after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
*538 The claim of the appellant that his demand, which passed into judgment May 5, 1881, against both the St. Louis and Keokuk Railroad Company and the St. Louis, Hannibal -and Keokuk Railroad' Company, is entitled to payment prior to the bonds secured by the mortgage or trust deed,- would seem to be answered by the dates of the judgment and mortgage respectively. The judgment wаs not rendered against the original company until October 3, 1882, and not against both companies until May 5, 1881. The mortgage was executed on the 1st day of August, 1877, five years before thе first judgment and nearly seven years before the second.
It does not appear in the record precisely what the services were which were rendered by the complainant, or for what purposes advances by him were made. This' is not material, ho-wever, as no claim is made, because of the nature of those services and аdvances, to a lien on the property of the original company, under the statute of the State. It does not appear that any proceedings were takеn to establish such a lien. Independently of that statute, there was no lien upon any property of the railroad company for the demand of the complainant. .It stоod like any ordinary debt against a corporation, which could only be enforced by legal proceedings establishing its validity and amount by judicial determination, and-then by process upon the judgment obtained, in- subordination to any previously existing liens upon the property.
In some States — and this is the case in Missouri — statutes make judgments of their courts liens uрon the real property of the judgment debtor, and the same rule applies in such States to judgments in the courts of the United States. But in all cases the judgments become liens оnly from the time they arc rendered, or notice thereof is.filed in the register’s office of’the county where the property is situated. They are subordinate to any prior mortgage upon the property. This doctrine is so familiar that it is surprising that any other can be supposed to exist. The property of a railroad company is not held under any such trust to apply it to the payment of its debts as to restrict its use for any other lawful purpose, it matters not how meritorious the demand of the creditor may *539 be. He must .obtаin a lien upon the property of the company, or security in some other form, or he will have to .take his chances with all other creditors to obtain payment in thе ordinary course of legal proceedings for the collection of debts.
In
Thompson
v.
White Water Valley Railroad Co.,
decided at the present term,
In Dunham v.
Railway Co.,
. We do not attach any weight to the objection that the transfer by the оld company of its entire property to the new company was illegal and ultra vires, and, therefore, to be disregarded. However such a transfer might be considered in a suit- to sеt it aside, the objection does not lie in the mouth of the appellant, for he has proceeded against the new company ,and obtained, upon the assumed vаlidity of such transfer, a-decree that it pay his judgment, which is founded upon a demand that company agreed to assume, as part of the consideration of the transfer.
• Thеre is no evidence in the record .before us that the parties who took the bonds issued by the St. Louis, Hannibal and Keokuk Railroad Company had any notice, actual or constructive of the demand of the complainant. But if they had, it *541 "would not have affected their rights. That demand was not then reduced to judgment, and created no lien upon the property of the company, nor any restriction upon the company’s right to use it for any lawful purpose. The bonds were given to ráise the necessary funds to complеte the road of the company, and_ the mortgage was executed to secure their payment. They were negotiable instruments, and in the hands of the purchasers cаnnot' be impeached for any neglect of the company issuing-them to pay the demands of other creditors. Ve are ■ unable to perceive any ground upon whiсh their priority over the claim of the appellant can be in any way impaired.
_ We do not question the general doctrine invoked by the appellant, that the prоperty of a railroad company is a trust fund for the payment of its debts, but do not perceive any place for its application here. That doctrine only meаns that the property must first be appropriated to the payment of the. debts of the company before any portion of it can be distributed to the stockholders; it dоes not meaii that the property is so affected by the indebtedness of. the company' that it cannot' be sold, transferred, or mortgaged to
bona fide
purchasers for a ■valuаble consideration, except subject to the liability of being. appropriated to pay that indebtedness. Such a doctrine has no existence. The cases of
Curran
v.
State of
Arkansas,
Judgment affirmed.
