217 F. 187 | 8th Cir. | 1914
These are appeals from orders of the District Court of the United States for .the District of Kansas made in the adjustment of a conflict of jurisdiction between it and a state court. On January 5, 1912, the state of Kansas brought an action against the Kansas Natural Gas Company and others in the district court of Montgomery county in that state to enforce its anti-trust laws. The company is a Delaware corporation, with business headquarters in Montgomery county. The hearing of the action began September 30, 1912, but before its conclusion and on October 7th McKinney, a creditor holding second mortgage bonds, filed a creditor’s bill against the company in the court below and caused receivers of its property to be appointed. October 19th the Fidelity Title & Trust Company, trustee in the first mortgage of the defendant company, was made a party plaintiff. Shortly afterwards the trustee filed an independent bill in foreclosure. For convenience these suits will be referred to as the foreclosure suit. By proceeding under section 56 of the Judicial Code jurisdiction was taken by the court below of the 'company’s property in Missouri and Oklahoma. On February 15, 1913, the state court concluded its consideration of' the action before it and rendered judgment against the company, appointing receivers of its property in Kansas, directing them in conjunction with the Attorney General to appear in the court below and urge the prior jurisdiction of the state court and the rights of the state of Kansas, making the Kansas City Pipe Line Company a party defendant and restraining it, from litigating elsewhere any matter of its contract with the Kansas Natural Gas Company. February 18, 1913, the Attorney General and the state receivers appeared in the court below qnd applied for possession. It was held, June 5, 1913, they should prevail. 206 Fed. 772, On appeal to this court the order was affirmed. 126 C. C. A. 226; 209 Fed. 300.
The order directed the federal receivers to surrender all the property in Kansas to the state receivers and retained the matter for future directions respecting certain conflicting relations and the moneys on hand from the operation of the business. The mandate of this court was spread on the records of the court below December 30, 1913, and the physical property of the company in Kansas, both owned and leased, was accordingly turned over to the state receivers. There was also paid them the sum of $75,000. The federal receivers re
On February 6, 1914, the court below modified the order of January 24th by limiting the amount of money to be paid over to $600,-000. On March 12th the remaining federal receiver, the others having resigned, was ordered by the court below to continue collecting for all gas theretofore or thereafter sold to purchasers or consumers in St. Joseph, Kansas City, Joplin, and elsewhere in Missouri. From these sources a large part of the income from the entire business was derived. The Attorney General of the state and the state receivers renewed their earlier application for the moneys and complained of the orders of February 6th and March 12th as violative of -the mandate of this court, and also because the federal receiver was allowed to collect for gas which he neither produced, bought, nor paid for,
“Which said money is paid for the express purpose, and for none other, to enable the state receivers of the district court of Montgomery county, Kan.. to operate the entire property and to furnish a gas supply to patrons and consumers at St. Joseph, Mo., Kansas City, Mo., Joplin, Mo., and other places in the state of Missouri and subject to the right of the state court receivers to make further applications for money for said purposes.”
The state receivers appealed from the order except as to the payment of the money. Cause No.^4195. The pipe line company and its mortgage trustee appealed from that part of the order directing the payment of the money. Cause No. 4196. Afterwards the pipe line company and its mortgage trustee prosecuted a further appeal from the orders of January 24th and March 23d (Cause No. 4202), and the state receivers applied for a writ of mandamus to require the judge of the court below to observe the mandate of this court (Cause No. 143, original).
A brief description of the property and business of the Kansas Natural‘Gas Company and the relation of the pipe line company thereto and its place in this litigation will assist the understanding of the controversies before us. The Kansas Natural Gas Company was engaged in the production, purchase, transportation by pipe lines, and marketing of natural gas. It supplied gas for lighting, heating, and manufacturing purposes in about 40 cities and towns in Kansas and Missouri. .. Its system of pipe lines, including those leased from other companies, extends from the Hogshooter gas field in Oklahoma, through eastern Kansas and across the Missouri river above Leavenworth, to St. Joseph, Mo., a distance of about 250 miles, with various branches therefrom, to Joplin, in southwestern Missouri, and the cities and towns in that neighborhood, to Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas City, Kan., and to Lawrence, Topeka, Leavenworth, and Atchison, Kan. Some of the gas is still obtained from wells in Kansas, but most of it from wells in Oklahoma. Much the larger part of the pipe line system is in Kansas; the lines into Missouri, particularly at Kansas City, being short in comparison. All the gas for the Missouri cities and towns goes through trunk pipe lines iii Kansas. Gas for the larger cities in both Kansas and Missouri is generally sold to local companies formerly in the artificial gas business and is distributed by them to consumers.
Because of the nature of the natural gas business, the necessity of shifting the pipe lines and compressor plants to reach new sources of supply as gas wells give out, the physical interconnection of the various pipe lines owned and leased, the fact that the principal source of supply is in Oklahoma, while a large proportion of the sales is in Missouri, and most of the trunk lines are in Kansas, all agree that the system operated by the Kansas Natural Gas Company should be regarded as an integral indivisible unit. Both the court below and the state court so found in express terms. The federal receivers and the
“And it seems to be a conceded fact that the dismemberment of this system ■by segregating the parts in the different states, or by taking from it the fixed properties of the Kansas City Pipe Line Company, would wholly disable the entire system, confiscate the values of the several parts, and deprive a million people of a prime necessity of life.” ,
Counsel for the protective committee of holders of the second mortgage bonds of the Kansas Natural Gas Company say that:
“A perpetuation of the dual receivership of the Kansas Natural Gas Company would wreck the property. * * . * Interests of all parties concerned can best be-served by making the management of the Kansas receivers exclusive over all the property, including money, now in the hands of the court or of the federal receivers.”
