The money in question was originally due the railroad company as taxes voted in aid of the company, and amounting to about $27,000. The plaintiff claims the same by virtue of a certain alleged assignment by the company. It appears that the plaintiff and defendant each respectively advanced money to or for the company, in reliance upon these taxes.’ Afterward, and before the taxes were collected, the company recognizing the fact that the plaintiff and defendant advanced money in reliance upon the taxes, passed a resolution respecting them, whereby it declared that “the same are hereby sold, assigned, and transferred to the said J. Calla-nan and J. J. Smart for the sum of $21,067, in manner and proportion as follows: To the said J. Callanan $17,567, and to the said J. J. Smart, the sum of $3,500 thereof, to be paid as col
The first question presented is, as to what was the character of the transaction which constituted the alleged transfer.
It is to be observed, in the first place, that no instrument was executed and delivered by the company to Callanan and Smart. If there had been, we yhould need only to look to the instrument and determine the character of the transaction from the intent of the parties as expressed therein. But what the company did was to pass a resolution. This, without something more, could not operate to transfer the taxes. It was in the outset in the nature of a mere proposition. Whether it could operate to transfer the taxes, even if accepted, whether qualifiedly or unqualifiedly, we need not consider. The counsel upon both sides have argued the case upon the theory that, there being an acceptance of some kind, the transaction, whatever it was, was sufficient in form to transfer the taxes, or carry some right therein, and we shall proceed upon the same theory. We come then to consider what was the intent. Opon this question it is safe to say that the intent must have been, either to transfer the taxes as an absolute sale to Callanan and ■ Smart, or to give them security thereon. The plaintiff claimed that there was an absolute sale. But, in our opinion, the plaintiff’s position cannot be sustained. It may be conceded that the language of the resolution is such that it might be held to contemplate a sale. If the evidence showed that the resolution was unqualifiedly accepted, we should be inclined to think that Callanan and Smart bought the taxes, taking them for better
The theory of the plaintiff’s counsel is, if we understand it, that neither he nor the defendant gave, or agreed to give, anything; that the taxes were to be collected and distributed between them in the proportion designated; that if only $21,067, or some less sum, was collected, the collection was to be applied on the .indebtedness due the plaintiff and defendant re
To this position we think that several valid objections may be made. In the first place, if such were the transaction, it would not be a sale. It would be a transfer' for security, to the extent of the indebtedness agreed to be secured, and a gift of the balance. But we find no evidence that such was the transaction, and we are glad to be able to say this. The plaintiff was president and one of the directors of the company. He sustained to it a fiduciary relation; it was his duty to protect the company, and not obtain from it an unconscionable bargain. The transaction which the plaintiff’s counsel impute to him, if we understand them, would be one for which no reasonable justification or apology could be offex-ed. As compared with it, the absolute sale of $27,000 of taxes, for a little more than $21,000, would be only slightly objectionable, for, in such case, the plaintiff and defendant would take the risk of the collection, and this fact would preclude us from saying that the transaction could not possibly be an honest one.
Having reached the conclusion that the plaintiff and defendant did not buy the taxes, nor acquire them by a transaction which was designed to secure a certain amount of indebtedness and cover a lax-ge contingent gift, it seems to result that they must have taken the taxes as security, and nothing else. We have then to inquire whether, in this view, the plaintiff is entitled to recover.
Having taken the taxes as security jointly with the defendant, it may be conceded that, so long as the plaintiff held the claim intended to be secured, and made no x’elinquishment of his security, he would be entitled to pursue the defendant, if he collected and retained more than his share. - But he does not hold any claim intended to be secured.. The evidence shows that in May, 1879, some months after the taxes in qxxestion wex*e collected by the defendant, the plaintiff had a
It is not material to inquire how the plaintiff justifies himself in his own conscience, but it is easy, we think, to see how he does. When he sold his claim against the company to Alley, including the note above referred to, it appears that he sold at a great discount, and lost several thousand dollars. He was doubtless relying then, as now, upon these taxes, to partially indemnify himself. But his trouble is that he had no claim upon the taxes, except as security, and a creditor cannot be allowed to enforce a security after he has ceased to hold the claim secured. We think the judgment of the Circuit Court must be
Reversed.
