15 F. 46 | E.D. Ark. | 1882
The Arkansas Central Railroa'd Company was formed for the purpose of constructing a railroad from Helena to Little Rock, with a branch to Pine Bluff. The chief ultimate promoters of this enterprise were Stephen W. Dorsey and J. E. Gregg. Dorsey was the president of the company, and its financial agent and manager, and generally controlled and conducted all the affairs of the corporation.
What is commonly called an exhaustive contract was entered into between the company and J. E. Gregg & Co. for the construction of the road, by-.the terms of which Gregg & Co. were to build the road for all its stock • subscriptions and other assets, and a majority of its stock.
The directors of the railroad company and all its officers, except the president, seem never to have had more than a mere nominal existence after the making of this contract. Prom that time Gregg & Co. were regarded as owners of the road, and its assets in hand, as well as all that might thereafter be acquired.
Dorsey was a member of this firm also, and in the double capacity of president of the railroad company and a member of the firm of Gregg & Co. he seems to have managed the financial affairs of both.
The company executed a mortgage to secure its first-mortgage bonds, which were put upon the market and sold to the amount of $720,-000. The defendant, the Union Trust Company of New York, was the trustee in this mortgage. Dorsey went abroad to effect a sale of the bonds, and succeeded in placing most of them in London and Amsterdam. •
By the fall of 1872, 48 miles of the road, which was a narrow gauge, had been completed in an imperfect manner. ’ The work of construction was never resumed;after that date. About this time Dorsey engaged actively in politics, and having been elected to the United States senate in'the early part of 18 73, and the assets and resources of the.railroad company having been exhausted, he and the firm of J. E. Gregg & Co. soon ceased to take any further interest in the enterprise; and the defendant Johnson, who had at the solicitation of Dorsey invested some money in the concern of J. E. Gregg & Co., was elected president, and had the control and management of the road and the affairs of the company from that time until the commencement of proceedings to foreclose. The company had neither resources nor credit, and the earnings of the road were barely sufficient to keep it running, without making needed repairs and improve
It seems to be settled that a court of equity has the power in this class of cases to authorize its receiver to issue‘certificates of indebtedness, and make them a first lien upon the road, for the purpose of raising funds to make necessary repairs and improvements. Wallace v. Loomis, 97 U. S. 146, 162; S. C. 2 Woods, 506, under title, Stanton v. Alabama & C. R. Co.
But it is a power to be sparingly exercised. It is liable to great abuse, and while it is usually resorted to under the pretext that it will enhance the security of the bondholders; it not unfrequently results in taking from them the security they already have, and appropriating it to pay debts contracted by the court. The history of Wallace v. Loomis, supra, furnishes an instructive lesson on this subject.
This court has uniformly refused to arm its receivers with such a dangerous power. When the road cannot be kept running without its exercise, except to a very limited extent, the safe and sound practice is to discharge the receiver or stop running the road, and speed the foreclosure.
Befdre the order authorizing the receiver to incur debts for repairs and other purposes was rescinded, he had incurred debts to the amount of some $22,000, chiefly for ties and a machine-shop. The ties were indispensable if trains were to be kept running, and the machine-shop was a necessary and valuable property to the road, and its use a necessity, though that could probably have been had without purchasing the property. A final decree of foreclosure was rendered on the seventeenth day of March, 1877. By the terms of the decree the purchaser was required to pay $40,000 in cash. This sum was required to pay the receiver’s certificates, and other costs and expenses of foreclosure. Any amount bid in excess of the $40,000 could be paid in first-mortgage bonds. Unusual pains were taken to convey to the bondholders actual notice of the foreclosure proceedings, and holders of $661,000, out of a total of $720,000, of the first-mortgage bonds had aetual notice of the foreclosure proceedings, and the time and place of sale. The present plaintiffs had opened negotiations looking to a foreclosure of the mortgage before the bill for that purpose was filed by the trustee; and before the sale under the decree it filed and proved in the master’s office bonds to the amount of $461,-000, being the very bonds on which this suit is bottomed. The road
The plaintiff, by its agent, had notice of this sale, and appeared, by its attorney, in court and moved to open the biddings for the road, and the court passed an order that the biddings would be opened if the present plaintiff or any person should advance the bid $5,000 during a period of 10 days allowed for that purpose. The plaintiff, or its agent, declined to open the biddings. In the mean time Johnson had grown sick of his bargain, and made application to the court to set aside the sale and permit him to withdraw the purchase money. This was refused, and the sale confirmed. Johnson then offered to turn the road over to the plaintiff, or any holders of the first-mortgage bonds who would pay him the amount of his bid within a period of some 50 days. This offer was communicated to the plaintiff by its agent, Sully, and declined.
