53 F. 174 | 8th Cir. | 1892
On the 6th day of December, 1889, J. H. Van Closter executed and delivered to Sarah A. Havemeyer a mortgage on certain lots in the city of Omaha, Neb., to secure the payment of a promissory note' for the sum of $2,500. The mortgage was recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Douglas county, Neb., on the 17th day of January, 1890. On the 6th of December,
The case was submitted to the circuit court upon the pleadings, the notes and mortgages, and a stipulation of facts signed on behalf of the complainant and the defendant Gray. The court granted a decree wherein it is found that the mortgages are valid liens on the realty; that the defendant Cray has a mechanic’s lien for materials furnished upon the realty covered by the mortgages for the sum of $1,202; that certain other of the defendants have liens for materials furnished; that Cor the sum of $12, being tlie value of the materials furnished by the defendant Cray on the 20th of December, 1889, and before the recording of the mortgages, the said Cray has a lien prior to the mortgages, but that for the remainder of the sum due him. his lien is inferior to (hat of the mortgagees; that, with the exception of the $12 just mentioned, the mechanics’ liens, including that of F. W. Gray, are eqnai in point of time. Based upon these findings, a foreclosure of the mortgages was decreed, it being directed
The appellees, upon appearing in this court, filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that Van Closter, the owner of the realty sought to be subjected to sale, and the mechanics’ lienholders' other than the appellant, are not made parties to the appeal, and therefore this court does not have before it the parties whose interests are directly involved, and whose presence is necessary to the proper disposition of the questions upon which the judgment of this court is invoked. This motion was submitted in connection with the arguments upon the main case, and in support thereof counsel for appellees urge that the decree appealed from is in fact a joint decree in favor of all the mechanics’ lienholders, and therefore all should have joined in the appeal. We do not think this position is maintainable. So far as the mechanics’ liens are concerned, it is not decreed that a lump sum shall be applied to the payment o'f these liens, to be divided pro fata among them, but the amount due each lienholder is separately decreed, and then upon the question of priority it is adjudged that they stand upon an equality. Upon this question of priority the decree is in favor of and is adverse to each one of the lienholders as between himself and the others of this class, and the appellant, Gray, has the right to assert that his lien is paramount to those of the other lienholders, and that the decree is erroneous in not awarding him this priority. Upon that question the appellant is not jointly interested with the other lienholders, but his interest is adverse to them. The contention, therefore, that, being jointly interested, they should have joined in the' appeal, cannot be sustained; but the real difficulty arises upon the point whether this court has before it the parties indispensably necessary to enable this court to pass upon the rights and interests involved in the litigation. It will be remembered that the only parties before this court are the holders of the two mortgages and the appellant, Gray. The latter seeks to have it adjudged by this court — First, that Ms lien is prior to that of the mortgagees; second, that his lien is prior to that of the other mechanics’ lienholders. Upon thé first proposition, the question is whether tMs court should attempt to deal .therewith in the absence of the owner of the realty, J. H. Van Closter. The latter is not personally bound for the payment of the claim held by the appellant, who was a subcontractor under Statler Bros. Under the statutes of Nebraska, the subcontractor may, by observing the requirements of the statute, create a lien upon the property, for the improvement of which the materials were furnished, but he does not become entitled to a personal claim against the owner of the property. Can it be said, therefore, that it
The absence of necessary parties is perhaps the more readily perceivable with regard to the mechanics’ lienholders, who were adjudged to stand on an equality with the appellant. By the decree of the circuit court, it was determined that all the lienholders were entitled to share equally in the proceeds of the sale after the payment of costs, of $12 to appellant, and of the sums due the mortgagees. The appellant now seeks to have it declared that he is entitled to priority over the other lienholders. It is apparent that, if these parties had not been before the circuit court; its decree would not be binding upon them in this particular. That court had the right to adjudicate the question of priority between the several lienholders because they had been made parties to the proceeding, and had been duly served with process. The appellant now seeks to set aside the decree of the circuit court, and to have this court adjudicate anew the question of priority between the several lienholders, without bringing before this court the parties whose rights are to be passed upon and settled by the decree now sought by the appellant. The mortgagees have no interest in that question, and cannot represent the absent parties. Of the persons interested in the matter of priority between the lienholders, there is but one before the court, to wit, the appellant. Upon what theory can it be held that this court ought to proceed to consider the correctness of the decree of the circuit court on the question of the relative priorities of the several lienholders when none of them, save the appellant, would be bound by any decree we might enter? The reasons demanding the enforcement of the general rule that a court should not proceed in a case, unless all the parties whose interests will necessarily be affected by any decree that might be rendered are before the court, are well stated in Gregory v. Stetson, 133 U. S. 579, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 422. See, also, Coiron v. Millaudon, 19 How. 113; Ribon v. Railroad Co., 16 Wall. 446; Williams v. Bankhead, 19 Wall. 563.
