42 F. 372 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Virginia | 1889
On October 12, 1888, all parties in interest appearing by .counsel and consenting thereto, it was ordered that the order entered on March 8, 1888, in the cause of Seventh National Bank v. Shenandoah Iron Co., appointing G. E. Lipe as special master to report certain accounts, the master’s report thereunder, the exceptions thereto, and also the •vouchers, accounts, and reports filed in said cause, be held and taken, to all intents and purposes, as if filed in this cause, with leave to parties in interest to file exceptions to said special master’s report, dated June 15, 1888, and filed October 12, 1888. On the same day, October 12, 1888, an order was entered in the suit of Seventh National Bank v. Shenandoah Iron Co. dismissing the same for want of equity: but the special master’s report was, by consent of all parties in interest, filed in the cause now in hearing, to have the same effect as if it had been taken in this cause, and numerous exceptions were filed thereto. The most important of those exceptions were filed by the first mortgage bondholders, and are as follows, in substance: (1) That claims 1-9 are erroneously in class 4, because, being for hay and oats furnished the Shenandoah Iron Company before the appointment of the receivers, they are not entitled to priority over the first mortgage; (2) that claims 10-12, 14-17, $31,481.70, are erroneously classed in class 4, because they are not entitled td priority over the first mortgage: (3) that claim 13 is erroneously in class 4, because, being for lumber furnished the Shenandoah Iron Company before t ho appointment of the receiver, it is not entitled to priority over the first mortgage; (4) that receivers’ certificates 2-13 are erroneously in class 2, because exceptants insist that said receivers’ certificates are not liens prior to their mortgage. There are a number of other exceptions, but the questions presented by them will all be answered in the determination of those above recited. Counsel for “other creditors” have, in argument, urged the following objections to the consideration of these exceptions:
First. “That they are not signed by any one who would bo liable for costs under the provisions of equity rule 84; that no bondholder is known by name in the record; and that, in the event of the failure of the bondholders to maintain their exceptions, there is no one against whom costs could be recovered.” It is true that the bondholders are not parties to the suit by name. They are represented by their trustee, the plaintiff in this suit, and any step taken in their name is virtually taken in the name of the trustee. They are really the parties in interest in the suit. They are the beneficiaries under the mortgage, — the cestuis que trust; and in filing exceptions, by counsel, the bondholders are only doing what the trustee might do, and the court sees no difficulty in entering a decree against the trustee for costs, in the event the bondholders fail to sustain their exceptions. It would be entirely impracticable to make all the bondholders parties defendant to the suit, or to' have them file exceptions in their own names to the master’s report. They are represented
Second. “That the exceptions are not sufficiently specific, are too general in their terms, and do not point out the grounds of exception.” Counsel argue that, as the counsel for the bondholders insist that the Virginia statute which gives priority to material, supply, and wage claims is unconstitutional, this objection should have been specifically stated in the exceptions, and that it is too late to raise the question in the argument of'the cause. This objection to the form of the exceptions to a master’s report was a question presented and passed upon by the supreme court of the United States in Goddard v. Foster, 1 Black, 506. In that case, Justice SwayNE, speaking for the court, said:
“Before proceeding to consider the four remaining exceptions, we deem it proper to advert to an objection made to their form by counsel for the complainant. It is said that such an exception is in the nature of a special demurrer, and that these are not so full and specificthat the court can consider them. Such is not the rule of this court. All that is necessary is that the exceptions should distinctly point out the findings and conclusions of the master which it seeks to reverse. Having done so, it brings up for examination all questions of fact and of “law arising upon the report of the master relative to that subject.”
Applying the doctrine as laid down in Goddard v. Foster to the exceptions to be considered in.this case, the court is very clearly of the opinion that the exceptions are sufficiently full and specific. “They distinctly point out the findings and conclusions of the master which they wish to reverse.”'