Counsel for the other parties are hardly less positive.
About 35 per cent, of the pipe line system operated by the Kansas Natural Gas Company and a substantial part of the compressor plants and appliances necessary for its operation belong to the pipe line company. It owns the double line extending from Olathe, Kan., a short distance into Missouri at Kansas City, and the contracts with the local distributing companies of Kansas City, Kan., and Kansas City, Mo., are in its name. It also owns a trunk line closely paralleling one of the Kansas Natural Gas Company from Olathe to the northeastern part of Wilson county, Kan., and the double trunk line thence to Grabham in Montgomery county. The cities and towns in southern Kansas east of Montgomery county and those in southwestern Missouri are served through lines owned by the Kansas Natural Gas Company, as also are Topeka, Lawrence, Leavenworth, and Atchison, Kan., and St. Joseph, Mo. The lines of the Kansas Natural Gas Company extend but a short distance into Oklahoma. They connect there with the lines held under lease from another company, for which the state court has also appointed a receiver. To the southern end of these lines have been attached between 15 and 20 miles of pipe belonging to the pipe line company, removed there from Kansas.
The Kansas Natural Gas Company was organized in 1904. It has ■a capital stock of $12,000,000. June 20, 1904, it issued $4,000,000 of first mortgage bonds, and on March 1, 1906, an equal amount of second mortgage bonds. Both mortgages contain sinking fund provisions for the retirement of the bonds in annual installments in 12 years from their dates, respectively. The pipe line company, though having an independent corporate origin, was organized as an auxiliary of the Kansas Natural Gas Company. The latter owns one-half of its capital stock of $5,000,000. On August 1, 1907, the pipe line company issued $4,745,000 of mortgage bonds maturing annpally in series, the last in 1918. The Fidelity Trust Company, one of the appellants, is the trustee in the mortgage. After the appointment of the federal receivers of the Kansas Natural Gas Company October 9, 1912, default was made in interest, sinking fund, and principal installments of the bonds of both companies.
The questions presented by the appeals before us are, in short: What should be done with the money, and the property in Missouri and Oklahoma, in the custody of the federal receiver? What should be done with the claims of the pipe line company? The pipe line company objects to the payment of any money or the further surrender'of property to the state receivers until its demands under the lease are satisfied. Its position is that the court below had jurisdiction of all the property owned and leased by the Kansas Natural Gas Company until the part in Kansas was surrendered; that the federal receivers were rightfully in possession of and operating it; that the remaining federal receiver still has the property in Missouri and Oklahoma; that the state court has no jurisdiction outside of Kansas, and its receivers can exercise no authority beyond the borders of that state; that the property in Missouri and Oklahoma cannot be
Our conclusions may be briefly stated. The mere pendency of the action in the state court was not an obstacle to the appointment of receivers by the court below. The court below had jurisdiction of the parties before it and of the subject-matter, and, were there no other reason for its action, the trustee in the first mortgage of the Kansas Natural Gas Company had a right at once to impound the income from the mortgaged property, the state court not having yet acted. There was no conflict until it acted. The jurisdiction in Kansas was properly extended to Missouri and Oklahoma. When the state court appointed receivers, their superior right to the property in Kansas then,arose, because of the nature of the action there and its prior pendency. That right was not self-executing, but in the orderly administration of justice was asserted by application in the court below. These principles were fully recognized in the opinion of the state court. The court below has the right to retain the foreclosure suit and await the progress and disposition of the action in the state court, with power to make such orders and decrees as future exigencies may require. When it surrendered the property in Kansas to the state receivers, it did not thereby lose the jurisdiction in Missouri and Oklahoma obtained under section 56 of the Judicial Code. The jurisdiction of the state court is confined to Kansas, and the authority of its receivers, as such, is no longer than the arm of the court. But their authority may be enlarged by agreement of the parties in interest, when agreeable to the court that appointed them, and not contrary to the laws of -the states where the property is located, nor inconsistent with a prior jurisdiction. In such case they depend on convention rather than the force of judicial process.
The motion to dismiss in case No. 4179 is denied. The order of January 24, 1914, should be modified by making it additionally specific that the state receivers, with the express authority of the state court, accept the property and money subject to all lawful liens and claims arising under or by virtue of the receivership in the court below, or otherwise. The property in Missouri and Oklahoma and the money, less the amount of taxed costs and allowances, should be surrendered to the state receivers, upon their receipt, authorized by the state court and according to the order of January 24, 1914, as modified. As so modified; the order is affirmed. The other orders of the court below which are involved in these appeals are reversed, except so far as they direct the payment of money to the state receivers. The application for a writ of mandamus is denied, at the cost of petitioners. The matters involved in the appeals are remanded to the court below for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.