202 F. 172 | 7th Cir. | 1912
It is unnecessary in these cases to consider the circumstances under which supply claims may be paid out of surplus earnings or because of diverted income. No such question is presented on these records. The important question is Whether an in
That the claim in the Gregg Case was for railroad ties used and to be used in the place of decayed and rotted ties, while in this case it is for coal and journal bearings, is immaterial. If the difference between the majority and minority of the court in the Gregg Case had, been based upon the nature of the supplies, if the majority had rejected the claim because in their judgment railroad ties were to be deemed part of the permanent construction of the road and not in the nature of current supplies necessary for the immediate operation andl business of the road, that case could be distinguished; but no such difference existed. The concession of counsel, adopted by the court, obviated the necessity of determining whether a claim for ties is strictly of the same character as a claim for coal.
The majority opinion, in stating that the payment for the supplies by the receiver, and not merely the supplies themselves, must be essential to the condiuct of the business of the road before the claim therefor can displace a mortgage lien upon the corpus, followed the Miltenberger Case. The allowance there made to laborers was based upon the theory, adopted by the court, that the payment of such claims by the receiver is essential to avert the danger of a strike and to secure the continued operation of the road. .The payment by the receiver of balances to connecting roads was likewise deemed essential to the further operation of the road because, unless paid, these connecting roads would have refused further to transact business with the receiver.
That a connecting, road would now be compelled under the Interstate Commerce Act to transact business with the receiver, is merely an argument that such a claim as was allowed, prior to this act, in the Miltenberger Case,' should no longer be entitled to such priority. It furnishes no basis, however, for counsel’s contention that the rule laid down in that case, so narrowly restricting the priority of supply claims as against the corpus, is now to be disregarded.
“The material point is not the time when they were used, but the time when they were acquired.”
The decrees of the. Circuit Court, approving the special master’s report and denying priority to the appellants’ claims, will therefore be affirmed.