Third. A third objection urged to the consideration of these exceptions is “that they were not taken at the proper time; that they should have been filed before the master before he had completed his report, so that, if there were errors in the report, the master could have had the opportunity to correct them.” This was formerly the English chancery practice. The master made a draft of his report, notified counsel of his findings, gave them an opportunity to point out errors, and the master considered and corrected them. It was also the practice of the federal courts in chancery, prior to the adoption of the equity rules of practice. This was .the practice when Story v. Livingston, 13 Pet. 359, was decided. This case has been strenuously urged upon the attention of the court as applicable to the exceptions, under consideration. Story v. Livingston was decided in January, 1839. The rules of equity practice were promulgated by the supreme court on March 2, 1842, and since that time the practice has been different from that indicated in Story v. Livingston. So far from its now being required that exceptions shall be filed before the master during the time he is making up his report, one month is allowed after the report has been completed and returned to the clerk’s office in wdiich to file exceptions thereto. Rule 83 of rules of practice in equity provides:
“The master, as soon as his report is ready, shall return the same into the clerk’s office, and the. day of tiie return ‘shall be entered by the clerk in the order book. The parties shall have one month from the time of filing the*375 report to file exceptions thereto; and, if no exceptions are within that period filed by either party, the report shall stand confirmed on the next rale-day after the month is expired.”
This provision leaves no question as to the correctness of the practice pursued in this case. This view is sustained in the opinion of Judge Gresilam in Hatch v. Railroad Co., 15 Myer, Fed. Dec. 839, 9 Fed. Rep. 856-860.
The most important question presented for the determination of the court in this case is as to the priority of lien between certain supply and wage claims which existed against the Shenandoah Iron Company before the appointment of the receivers and the mortgage bondholders. The priority of these supply and labor claims, as reported by the master, rests upon the provisions of an act of the general assembly of Virginia, passed March 21, 1877, and amended by act of April 2, 1879. The first act is entitled “An act to secure the payment of wages or salaries to certain employes of railway, canal, steam-boat, and other corporations,” and reads as follows:
“Be it enacted by the general assembly, that hereafter all conductors, brakemen, engine-drivers, firemen, captains, stewards, pilots, clerks, depot or office agents, storekeepers, mechanics, or laborers, and all persons furnishing railroad iron, fuel, and all other supplies necessary for the operation of trains and engiiies employed in the service of any railroad, canal, or other transportation company, chartered under the laws of this state, or doing business within its limits, shall have a prior lien on the franchises, the gross earnings, and on all the real and personal property of said company which is used in. operating the same, for and to the extent of the wages or salaries contracted to be paid them by said company. ”
The title and body of the act of April 2, 1879, read as follows:
“An act to amend and re-enact the first and second sections of an act approved March 21, 1877, entitled • An act to secure the payment of wages or salaries to certain employes of railway, canal, steam-boat, and other transportation companies.’
“(1) Be it enacted by the general assembly, that hereafter all conductors, brakemen, engine-drivers, firemen, captains, stewards, pilots, clerks, depot or office agents, storekeepers, mechanics, or laborers, and all persons furnishing railroad iron, engines, cars, fuel, and all other supplies necessary for the operation of any railway, canal, or other transportation company, or of any milling or manufacturing company, chartered under or by the laws of this state, or doing business within its limits, shall have a prior lien on the franchises, the gross earnings, and on all the real and personal property of said company which is used in operating the same, to tho extent of the moneys due them by said company for such wages or supplies.”
—And no mortgage, deed of trust, sale, conveyance, or hypothecation hereafter executed of said property shall defeat or take precedence over said lien; but it is expressly provided that the liens of the employes and officials aforesaid shall be prior to all other liens whatsoever, and shall be the first discharged. Section 2 provides the mode of securing the liens provided for in the first section.