It is clear, from the evidence, that the defendants Johnson and Horner and the citizens of Helena wished to have the bondholders purchase the road. They were extremely anxious that the road should be completed, and believed that its purchase by the bondholders would insure that result, and that nothing else would. After the plaintiff and other bondholders declined to take Johnson’s purchase off his hands, he proceeded, as fast as he could raise means for that purpose, to put the necessary repairs and improvements upon the road, which embraced 50,000 new ties, 5 miles of new iron, the rebuilding of nearly all the bridges and culverts, raising the road-bed in many places, and extensive repairs of the rolling stock. He afterwards sold a half interest in the property to his co-defendant, John J. Horner. Not long after the purchase, railroad securities and property in the south appreciated very much, and, although the road in question was but a fragment, its value was enhanced by the general and unprecedented increase in the value of all railroad property. Its value was further enhanced by the construction of a trunk line—not projected when Johnson purchased—from Missouri to Texas, which connects with its western terminus at Clarendon, and by the extensive repairs and improvements put upon the road, which altogether made it worth from $100,000 to $200,000 at the time this suit was commenced, supposing it to be free from incumbrances prior in time to the mortgage under which defendants claim.
The bill, which was filed five years after the sale, seeks to charge Johnson as a trustee for the bondholders op general charges of fraud
The rule is well settled that in the absence of fraud the beneficiaries in railway mortgages are bound by what is done by their trustee.
“In such cases the trustee is in court for and on behalf of the beneficiaries; and they, though not parties, are bound by the judgment, unless it is impeached for fraud or collusion between him and the adverse party. The principle which underlies this rule has always been applied in proceedings relating to railway mortgages where a trustee holds the security for the benefit of the bondholders.” Kerrison v. Stewart, 93 U. S. 155, 160. “The trustee of a railroad mortgage ' represents the bondholders in all legal proceedings carried on by him affecting his trust, to which they are not actual parties, and whatever binds him, if he acts in good faith, binds them. If a bondholder not a party to the suit can under any circumstances bring a bill of review, he can only have such relief as the trustee would be entitled to in the same form of proceeding.” Shaw v. Railroad Co. 100 U. S. 605, 611. Although the bill charges fraud in general terms upon the trustee, in connection with the foreclosure suit, there is not a syllable of evidence to support the charge.
One point much relied on at the hearing to support the bill was that the bill to foreclose was filed by the trustee without'the written request of the holders of one-third in amount of the bonds then outstanding, as required by the twelfth article of the mortgage; and that the decree requiring' the payment of the principal sum of the mortgage debt was therefore erroneous. The late cases of the Chicago, D. & V. R. Co. v. Fosdick, 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 10, United States supreme court, are cited in support of this contention. The ruling in those cases does not aid the plaintiff’s ease, for several reasons: (1) The mortgage in the case at bar contains an important provision on the subject which was not contained in the mortgage under consideration in the cases cited, and which would seem to authorize all that was done by the trustee, and the decree of the court for the whole debt. (2) It was undoubtedly competent for the trustee to file a bill to foreclose for the interest actually due, and that largely exceeded in amount the value of the road. .(3) The railroad company does not complain of
It is needless to discuss in detail the charges of fraud contained in the bill. The plaintiff has lost all right to be hoard by its own gross laches. In excuse for the long delay, the bill alleges the plaintiff was ignorant of the facts until recently. This allegation is not true. The plaintiff’s agent had notice of all the facts, and testifies he communicated them to the plaintiff immediately after the sale. But the bill itself does not state a case that will excuse the delay. “A general allegation of ignorance at one time and knowledge at another is of no effect. If the plaintiff made any particular discovery it should be stated when it was made, what it was, how it was made, and why it was not made sooner. * * * There must be reasonable dili-
gence, and the means of knowledge are the same, then, in effect as knowledge itself.” Wood v. Carpenter, 101 U. S. 135, 140; Harwood v. Railroad Co. 17 Wall. 78; Badger v. Badger, 2 Wall. 87.