In our judgment, under the facts of this case and in the absence of the owner of the realty and the several mechanics’ lienholders who were adjudged by the circuit court to stand on. an equality with appellant, this court should not proceed to adjudicate anew the questions of priority presented by the errors assigned by the appellant. There is, however, one question appearing on the face of this record in which the parties before this court are adversely interested, and which, being a manifest error, can be taken notice of under the provisions of the eleventh rule of this court. The decree, as part of the costs, awards the complainant the sum of $290 as attorneys’ fees, the same being allowed under a provision in the mortgage which declares that, in the event of the foreclosure of the mortgage, a reasonable sum, to be determined by the court, shall be awarded as an .attorney’s fee in the cause. It has been settledoby repeated decisions of the supreme court of the United States that the validity of provisions of this nature is a question of local law in which the federal courts are bound by the rule adopted by the supreme court of the state in which
“The decree below is therefore right in all respects, except in allowing a solicitor’s fee of 8100. The land is in Michigan, the notes and mortgage are made and payable in Michigan, and by the law of Michigan, as settled by repeated and uniform decisions of the supreme court of that state, a stipulation in a mortgage to pay an attorney’s or solicitor’s foe of a fixed sum is unlawful and void,"and cannot, be enforced in a foreclosure, cither under the statutes of the state or by a bill in equity. * * * Upon such a question, affecting the validity and effect of a contract made and to be performed in Michigan, concerning land in Michigan, the law of the state must govern in proceedings to enforce the contract in a federal court held within the state Brine v. Insurance Co. 96 U. S. 627; Insurance Co. v. Cushman, 108 U. S. 51, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 236; Smelting Co. v. Hall, 106 U. S. 86, 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 128. ”
In Dodge v. Tulleys, 144 U. S. 451, 12 Sup. Ct. Rep. 728, the question «ame up in a case appealed fro:t a the circuit court for the district of Nebraska, wherein it was held iiiat -
“There is a stipulation in the trust deed for the payment of an attorney’s fee of 81,000, in case of foreclosure, but such stipulations have been held by the supreme court of Nebraska to be unauthorized. Dow v. Updike, 11 Neb. 95, 7 N. W. Rep. 857; Hardy v. Miller, 11 Neb. 395, 9 N. W. Rep. 475. It seems that, in 1873 an act passed the legislature of Nebraska expressly authorizing in any written instrument for the payment, of money a stipulation for not exceeding ten per cent, as an attorney’s fee in case of suit. Gen. St. Neb. p. 98. Thig act was repealed in 1879. Laws Neb. 1879, p. /8. In the eases cited, the supreme court of the state held that by the repeal of the statute the contract right to recover attornejs' fees was taken away, so, as this court, follows the decisions of the highest court of the state in such matters (Bendey v. Townsend, 109 U. S. 665, 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 482,) the provision in the trust deed for the payment of $1,000 as attorneys’ fees cannot he regarded as of binding force. ”
The court then proceeds to show that it is a general rule of equity that, when a trustee is called up< m to discharge the duties of his trust, a reasonable allowance may be made him for the counsel fees incurred in the proper performance of the trust, and that the right of a court of the United States to make such allowance in a proper case cannot be limited or taken away by state legislation. In the case now before the court, the proceeding for the foreclosure is not brought by a trustee, but by the party directly interested as mortgagee, and the right to an attorney’s fee i-s based only on the stipulation contained in the mortgage. The mortgage is upon realty situated in Nebraska, the debt secured thoieby is payable in Nebraska, and the mortgagor is a resident of that state, and yvas such when the mortgage was executed. The validity of the provision for the allowance of an attorney’s fee is therefore dependent upon the law of that slate, and it is well settled that, since the repeal by the legislature of Nebraska of the act of 1873, an agreement for the allowance of an attorney’s fee is invalid in all mortgages or other instruments executed since the repeal of that act. Dow v. Updike, 11 Neb. 95, 7 N. W. Rep. 857; Hardy v. Miller, 11 Neb. 395, 9 N. W. Rep. 475; Otoe Co. v. Brown, 16 Neb. 395, 20 N. W. Rep. 274; In re Breckinridge, 31 Neb. 489, 48 N. W. Rep. 142. It was clearly error, therefore, to allow any attorney’s fee in this case, other than the $20 docket fee provided for in section 824, Rev. St. U. S. The decree appealed from will therefore be modified by disallowing the attorney’s fee for $290, and in all other respects it will stand affirmed.