It1 is contended by the bondholders that both the act of March 21, 1877, and the act amendatory thereof, are unconstitutional and invalid
“In the light of these principles, there can be no'reasonable doubt, we think, that so much of the act, and the act amendatory thereof, as is relied on in the present case is repugnant to the constitution, and therefore void. The simple and single purpose indicated by the titles to the two acts is to secure the payment of wages or salaries to certain employes: and we have only to regard the plain and well-understood meaning of these terms to see that'by no possibility can they be made to embrace the .claims in question. The price of a locomotive is not wages or salary, and a person who builds and sells locomotives, cars, etc., is; presumably, not an employe, but an employer. Bouvier defines ‘ wages ’ to be ‘ a compensation given to a hired person for his or her services;’ and ‘salary’ he defines ‘a reward or recompense for services performed; * * * the price of hiring of domestic servants and workmen;’ though the term is usually applied, he says, to the reward paid to a public officer for the performance of his official duties. We do not see how argument can make plainer the invalidity of the act in the particular mentioned. The title is misleading and deceptive. It gave not the remotest intimation of the provisions of the act relied on here, which are foreign to the subject expressed in the title'; and to sustain the act in its entirety would be, in effect, by judicial construction, to eliminate from the constitution one of its most important provisions, or, at all events, to seriously impair its usefulness. This the courts have no power to do. Our duty, in such a case, is to maintain the constitution inviolate, and to declare void so much of the act as is inconsistent therewith. ”
It is a well-settled principle that the decisions of the highest state courts, in-'the construction of the state constitution and laws, are to be adopted by the.federal courts. This doctrine is established by numerous decisions. Spear, Fed. Jud. 645, 646; Shelby v. Guy, 11 Wheat. 361; Jackson v. Chew, 12 Wheat. 153; Green v. Neal’s Lessee, 6 Pet, 291; City of Richmond v. Smith, 15 Wall. 429. The decision of the court of appeals of Virginia in the case cited controls in this cause.. The reasons assigned in that case for holding the acts unconstitutional as to supply claims against a railway company apply with equal force to supplies furnished a mining or manufacturing company; and the court decides that the material and supply claims existing prior to the appointment of the receivers have no priority over the lien of the mortgage bonds.
. The court has carefully examined the question as to the constitutionality of that provision of the amended act of April 2,1879, which gives a lien to the employes of mining and manufacturing companies superior to that of the mortgage bonds. As we have seen, the original act made
In this connection we will consider the exception filed by the bondholders to that part of the master’s report which reports 14 receivers’ certificates in favor of J. W. llodgers. This exception must be sustained. The order of October 1, 1885, authorized the receivers to issue their certificates for a sum not to exceed $50,000 “to. pay interest due on the bonds of the defendant company October 1, 1885, taxes overdue, and wages and freights due and to become duo, before the business of the said defendant company to he prosecuted by the said receivers will realize sufficient to pay the same, and to pay for necessary materials in the prosecution of the said business.” Mr. Rodgers’ claim was not for wages, and the receivers -were not authorized to issue to him certificates for it. The character of this claim was thoroughly discussed and carefully considered in the case of Seventh Nat. Bank v. Shenandoah Iron Co., 35 Fed. Rep. 436, and the same evidence considered then bears upon it now. It is simply a store-account debt against the Shenandoah Iron Company, existing by reason of orders given by the Shenandoah Iron Company to its employes on the store of Rodgers & Milner in payment of their wages. “The issue of the certificates is, howevej’, confined strictly to the purposes expressed in the order, and these purposes cannot be extended by implication.” High, Rec. § 398d. Receivers’ certificates, being merely evidences of indebtedness, can have no higher character than the debts of -which they are the representatives. The debts for which these certificates were issued belonged to the class of general claims, and the
The position taken by counsel, that the claims for materials, supplies, and labor furnished the defendant company before the appointment of receivers have, under the general principles of equity, a preference given them over the lien of the mortgage bonds, cannot be sustained. This doctrine has never been applied to mining or manufacturing companies. It is, owing to the quasi public character of such companies, confined to railroad corporations. This question was thoroughly and ably argued before this court in the case of Seventh Nat. Bank v. Shenandoah Iron Co., 35 Fed. Rep. 438, 439. The court has found no reason to change its decision rendered in that case, and deems it unnecessary to repeat the views therein expressed. A decree will be entered in accordance with the opinion here expressed.