94 F. 275 | 5th Cir. | 1899
The Chattanooga, Rome & Columbus Railroad Company, by a different name, was chartered by an act of the legislature of the state of Georgia approved August 30, 1881. The company was given power to issue bonds in such amount as it desired, and to mcrtgage all of its railroad, right of way, rolling stock, and franchise for the purpose of securing its bonds. Laws Ga. 1880-81, p. 246, § 13. By an amendment approved December 22, 1886, it was provided that the company should have power and authority to issue income bonds,- and to secure the same by a mortgage of its property and franchise, or by pledging the income of its railroad, either or both, as the company should deem proper. .Laws 1886, p. 137, § 2. The company was authorized to construct a railroad from Chattanooga, Tenn., to Carrollton, Ga., — a distance, by the route proposed, of about 140 miles. It began the construction of its road, placed a mortgage on that part of its property lying between Rome and Cedartown to secure an issue of bonds amounting to $150,000., but up to September 1, 1887, had only completed 20 miles of its railroad. On September 1, 1887, it executed the deed of trust foreclosed in this proceeding. This deed conveyed to the trustee all of the railroad constructed and to be constructed extending from Chattanooga, Tenn., to Carrollton, Ga., with all the rights of way,
The errors assigned are: (1) That the circuit court erred in holding that the mortgage is a valid lien upon the property acquired by the railroad company after the execution of the mortgage; (2) in holding that the mortgage creditors are entitled to the income earned by the receiver while operating the railroad; (3) in holding that the judgments are not liens on the after-acquired property and the incomes, superior to the mortgage lien. The appellants contend — First, that the defendant railroad corporation (mortgagor) had no authority, under its original or its amended charter, or the general laws of Georgia, to mortgage on September 1, 1887, any part of its railroad not then constructed, or any part of its equipment or other property which had not theretofore been
By the act of the legislature of the state of Georgia approved September 27, 1883, a general law for the incorporation of railroads, it is provided that future-acquired property may be mortgaged by railroad corporations formed under that act. Laws Ga. 1880-81, p. 300, § 9. The supreme court of Georgia, by a decision rendered on August 20, 1894, held:
“(1) There being in force a general law for the incorporation of 'railroad companies, if the subsequent special charters of the two railroad companies involved in this litigation were unconstitutional, and therefore wholly void, each of said companies was, nevertheless, a corporation do facto, and, as such, could acquire and own property, and would be bound to Its creditors by all acts which would have bound it had it been duly incorporated under the general law. Bonds issued by it, and deeds or mortgages made to secure the same, are enforceable to the same extent as they would be if no special charter had been granted, and the company had been organized as a corporation in the method prescribed by the general law, and such bonds, deeds, and mortgages had been thereafter executed; and any person making claim upon the assets of one of these corporations de facto, whether as its own creditor directly, or as a creditor of such creditor or of a stockholder, sustains the same relation to it in respect to such claim as would be sustained under like circumstances were it a corporation de jure. (2) A corporation created under the general law of this state for incorporating railroad companies can bind by mortgage or trust deed, executed to secure bonds issued by it to provide funds for constructing its railroad, fuiure-aequirod property, as well as property owned by it at the time of the execution of the instrument. This being so, a corporation de facto can do the like.” Georgia S. & F. R. Co. v. Mercantile Trust & Deposit Co., 93 Ga. 306, 21 S. E. 701.
In the opinion in the case just cited we find this language:
“If we have succeeded in showing that these railroad companies, supposing their special charters to he void, are de facto corporations, because of the existence of the general law, it would seem that they might make any contracts authorized hy that law, and become bound by such contracts to those with whom the same were made. As a practical proposition, it is well known that most, if not all, of the railroads of any length in the United States which have been built for years past have been constructed by issuing in advance bonds upon their entire lines, including the unbuilt portions, as well as those already constructed, with mortgages to secure the bonds covering the whole. If a de l'aeto railroad company Is a corporation for any purpose at all, it ought, on general principles, to have the power to mortgage ‘future-acquired property’; and this seems to be the doctrine very generally recognized by the courts.”
On the authority of this decision of the supreme court of Georgia, the circuit court rightly held that the appellants’ first contention is not well taken.
The appellants’ second contention is that the deed of trust foreclosed in these proceedings does not purport, in express terms, to cover the income of the railroad property, and that, if it did, the mortgagor company had no authority to mortgage its incomí:. It is earnestly insisted that the questions submitted by this contention depend upon the local law as declared by the statutes of Georgia and by the decisions of the supreme court of that state. We have examined with some care all the provisions of the statute law which seem to us to bear either directly or remotely upon these questions, and, in connection therewith, the decisions of
“By invoking equitable relief, sucb as tbe appointment of a receiver and tbe administration of tbe mortgaged property by equitable means and agencies, mortgagees submit themselves to do equity relatively to any creditor of tbe mortgagor wbo may rightly intervene in tbe foreclosure proceedings in which sucb relief is sought. Mortgages upon a railway, and tbe income from tbe same, tbe mortgagor being left in possession, are, as to the income, whether produced before or after the appointment of a receiver in foreclosure proceedings, subject to be postponed in equity in favor of a claim for damages resulting from a tort committed by the mortgagor while and by reason of operating the railway after the execution of the mortgage. The tort now in question consisting of negligence in running a train upon the railway, whereby damages accrued, and judgment therefor against tbe mortgagor having been obtained before the mortgages were foreclosed or the receiver was appointed, such damages, so reduced to judgment, should be regarded as operating expenses charged by the judgment upon income as against the mortgages and all their incidents. So long as such a charge is unsatisfied, the mortgagees cannot justly and equitably divert income from its payment, and take the benefit of such diversion, whether directly or indirectly.”