In Harwood v. Railroad Co. supra, there was a delay of five years, and in Twin-lick Oil Co. v. Marbury, 91 U. S. 587, there was a delay of four years, and the court denied relief in both cases on the ground of laches. In the case last cited, the defendant, at the time he purchased the corporate property, was a stockholder and director in the company, and the bill, which sought to charge him as a trustee, was filed by the company, and not, as in the case at bar, by a bondholder. All parties in this case were authorized to bid at the sale, and the fact that Johnson was president of the railroad .company and the plaintiff a holder of bonds of the company did not in itself raise a trust relation between them which would entitle the latter to charge
In Twin-lick Oil Co. v. Marbury, supra, Mr. Justice Miller says: “No delay for the purpose of enabling the defrauded party to speculate upon the chances which the future may give him of deciding profitably to himself whether he will abide by his bargain or rescind it, is allowed it in a court of equity.” That is precisely what the plaintiff asks the court to permit it to do in this case. It declined to take the property at the price bid by Johnson, because, as matters then appeared, that seemed to be all or more than the property was worth. It was patent to all at the time of the sale that the alternative would be presented to the purchaser” of expending at once a large sum for repairs and improvements on the road, or abandoning, its use as a railroad altogether. And after these expenditures had been made it was exceedingly doubtful whether the earnings of the road would equal its running expenses. In view of these facts, and the further fact that it was claimed then that the lien for the $1,350,000 state aid bonds issued to the road was paramount to the lien of the mortgage under which the road was sold, (which is still an open question so far as relates to this road,) it is not surprising that it was difficult to find a bidder for the property at the minimum price fixed in the decree, or that the plaintiff declined to take it at that price. Years after-wards, and when the property had greatly increased in value from causes not then foreseen, and from extensive repairs and improvements put upon it, and after other interests had intérvened, and the plaintiff erroneously supposed the question of the lien for the amount of the state aid bonds was out of the way, it files this bill, and asks that it be permitted to do now what it declined to do then, take the property at Johnson’s bid, and that he be decreed to be a trustee and required to account.
A more inequitable demand, considering the facts of the case, was probably never addressed to a court of equity. If it was settled that there was no lien on the road to secure the state aid bonds, the ease would not be any more favorable for the plaintiff. Having declined
Laches need not be pleaded. If the objection is apparent on the bill itself, it may be taken by demurrer. Maxwell v. Kennedy, 8 How. 222; Lansdale v. Smith, 16 Cent. Law J. 28; [S. C. 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 350.] And if the cause, as it appears on the hearing, is liable to the objection, the court will refuse relief, without inquiring whether there is a demurrer, plea, or answer setting it up. Sullivan v. Portland R. Co. 94 U. S. 811; Badger v. Badger, 2 Wall. 95.
The plaintiff and all other purchasers of the first-mortgage bonds have undoubtedly lost the money invested in them. But they did not lose it by the foreclosure proceedings. It was lost from the instant it was invested in bonds secured by a mortgage on a road which had an existence only in name. If they have any just ground of complaint, it would seem to be against those whose representations induced them to purchase the bonds, and who probably used the proceeds for purposes other than building the road.
Let a decree be entered dismissing the bill for want of equity, at plaintiff’s costs.