80 F. 569 | 6th Cir. | 1897
after making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
Before considering the merits, there is a preliminary question for consideration, involving the jurisdiction of the circuit court to pronounce any decree in this cause. The jurisdiction of the court seems never to have been brought to the notice of the court below until after an amended and supplemental bill had been filed by complainant, and the cause about ready for hearing. In considering this question of jurisdiction, we shall therefore consider the status of the cause as it appears upon both the original and amended bills. If the court had jurisdiction at the time a motion was first made to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, and had jurisdiction when it entered the decrees appealed from, it is of no moment, on this record, how long it fiad had jurisdiction, or at what prior stage of the cause it was acquired. In Railroad v. Ketchum, 101 U. S. 289-298, a like objection was made at a. late' stage of the cause, and the court said:
“For tbe purposes of this appeal, we need not inquire when the circuit court first got jurisdiction of this suit. It is sufficient if it had jurisdiction when the decree appealed from was rendered. As no objections were made by the parties in the progress of the cause to the right of the court to proceed, and the decree, when rendered, .was consented to, it is enough for the purpose of this appeal if the record shows that, when the consent was acted on by the court, jurisdiction was complete. Consent cannot give the courts of the United States jurisdiction, but it may bind the parties, and waive previous errors, if, when the court acts, jurisdiction has been obtained.”
The sole complainant in the original bill was the Badford Trust Company, a corporation of the state of Virginia. The defendants were all citizens of the state of Tennessee, or of states other than Virginia. One of these defendants was R. M. Barton, Jr., who was made a defendant as trustee under the mortgage securing the bonds issued by the Hughes Lumber Company, which was a corporation of the state of Tennessee. Barton, the trustee, was also a citizen of Tennessee. The appellants now insist very strenuously that Barton, as trustee, should, for purposes of jurisdiction, be classed on the same
“For the purpose of jurisdiction, the court had power to ascertain the real matter in dispute, and arrange the parties on one side or the other of that dispute. If, in such arrangement, it appeared that those on one side were all citizens of different states from those on the other, jurisdiction might be entertained, and the cause proceeded with.”
In the case last cited the bill was a foreclosure suit brought by Ketchum, a holder of bonds, against the mortgagor and the trustees under the mortgage. The comjfiainant and the trustees thus made defendants were citizens of the state of Slew Toril. The mortgagor was a corporation of Missouri, and the suit was brought in one of the circuit courts of the United States for the Eastern district of Missouri. The jurisdiction was wholly dependent, upon all the parties on one side of the controversy being citizens of different states from those on the other. As the parties were arranged by the pleader, this diversity did not exist, and there was no jurisdiction. It appeared, however, that the trustees were necessary parties, because the legal title to the mortgaged property was in them, and they were made defendants because, doubting their authority, they had declined to institute foreclosure proceedings. There were no averments in the bill indicating any antagonism between the trustees and the beneficiaries under the mortgages. “The complainants,” said the court, “commenced the suit to get done just what the trustees, if they had been willing to proceed, might have done- Whatever he did was for the trustees, and in their behalf, and he really had no power to do more than they might have done if they had been so inclined.” The court therefore held that there was no antagonism between the complainant and the trustees, who should therefore be arranged on the same side of the real dispute with the complainants, which gave juris» diction and enabled the court to proceed with the cause. The aver-inent of the amended bill touching the refusal of Barton to foreclose the mortgage made to him was in these words:
“R. M. Barton, .Tr., the trustee, not only declined and neglected to advertise and sell the property covered by said trust deed, but complainant avers that he had definitely and positively determined and declined to join as a party bringing said suit; that he had in fact, for reasons personal to himself, and having- no reference to this cause, or to giving this court jurisdiction thereof,*574 positively and definitely determined not to execute the trust, and to have nothing to do as trustee with the matters and trusts created by said deed; that he had reached this determination before he was aware that this suit would be brought, and before his connection therewith; that he did this, not for the purpose of giving this court jurisdiction, but that this conduct would have been the same under any and all circumstances, and, as before stated, for reasons personal to said trustee, and which were, in his judgment, imperative, and conclusive on him.”