This decision evidently does not purport to rest upon local law. It extends a little further than had hitherto been done the class of preferential claims which have been fully recognized generally by the courts since the decision in Fosdick v. Schall, 99 U. S. 285. There was manifested in the circuit courts of the United 'States a disposition to extend the doctrine of Fosdick v. Schall to a degree that has challenged the attention of the supreme court, and moved it to check this tendency, as appears from its utterances in Kneeland v. Loan Co., 10. Sup. Ct. 950, and subsequent cases. The fact that so many railroad corporations have issued bonds and mortgaged their property in advance of the construction of their railroads, and the acquisition of the property mortgaged, greatly beyond its market value at forced sale, had inclined courts of equity to treat the holders of railroad bonds, or the trustees in the mortgages, as the owners of the roads, rather than simply as lienholders, and to charge them as such owners, after default, with the unpaid expenses of operating the property. It has become the settled practice, where mortgagees invoke equitable relief and seek the appointment of a receiver and the administration of the mortgaged property by equitable means and agencies, to require them to permit payment of that large class of claims generally referred to as “preferential claims.” The considerations which inspired the glowing argument of the distinguished jurist who wrote the opinion in the case of Green v. Railroad Co., supra, have touched the consciences of other chancellors. No exactly definite limits can be traced to include the class of claims which have generally been heretofore allowed as preferential. The warnings of the supreme court indicate that the bounds have been extended as far as sound-judicial discretion can go, and that, if further relief is needed, it can be granted only by the legislature. The decisions of the supreme
The bill in this case shows that the mortgagor company and its assigns are insolvent, are unable to pay their debts and liabilities in full, and that the value of the property covered by the mortgage of September 1, 1887, is less in amount than the amount of the bonds issued under that mortgage, and is inadequate security for their payment. The result of the sale shows that after nearly three years’ delay (during which the property was improved) the court, through its commissioner, succeeded in obtaining a bid for the mortgaged property as an entirety to an amount equal to not more than one-fifth of the mortgage debt at the date of the sale. It is true that such sales are not a reasonable test of the actual value of such property. It is, however, equally true that the conditions which generally affect such property have been found to render it not practicable to make a sale thereof in any other manner to any greater or to an equal advantage to all parties concerned therein. The practical result from these prevalent conditions is that, when a railroad corporation is unable to pay its currently accruing interest, it is actually, as well as technically, insolvent, and its property inadequate security for its mortgage debt. The lárger part of the value of the property is dependent upon its continued operation as a public carrier. Its successful operation and ability to earn income are in most cases largely dependent on the railroad’s connections, and its friendly relations with other carriers, and on the good will it has secured. And while the appointment of a receiver is not a matter of strict right, and such applications always call for the exercise of judicial discretion, these imminent conditions bearing upon such property, after default by the mortgagor in the payment of interest on the mortgage debt, give to an application for the appointment of a receiver great force, and the practice to grant the prayer therefor in such cases has become settled. We think it is quite equally well settled that the receiver takes and operates the property, subject to the preferential claims as stated in Fosdick v. Schall, and to liens prior in point of time to the date of the mortgage, for the benefit of the mortgagees, according to their priority. His possession is “that of the court, whose officer he is, and adds nothing to the previously existing title of the mortgagees. He holds, pending the litigation, for the benefit of whomsoever in the end it shall be found to concern, and in the meantime the court proceeds to determine the rights of the parties upon the same principles-it would if no change of possession had taken place.” This is precisely what the circuit court did in this case. It has determined that the judgments, being junior to the mortgage in the date of their rendition, if entitled to a- lien at all on the corpus of the mortgaged property, such lien is not superior to that of the mortgage. And the mortgage by its terms having limited the right of the mortgagor to remain in possession and receive rents and profits, and authorized the entry of the trustee either without or by
We have seen that the mortgage does expressly provide that the mortgagor should receive the income until default had been made for three months in the payment of interest on the bonds, and that thereupon the trustee had the right to take possession and operate the mortgaged property until the sale to be thereafter fixed, or, at its discretion, to apply to a court of equity, as it elected to do, for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the property, and operate the same until a sale should be made. We have seen, further, that in the issuance of its income bonds, and the mortgage given to secure the same, it provided that payment thereon should be made out of the net income of the road, after the interest on the bonds issued under the prior mortgage was duly paid. It seems clear to us that the circuit court did not err in holding that the lien of the mortgage was superior to the lien of the judgments, both as to the proceeds of the corpus of the property and as to the net income from the operation thereof while it was in the hands of the receiver. The decree of the circuit court is therefore affirmed.