25 F. 684 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri | 1885
(orally.) In the case of the cross-bill of Josiah Fogg against the St. Louis, Hannibal ¿5 Keokuk Bailroad Company, argued and submitted to me the day before I left St. Louis, a few weeks ago, I will state that I have read She evidence and am prepared to render a decision. The facts in the case are that the St. Louis & Keokuk Bailroad Company was organized under a charier of February 15, 1859. After its organization it commenced to do some work.
This claim of Josiali Fogg against both companies and each company remained in parol, was not reduced to judgment, and no suit commenced thereon until the twenty-first of September, 1880, when he brought suit on the law side of this court against both roads, the St. Lonis & Keokuk and the St. Louis, Hannibal & Keokuk. That action was dismissed as to the St. Louis, Hannibal & Keokuk, and passed to judgment against the St. Louis & Keokuk, the old corporation, on October 8, 1882. Thereafter he sought, by a bill in equity filed on May 3, 1883, to charge that judgment against the St. .Louis & Keokuk Bailroad against the St. Louis, Hannibal & Keokuk. This suit passed to a decree against the St. Louis, Hannibal & Keokuk Bailroad, May 5, 1884. The transfer from the St. Louis & Keokuk Bailroad to the St. Louis, Hannibal <fc Keokuk Bailroad, though reduced to writing, was never placed on record, and the question that comes up now is whether this claim put in decree, on May 5, 1884, against the St. Louis, Hannibal & Keokuk Bailroad is a lien upon that road prior to the trust deed executed in .1877 to Dewitt C. Blair, as trustee. It should be stated here, though, that of the bonds issued under that trust deed to Dewitt C. Blair a large proportion of them were not earned or delivered until after 1880, and then in pursuance of a contract with John I. Blair and Moses Taylor for the construction of a certain portion of the road.
There has been taken, to show actual notice, the depositions of John I. Blair and Dewitt C. Blair. As far as Moses Taylor is concerned, who was with John I. Blair the holder of nearly all the bonds, it appears from the testimony that the business was transacted wholly by John I. Blair. Dewitt C. Blair, the trustee, absolutely knows nothing. Counsel commented upon the remarkable ignorance which He manifests, and seemed loth to believe that any man would take such a trust in such profound and dense ignorance of the facts concerning-it. Well, if he had a pecuniary interest in the matter, possibly that criticism might be just, but if he was, as he seems to have been, simply a nominal party in this matter, a trustee having no further duties than to deliver the bonds, and be the instrument of executing the orders of the officers of the company, it is not strange that the matter
After reading this testimony through, from its commencement to the close, (subjected, as both witnesses were, to a searching cross-examination,) it seems to me there is not one syllable to indicate that at the time the interest was acquired by John I. Blair and Moses Taylor in those bonds they had any notice or information or intimation that Josiah Fogg had any claim against the St. Louis, Hannibal & Keokuk Bailroad. While counsel criticise this as strange, yet I think an opposing fact is equally strange. If Josiah Fogg had a claim, which it is now proved that he did have, a claim existing prior to Alaren 4, 1873, a claim against both the St. Louis & Keokuk Bailroad and the-St. Louis, Hannibal & Keokuk Bailroad, he permits that to rest unenforced, unreduced to judgment, a mere matter of parol, until the twenty-first of September, 1880, more than seven years. It does not lie in his mouth to reflect or criticise the apparent confidence of other persons dealing with the St. Louis, Hannibal & Keokuk Bailroad Company, if he was willing'to trust these parties all those years, and take his chances of voluntary payment. I suppose he had reason to believe it -would be paid, and therefore did not take any stops to enforce it. It certainly does not lie in his mouth to complain that other people were equally confiding in trusting to the representations of tho same officers. It seems to me that there was neither actual nor constructive notice to either the trustee in this mortgage or to the principal bondholders of the existence of this claim at the time they became interested as trustee and as bondholders. It follows from that,-that this claim, as well as that of Sarah Barker, similarly situated, is not entitled to priority to the bonds, and it is so ordered.