252 F. 530 | 4th Cir. | 1918
This is an appeal from an order appointing a co-receiver of tire defendant the Greenville & Western Railway Company, and directing the receivers to issue receivers’ certificates not to exceed the sum of $3,000, and use the proceeds thereof, or so much as may be necessary, in repairing the roadbed of the railway, so as,to make it safe to operate trains over the same,.and, as soon as trains can be safely run over the road, to resume the operation thereof. It
It appears that all parties interested in the railroad are before' the court — the mortgagee for the bondholders, the unsecured creditors, the railroad company, and its stockholders. It further appears that the amount of bonds outstanding secured by the mortgage is largely in excess of any possible value of the railroad and its assets; its outstanding first mortgage bonds alone being in amount $460,000, with a large amount of unpaid interest. It further appears that these interveners are people who are neither stockholders, nor creditors, nor bondholders of the railroad company, but simply outsiders, residents along the line of the railroad, who are discommoded by its nonoperation, and who now attempt to assert their claim as the right of the public to have the railroad operated. The contention of these interveners is that, under the law, the court can compel (as the state of South Carolina in their view can compel) the operation of the railroad, although its operation is at a continuous loss, and may mean a continuous impairment and ultimate possible entire loss of all the cápital invested in the railway. The logical consequence of their contention is that the effect of subscribing to the capital, or lending on the application of a railroad company, and its construction therewith, is h> subject all the property of the corporation to a first lien to the state for the indefinite operation of the road, and, although its operation may prove to be unprofitable and at a loss, the owners of the property, or the holders of securities secured by a lien upon the property, cannot cease operation and realize on the security, but they are bound to continue the operation of it, even to the entire exhaustion of the assets of the railroad.
Ujion this point the controversy is between all the persons who have
A railroad was formerly constructed along the very line of the railroad now concerned. Its name was the Carolina, Knoxville & Western Railway Company. The operation of the railroad having proved unsuccessful, and that it could only be operated at a loss, foreclosure proceedings were instituted, in tire Circuit Court of the United States for the District of South Carolina, for foreclosure and sale, and a sale at auction was ordered. It was twice exposed for sale at auction without any bidders, and it was finally bid in for $15,000. The purchaser did not attempt to operate it, but sought to remove and sell the rails. Thereupon a number of persons, relators, acting in the name of the state, just as in the present cause, intervened and sought to have the court require the rails taken up and sold to be replaced by the purchaser and the road to be operated.
The case came on to be heard before Judge Simonton, sitting in the Circuit Court. The very point was made that is made in the present case, that under the statute of the state of South Carolina referred to in the order of the learned judge below, slightly modified as embodied in section 3117 of the Code of Laws of South Carolina, the purchaser of a railroad was required to organize and put it in operation within 60 days of the purchase and acquisition thereof, and that that meant that the stockholders accepted an obligation to maintain and operate, and keep on operating, although the operation was at a loss. After a full hearing Judge Simonton decided to the contrary. Jack v. Williams, 113 Fed. 823. He held that, while a railroad was in a sense a-public concern, for whose construction and operation the action of the sovereign was needed, yet that, whilst thus serving tire public, no corporation or person is thereby bound to continue the service without a reasonable remuneration. No one can be compelled to serve the public fox-nothing. Private property of no kind, including railroad property, can be used for public purposes without compensation. He decided, further, that the effect of the act of the Legislature referred to' was not to forfeit or sequestrate the property of a railroad company to the use of the public, by requiring its operation even at a loss, but only that, if the purchasers did not organize and operate within the time limited, they forfeited the franchises of the railroad corporation. The state could not compel the stockholders to exhaust their assets in the operation of a losing concern, but it could say that, if you do not choose to operate, you shall not be entitled to the public franchises given to a common carrier, and in that case the only thing left to the owners of the property would be to sell the property, without being able at the sale of the property to sell the franchises and the right of operation.
That decision was appealed from, but was affirmed by this court.
Were this the case of a private corporation, there would be no difficulty. The rule is generally accepted in the case of private financial corporations that, without the assent of the existing lienholders, a court of equity will not, by the issue of receivers’ certificates, displace prior liens, save to the extent actually required for necessary expenditures incident to administering the assets and preserving the property from deterioration pending the winding up of the business and the settlement of the receivership. The whole rule is fully discussed in International Trust Co. v. Decker Bros., 152 Fed. 78, 81 C. C. A. 302, 11 L. R. A. (N. S.) 152, cited and reaffirmed in Nowell v. International Trust Co., 169 Fed. 505, 94 C. C. A. 589. It seems, also, generally accepted that, where a receiver is directed to ope.rate a business, it is because the income of operation will, as clearly shown by the facts, exceed the outgo, and the operation therefore he beneficial to the holders of the liens; the income being the primary fund to which the expenses of a receivership must be referred.
In the case, however, of public utility corporations, especially in the cases of railways, the rule has been modified by reason of the interest that the public have in the operation of the concern. In the case of a great railway corporation, for instance, if suddenly its operation were put an end to, all the avenues of transportation and trade around which public life and interests had grown up and clustered for many years, would be destructively paralyzed by a sudden stoppage. So, also, in the case of a receivership of a large public utility corporation for the furnishing of gas, water, or other public necessity to a community — its sudden stoppage would entail such untold inj ury to the community that the stoppage is not permitted; and the theory has been adopted that, unless it manifestly appears otherwise, the very existence of the utility corporation shows that it can be operated at sufficient income to pay its cost of operation and not to impair the value of the property.
There has been no case in which such a doctrine has been announced. For the general rule, see Barton v. Barbour, 104 U. S. 126, 26 L. Ed. 672; Union Trust Co. v. Illinois Midland Co., 117 U. S. 434, 6 Sup. Ct. 809, 29 L. Ed. 963; Kneeland v. American Loan Co., 136 U. S. 89, 97, 10 Sup. Ct. 950, 34 L. Ed. 379; Thomas v. Western Car. Co., 149 U. S. 95, 13 Sup. Ct. 824, 37 L. Ed. 663; V. & A. Coal Co. v. Central R. R. Co., 170 U. S. 355, 18 Sup. Ct. 657, 42 L. Ed. 1068. The principle decided in these cases extends to the effect that certain classes of debts already incurred for operating expenses may, by reason of the public right and necessity for operation, be given priority in payment over mortgage liens, under the view also that, like supplies advanced or repairs made to a vessel, they had been actually necessary to preserve the existence of the res itself, upon the existence of which res all other liens depended.
The present case, however, does not fall in any of these categories. In the first place, it is a small branch railroad, and it is not the public, as a general whole, which is affected, but only .the limited number of individuals who are-connected with the neighborhood of a small branch railroad. Next, the facts show that it is unreasonable to expect this railroad to be operated, so as to pay its costs of operation, except as a speculative hope. The only grounds upon which expectations are based that it can be operated so as not to entail further loss by the operating expenses being greater than the operating receipts is a speculative ' hope that business may be built up so as to have this result. This is not a conclusion based upon past operation, but a hope voiced upon speculative contingencies. The railroad, therefore, is in the same position as the line referred to in the previous case, when it was ordered in the previous decree of this court to be sold.
This can be effected by the requirement that, before the operation of the railroad be resumed and continued, and the certificates issued, sufficient security be given on behalf of the relators for the repayment of these certificates, and of all loss or impairment of value that may result from the operation, less any increased value that at any sale may he shown to have accrued to the security holders from any expenditures for permanent repairs or betterments, or from the sale of the property as a continued operating railway. The cause must therefore be remanded to the court below for a modification of its order, so as to accord with this opinion.
Modified.'
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