The claim is for .$3,000 and costs, on a judgment rendered as • damages, for an injury received by Davenport while traveling as a passenger on the Alabama & Chattanooga road, when it was run by the receivers Rice and Haralson. The question-is, whether such claim can come in as a lien on the fund, superior
The case, therefore, comes down to this: Does the decree of Circuit Justice Bradley, of August 26, 1872, or the decree of foreclosure •of January, 1874, establish such liens? And it may be stated thus: Has Justice Bradley departed from a well settled rule of law, to ■create' a lien not essential to running the “road, and not necessary for increasing, either directly or consequently, the rights of the first' mortgage bondholders, for the- protection of whose rights the appointment was made? It is clear that such a lien is not one •of the incidents to running the road, nor was its creation necessary to procure traffic and travel; nothing of the kind is intimated in the application for a receiver, and no such view or idea is presented in the order, an analysis of which will make this clear. The order of the circuit justice recites that the •property is deteriorating in value, and being wasted and scattered and destroyed, whereby the security of the first mortgage bondholders, and the interest of all other persons then concerned in said property are subject to hazard, danger and sacrifice. It then recites the impossibility to dispose of the property in its then present condition without great sacrifice, and the proposal and agreement of the parties * * “that a receiver or receivers shall be appointed in this cause, to take charge of said property and put the ■same into proper condition for its preservation and disposition, for the mutual benefit of all parties interested therein. And whereas, in view of all the evidence and admissions of the parties,' the court is satisfied that a receiver or receivers ought to be appointed to take charge of the entire property and manage the same, and to put the same in order and repair, to prevent the entire destruction thereof:” Therefore it was ordered that receivers be appointed: 1. To take possession, recover and receive the property covered by the first mortgage. 2. To sue for damages done to it, etc. S. To' put the property in repair, and to complete the road, and to procure rolling stock, etc., necessary to operate it, “and to operate the same to the best advantage, so as to prevent the said property from further deteriorating, and to save and preserve the same for the benefit and interest of the said first mortgage bondholders, and all others having an interest therein.” Then follows the creation of the prior lien, and it is for money raised or advanced “for the purposes aforesaid.” The order then, in words, provides: “That any funds raised by said receivers, by loan as aforesaid, or received by them from any other source, as such receivers, which may not be employed or required for the purposes above mentioned, or allowed to. them by the court for their services as such receivers, shall be paid by them into this court, for the use of the said first mortgage bondholders, as their interest or principal shall become due.” We here have an explicit declaration that no money is to be used by the receivers except for the purposes above mentioned. .Now is it necessary, in order to operate the road, that any man entitled to his action for injuries should have a prior lien on the road for such damages? And is the lien to be created by inference, and on conjecture that the creation of such a lien was necessary in order to operate the road? As a fact, it is known that almost every railroad in the United States is under mortgage, and that every such one is operated without being subject to a lien for such liabilities. There is not one word in the inducements recited for the appointment of the receivers, or in the purposes named for which they were appointed, which, by the remotest inference, countenances the creation of a prior lien.
The exercise of power by a court to displace liens can only be sustained on the ground of actual necessity, and surely there can be no necessity to append, as an incident to running a railroad, a lien for damages that displaces existing contracts. The party has a right to be paid from the fund remaining, after satisfying prior rights. He has a right to be allowed his claim to be paid- from an excess remaining. He has the same right against the property which he could have had if the road had been run by the president and directors when his right accrued, and none other.
Turning to the decree of foreclosure of January, .1S74, we see how clearly the court viewed the order of the circuit justice in the light presented. It devotes the proceeds of sale, first, to necessary .expenses incident to the execution and due prosecution of the trust created in behalf of the mortgage, etc. But it cannot be said that the giving of a prior lien to a traveler for damages is ■ an expense incident to the execution of the trust which was created in behalf of the mortgagees. Such a claim is in fact no “expense” at all, in the proper or ordinary sense of the word. It is a liability resulting secondarily from operating the road and that is all. The petition must be dismissed.