81 F. 759 | 5th Cir. | 1897
Charles Dillingham was the receiver of the Texas Central Railway under order of the United States circuit court for the Northern district of Texas at Waco. He was appointed such receiver on the 4th day of April, 1885. On December 4, 1886, the court» directed that the receiver, Charles Dillingham, he placed on the pay roll of the receivers (there was a joint receiver) at $150 pér month as an allowance upon his compensation as receiver in the cause, which allowance was to date from the possession of the receivers, and to continue while Mr. Dillingham gave his personal attention to the business of the company, until the, further order of the court. On the 22d day of April, 1891, the railway property was sold. This sale did not embrace certain property which was not part of the railway proper, the parts not sold consisting of five lots, lands, notes, etc. At the time of the sale of the railway property, under a compromise arrangement, the receiver Dillingham was paid $20,000. On August 28, 1891, at the close of the decree in confirming the sale, this occurs:
“That nothing in this decree contained is intended to affect, or shall he construed as affecting, the status of any pending or undetermined litigation in which said receivers appear as parties. .Such litigation shall continue to determination in the name of said receivers, with the right reserved to said purchasers, should they he so advised, to appear and join in any such litigation; and nothing in this decree contained is intended to affect, or shall he construed as affecting, the receivership of any of the property of the defendant railway company other than the property so transferred to said purchasers, possession of which said prooerty other than that so transferred is retained for further administration, subject to the orders of this court.”
At the conclusion of a petition for a modification of the decree of confirmation, this appears:
“It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that nothing contained in this decree is intended to affect, or shall be construed as affecting, the receivership of any of the property of the defendant railway company oilier than the properly so transferred to said purchasers; possession of which said property, other than that so transferred, is retained for further administration, subject to the orders of this court, in like manner as if this decree had never been entered or rendered.”
Dillingham continued to act as receiver up to April, 1895, apparently, from the record, attending to such matters as were necessary to he disposed of in winding up the affairs of the receivership; and continued to draw and to pay himself the $150 per month until April, 1895. After the railway was sold, Receiver Dillingham filed regular quarterly accounts for each quarter, ending, respectively,, on the 1st days of April, July, October, and January, for the years
The case, as shown by the foregoing statement, presents somewhat remarkable facts. In the first place, those who are most interested in the matter of the receiver’s compensation appear to have made no objection at all to his receiving the $150 per month at any time. And, next, conceding the purchasing committee to have been interested in this question of compensation, they stood by for years, and allowed the receiver Dillingham to pay himself this amount,