Steamship Company found by the court to be a lien superior to said mortgages and the bonds and coupons secured thereby, but said certificates to constitute a lien upon the property aforesaid prior' to the general unsecured indebtedness of said Metropolitan Steamship Company.
“This certificate shall not become obligatory until countersigned by the clerk of the United States Circuit Court for the District of Maine as registrar.
“In witness whereof the undersigned as such receivers have signed this certificate this 10th day of July, A. D. 1908.
“William T. Cobb,
“Calvin Austin,
“Abel I. Culver,
“Deceivers Metropolitan Steamship Company.
“Countersigned and registered this 10th day of July A. D. 1908.
“James E. Hewey,
“Clerk United States Circuit Court for the District of Maine. [L S.]”
Series C bears date the 7th day of November, 1908, and is for the gross amount of $64,60®. These certificates contain a provision subjecting them to the liabilities for supplies and materials which were to be paid according to the decrees appointing the receivers. In all other particulars they read the same as the certificates of series B. There are sufficient funds in the hands of the receivers to discharge these prior liabilities in any event; so that, although all parties, interested were notified to answer to the present application of the receivers, no holders of claims for supplies or .materials appeared. Therefore the two series of certificates stand for the present hearing exactly alike. Consequently, in disposing of series B, we also dispose of series C.
We have spoken of: the interlocutory order creating the receivership entered on the 4th day of February, 1908. This” needs explanation. This order was entered in the suit of Berwind-White Coal Mining Company v. Metropolitan Steamship Company, which suit was the first commenced, and which was merely a creditor’s bill as ordinarily called. It carefully reserved all the rights of the American Trust Company as trustee. While it authorized the receivers to take possession of all the assets of the corporation and to operate its steamship lines, it expressly stated that the appointment of receivers was without prejudice to, and subject to all, the rights legal and equitable of the Ameri
'3 )n August 7, 3909, upon the bill and supplemental hills of American Trust Company, a foreclosure decree was entered, pursuant to which decree the property of the steamship company covered by the mortgages-was sold by special masters, the property so sold was convejmd and delivered to the purchaser, and the sale was confirmed by an order entered November 3, 1909. The proceeds of the sale were distributed ratably among the bonds and matured coupons secured by the mortgages, and the several reports relating to said sale and distribution were confirmed.
“On November 8, 1909, the court allowed claims to that date for costs of the receivership, compensation of receivers, and fees of counsel, and the same were paid by the receivers.
“The current cash assets other than cash were then sold by order of the court, and turned over to the purchaser. Under an order of the court for proof of supply and material claims the receivers ascertained and reported such claims to amount to $144,395.11. The court confirmed that finding and report, and on September 5, 1910, ordered a dividend of 50 per cent, to be paid on said claims.”
The mortgages contain no specific pledge of the “rents and profits” or income, and no specific stipulation on the part of the Metropolitan Steamship Company that it would account for or pay over the “rents and profits” or income, either prior to default or afterwards. The description in the mortgage of the property pledged is as follows:
“All and singular the property, both real, personal, and mixed, now owned, or hereafter acquired, by the steamship company, including the ships, steamships, steamboats, vessels,. laud, wharves, docks, piers, warehouse, buildings, approaches, and structures now owned, or hereafter acquired, by the steamship company. And also including the equipment, machinery, materials, furniture, fuel, supplies, contracts, books, documents, choses in action, and other chattels and personal property now owned, or hereafter acquired, by the steamship company. And also including the easements, privileges, and rights and all other property of every kind and nature now owned, or hereafter acquired, by the steamship company, which premises shall include without restricting the generality of the foregoing description the proiJerty described in the schedule hereto.”
This contains a sweeping transfer of all property, present and future. It does not specify moneys in terms, or income. Even if it did, and even under the liberal rules of the federal courts as to after-acquired property, a broad attempt to convey moneys and income would be ineffectual; although, of course, a conveyance of income of certain specified property which was pledged might be effectual to a certain extent. Therefore, in order to give the American Trust Company any lien on the earnings of the Metropolitan Steamship Company, it must be by applying the rules of the common law, which, under ordi
It is true that the receivers’ certificates in question here were sold merely for the purpose of paying interest in arrears on the bonds which the mortgage to the American Trust Company secured. It is also true, as said by the American Trust Company, that the payment of those coupons postponed the foreclosure for the corresponding period covered by the due dates thereon, in this case we understand a year. It is also true that the American Trust Company maintains that the purpose of the issue of the certificates and of applying the funds to the payment of coupons was merely through an intent on the part of the corporation to delay foreclosure. There is not a particle of proof in favor of that proposition. On the other hand, these certificates were issued by virtue of au order based upon petitions setting out that it was for the common interest that those particular coupons should be paid. Why it was for the common interest does not appear; but it is a matter of common knowledge that, if a foreclosure sale had
However, in one aspect, it seems to us to reduce the position of the American Trust Company to a matter of mere illegal injustice. These certificates were sold at par, and every dollar of the funds which they represented went into the hands of the bondholders in discharge of coupons to an equal amount at par. The American Trust Company now desires that its bondholders should receive two dollars for one; one of the two dollars being what they derived from the sale of the receivers’ certificates, and the other one of the two dollars to come out of the pockets or those holders of the certificates, without any equivalent whatever therefor. This is a result which no court of equity could possibly permit.
We have said that, as to the general principles herein considered, we hardly need a citation of authorities. Nevertheless, the language of the Supreme Court in Fosdick v. Schall, 99 U. S. 235, 253 (25 L. Ed. 339), is thoroughly crystalized into the rules on this topic as administered by that court; and it is so clearly applicable to the facts in this case we think it well to quote from it as follows:
“For even though the mortgage may in terms give a lien upon the profits and income until possession of the mortgaged premises is actually taken or something equivalent done, the whole earnings belong to the company and iire subject to its control. The mortgagee has his strict rights which ha*257 may enforce in the ordinary way. If he asks no favors, he need grant none. But, if he calks upon a court of chancery to put forth its extraordinary powers and grant him purely equitable relief, he may with propriety be required to submit to the operation of a rule which always applies in such eases, and do equity in order to get equity.”
The clerk will enter the following interlocutory decree:
It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed thkt the receivers deposit in the registry of the court forthwith a sum equal to the principal of the receivers’ certificates constituting series B and C now outstanding and interest thereon to the date of the deposit; that they also deposit sums equal to the poundage of the clerk, and his lawful fees and disbursements in reference to the matter to which this decree relates; that the receivers deposit with the clerk for cancellation any certificates which have not been sold or which have come back into the hands of the receivers; that the holders of the several certificates surrender the same to the clerk for cancellation and payment; that, before payment, each shall be authenticated by the signature of the receivers or their solicitor as valid, and the clerk shall verify each by reference to the registry which shows the issue thereof; that, each being so authenticated, the clerk shall pay it, with interest to the date of the deposit as aforesaid; and that, upon such payment, each certificate shall be effectually canceled by the clerk, and shall be duly filed.