115 F. 786 | 2d Cir. | 1902
Error is assigned of an order of the circuit court of the United States for the district of Vermont entered August 7, 1900, authorizing the receiver of the White River Valley Electric Railroad Company to create a new issue of receiver’s certificates to be used in the completion of the railroad of that company, such certificates to be a prior lien over certain certificates previously issued by the receiver pursuant to authority from the court. The facts which led to the making of the order were these: A bill of complaint was filed in February, 1900, by one of the unsecured creditors of the railroad company, asking, among other things, for the appointment of a receiver, with power to operate, repair, and complete the unfinished railroad of the defendant. The bill alleged the insolvency of the defendant ; that its railroad was partially completed, and being operated over a portion of its length; that there were outstanding $120,000 bonds of the defendant, of an authorized issue of $250,000, secured by a mortgage deed covering all its property; that the bonds were held by various persons as collateral security for loans to the defendant amounting to some $60,000; that $88,000 of these bonds were held by Jose Parker & Co., as collateral security for $44,000 of notes of the defendant; that the towns through which the said railroad was to run had subscribed subsidies amounting to $55,000, conditioned upon the completion of the railroad by December 30th next ensuing; that the defendant had unsecured indebtedness amounting to $125,000; that it had become impossible for the defendant to borrow money to complete its obligations or continue the work, and some attachments had been made and others threatened; that if its outstanding bonds should be defaulted, and the property should be sold under the mortgage, it would bring a nominal sum only; and that if the outstanding bonds could be recovered, and the road completed so as to save the town subsidies, the property could be saved, and the creditors of the defendant be paid. The defendant answered, admitting the allegations in the bill of complaint, and submitting to the judgment of the court in respect thereto. Thereupon, and upon the 20th day of February, 1900, the court appointed a receiver, with power to maintain and operate the railroad, and authority to complete and equip the same;
We have entertained some doubt whether the order is in such sense a final decision as to permit a review by this court, except on appeal from the final decree in the cause, but have concluded that it is, upon the authority of In re Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co., 129 U. S. 206, 9 Sup. Ct. 265, 32 L. Ed. 656.
The question of the propriety of the action of the court in authorizing the receiver to complete the road, and authorizing this to be done by an issue of receiver’s certificates in the amount of $170,000, which should be a prior lien to the mortgage bonds, is not presented by this appeal. To all this the appellants consented, and it is fairly to be assumed that in doing so they recognized this course to be expedient under the circumstances of the case. They not only accepted the certificates issued pursuant to the first order and surrendered the bonds, but they also consented to a modification of that order which might involve the creation of a larger issue of certificates. Their objections raise the single question whether the court was justified in postponing one class of certificate holders to another, — their liens to the new ones created.
We must assume from the facts in the record that, unless the court had made the order which is complained of, the completion of the
The power of a court, which has appointed a receiver in an equity cause and taken possession of a railroad, to subordinate the existing liens upon the property to the expenses of the administration, including those of operating and maintaining it in proper repair, cannot be challenged. But the power to postpone existing liens to liens created by the court for the purpose of completing an unfinished railroad has rarely been exercised, and ought not to be exerted unless it can be done without ultimate loss to the existing lienholders. It is to be exercised with great caution, and, if possible, with the consent or acquiescence of all the parties in interest. Wallace v. Loomis, 97 U. S. 146, 24 L. Ed. 895; Kennedy v. Railroad Co., 5 Dill. 519, Fed. Cas. No. 7,707; Union Trust Co. v. Illinois Midland R. Co., 117 U. S. 434, 6 Sup. Ct. 809, 29 L. Ed. 963. In Jerome v. McCarter, 94 U. S. 734, 24 L. Ed. 136, the court intimated doubt of the propriety of the exercise of the power to the prejudice of the prior lienholders without their consent; but in Miltenberger v. Railroad Co., 106 U. S. 287, 1 Sup. Ct. 140, 27 L. Ed. 117, the court upheld receiver’s certificates, with a prior lien to that of a pre-existing mortgage, created for the purpose of obtaining rolling stock, and for building 6 miles of road and a bridge, part of the main line of a road 92 miles long. The latter is the only reported case which has been called to our attention, in which the exercise of the power has been approved, where it was not invoked at the instance of the prior lienholders, or sanctioned subsequently by their acquiescence, or where their conduct did not create an estoppel. In that case, however, the security of the prior lienholders was augmented instead of impaired by the expenditure permitted. The value of the property was to be enhanced far beyond the cost of the new construction, and $95,000 of the total cost of $125,000 had been donated for the purpose to the receiver by a municipal corporation and another railroad corporation, and it was upon these considerations that the court below made the order which was under review. That decision affords no support to sustain the present order. Here was a road only one-third built. No one could be found willing to complete it upon the terms which had previously been proposed, and, in view of the whole situation as it was presented to the court, the outcome of an attempt to complete it was too uncertain to authorize it to be made without the consent of the appellants. The effect of the order was certain to render their security more precarious, if not to render it worthless, and the chances that the other creditors of the corporation could realize anything by carrying out the scheme were wholly conjectural. Probably in making the order the learned judge
As the appellants had consented to such a modification of the prior order as would involve the creation of new certificates sufficient in amount to complete the road, the order appealed from should not be vacated, but should be modified by striking out that part making the new certificates prior in lien to those previously issued.
So ordered, and the cause remitted, with instructions to modify the order accordingly.