If the only object of complainant’s bill had been to foreclose the Barton mortgage, such an averment as to the reasons moving Barton in his refusal to institute such a proceeding would be insufficient fo show any real antagonism between the complainant and himself as trustee, and would bring the case within the facts of Railroad v. Ketchum and Shipp v. Williams, elsewhere cited, and require that the complainant and Barton should be treated as on the same side of the real controversy, which, in the case supposed, would have been the mere question of the' foreclosure of the mortgage, — a controversy wholly with the mortgagor. But complainant’s bill, as amended, was not a simple foreclosure bill. It was full of averments attacking the right of any beneficiaries thereunder, save itself, to share in the benefits of the common security; alleging that, with the consent of all other holders of bonds, the mortgaged property had been conveyed to another newly-organized corporation, and bonds of this new corporatioii, secured by a mortgage on same property, accepted in exchange for those secured by the conveyance to Barton. These averments involved a dispute as to the right of Barton to foreclose the mortgage for the benefit of any beneficiary other than complainant, and involved an insistence that if he did foreclose, or if foreclosure should result from judicial proceedings, the proceeds arising from the sale of the mortgaged property should be paid exclusively to complainant, to the extent necessary to satisfy its bonds. Thus, the controversy was not only as to the foreclosure of the mortgage, but as to the right of complainant to be paid to the exclusion of all others. Clearly, this was a dispute in which Barton, as trustee for all beneficiaries, must stand in antagonism to the exclusive claim set up by a single beneficiary, and should not be treated as upon the same side. The bill was not one which could have been properly prosecuted by him, and complainant cannot be said to be doing just what Barton might have done had he been willing to proceed, nor that what complainant did by filing such a bill was done for the trustee and in his behalf, hi either was the liability of the mortgagor to the complainant unquestioned, for it appears that its right to hold the bonds in its possession, or to proceed against the mortgaged property for their satisfaction, was also disputed. If this contention of the mortgagor should be sustained, the mortgage was satisfied, and the trustee had no power to foreclose. To a bill filed for the purpose of preventing all other holders of bonds from participating in the benefits of a common security, and for the purpose of establishing complainant’s right to the bonds it held, and of procuring a decree appropriating that security to its exclusive benefit, the trustee was a necessary party defendant. Though the trustee thus made defendant may have been under no duty to actively participate in a controversy
We come now to the merits of the cause. The principal question arises upon the error assigned to so much of the decree as excludes the First National Bank of ‘Chattanooga and G-. 11. Jam agin, assignee of the City Savings Bank of Chattanooga, fr.om participating in the proceeds arising from a foreclosure of the mortgage to Barton. Both of the appellants who complain of this part of the decree were large creditors of the Hughes Lumber Company and of D. W. Hughes. The national Bank held, as collateral security for its debts, bonds of the Hughes Lumber Company aggregating f>75,000; and the City Savings Bank, for a like purpose, held bonds amounting to $50,000. In the creation and management of these large debts, the National Bank was represented by its president, T. G-. Montague, and the City Savings Bank by its cashier, O. E. Stivers. The Hughes Lumber Company was largely owned by its president, 1). W. Hughes, who seems to have involved his personal credit in its business, and to have completely controlled the affairs of the corporation. Alter the execution of the Barton mortgage, and after the general assignments of both the corporation and D. W. Hughes to Ward, as assignee, Hughes made a struggle to extricate himself and Ms corporation, by the scheme of organizing a new corporation, which should take all the property of the old, and all of Ms individual estate, and assume all liabilities of himself, as well as of the Hughes Lumber Company. He believed, as did many of thé creditors, that the combined property of the corporation and himself would furnish ample security for an issue of $250,000 in bonds, and that these bonds would be accepted by the holders of the Barton bonds, and other creditors who had only the security afforded by the assignments to Ward in satisfaction of their debts. A meeting of creditors was accordingly held, and this scheme was indorsed. A circular letter was signed by Montague and by Stivers, representing these two banks, and by several other creditors, and was sent to such creditors as had not been present, soliciting their assent to the plan. The great mass of creditors did assent, and agreed to accept the new bonds in satisfaction of their claims, and to surrender the security afforded by the Barton mortgage, and by the assignments to Ward. But before all had assented the new corporation was organized, and Ward, through the active co-operation of these two banks and others, was induced to convey the assets vested in him to the new company. This conveyance was not joined in by Barton, and was therefore subject to the lien of his mortgage, upon the real estate and machinery of the Hughes Lumber Company.
It has been argued that these new bonds were accepted and received only as additional security to that afforded by the Barton mortgage and by the assignments to Ward, and were to be received in substitution for the old security only when all beneficiaries had accepted the plan of settlement, and when the Barton mortgage had been canceled, and that they are entitled to the benefit of both securities, the condition upon which they were to surrender one never having been performed. This contention is not supported by the facts and circumstances found in this record, nor can we believe that either Mr. Montague, who acted for the National Bank, or Mr. Stivers, whc represented the Savings Bank, mean to have their evidence interpreted as supporting - such a proposition. That these appellants should, under any circumstances, obtain an additional security to that afforded them by the Barton mortgage and the Ward deeds of trust, except upon condition that they should surrender the Barton bonds and the benefit of the Ward assignments, is utterly inconsistent with the whole scheme of settlement which had been presented by them. That they were unwilling to give up the Barton bonds until others had done so is quite reasonable. But it is equally clear that, until they did agree to surrender the Barton bonds, they could obtain no title to the bonds of the new corporation. A consideration of the whole evidence leads us to the conclusion that each of these banks accepted these new securities as a substitute for the old bonds, subject to the condition that all other holders of the old issue of bonds should agree to a like exchange of securities, and that the old or Barton bonds were retained until this condition had been complied with. These were the facts as reported by Special Master Ewing, and were the facts as found by the court below.
The document signed by D. W. Hughes under date of June 1, 1891, pledging, among other collaterals, 48 of the bonds of the Hughes Bros. Manufacturing Company to the City Savings Bank to secure the indebtedness which had been theretofore secured by the bonds of the Hughes Lumber Company and other collaterals, is not hostile to this conclusion. The indebtedness secured by the pledge of June 1, 1891, were the same debts theretofore secured by a pledge of the bonds of the Hughes Lumber Company, together with certain shares of stock in an electric lighting company, and by certain notes secured