66 F. 224 | 5th Cir. | 1894
(after stating the facts). The contention of the complainant in this suit is that the lots in question did not appertain to the railroad at the time of the sale of the railroad property on the (itli of January, 1882, and therefore did not pass to the purchaser, hut remained the property of the Florida Central Railroad Company and its stockholders. The grounds of the defense are: First, that the complainant has no standing in a court of equity, but that he should have brought an action of ejectment to try title at law; second, that the property in question, the lots in Jacksonville, did appertain to the railroad, and passed by the sale under the deed of foreclosure; and, third, that complaiuant is estopped from setting up title. Although it was strongly contended by the defendant that the complainant was not entitled to the remedy prayed for in a court of equity, but that he should resort to an action of ejectment in a court of law, we fail to find the point discussed at length in the able brief of the complainant, and it was but lightly touched upon in the oral argument. The two grounds upon which it is presumed that; the suit has been brought in equity rather than law are: First, that the complainant alleges that he was acting as trustee, with but an equitable title in part of the stock upon which he was suing; and, second. that he was attempting to recover property of a dissolved cor
The second ground upon which it may be considered that a court of equity might entertain jurisdiction of the case is that the complainant was seeking to recover the property of a dissolved corporation. The principle upon which courts of equity take jurisdiction of causes in which it is sought to follow the property of dissolved corporations, in behalf of creditors of that corporation, is that such property, where held by a legal title, is charged with an implied trust to pay such indebtedness. But it cannot be claimed that this property is so charged. The complainant, as assignee of a pledgee of such stock, can have no greater rights in bringing suit, than could his assignor or the pledgee, and certainly such pledgee can have no greater rights than 'his pledgor, as no party can convey to others greater rights than lie has himself. Trask v. Railroad Co., 124 U. S. 515, 8 Sup. Ct. 574. Nor can the stockholders of a company, as snch, have greater rights in obtaining possession of corporation property than the corporation might have, if in existence. When it appears that the interest: which the complainant has in the shares of stock, instead of being equitable, as alleged in the bill, has become legal by a conveyance and assignment, as shown by the evidence, every equitable feature disappears from the suit,, and, whatever equities might be urged as be? tween the complainant and his cestuis qni trustent, as between him and the defendant there is but the enforcement of a legal title. Hayward v. Andrews, 106 U. S. 672, 1 Sup. Ct. 544. In the case of Howe v. Robinson, 20 Fla. 352, cited by complainant in the support of his right, it was the lien of a prior judgment that was sought to be enforced, and not a legal right. But in this case we fail to find any equitable title whatever. We consider, therefore, that it would he beyond the jurisdiction of a court of equity to grant the relief prayed, although it might be competent to appoint a receiver for tiie purpose of bringing an action at law to determine the legal title. Whether this court should reverse the judgment below dismissing the bill, and direct such appointment, and that the case be permitted to proceed, depends upon the other questions involved.
It has been considered by both parties that the question as to whether these lots in question appertained to the railroad, and therefore passed by the sale, is the important one in the case. Our views do not coincide with those of the complainant, that the burden of proof upon this point is upon the defendant to show that the property passed by the sale, but. the sale being proven and being general, purporting to convey all the property, rights, and franchises of the railroad, and the possession having passed with the sale, and the property being now, and having been for years, in the control of the defendants, and a great part of each lot occupied for railroad purposes, we consider the burden to be upon the
In that case the conduct of those interested, from the time of the mortgage and the sale up to the .time of the suit, was reviewed, and, in closing, the court says: “These remarks are not to show a ratification of a void sale, but, by the united conduct and understanding of all the parties, that no actual appropriation of the lots has ever been made, and that the sale was valid.” The same examination in this case would, we think, show, by the united conduct and understanding of all parties, that there was an actual appropriation of the lots to railroad purposes, and, although not all were required for immediate use, such appropriation has never been abandoned, or the idea entertained that any portion of the property had been or would be separated from the railroad, as held for actual use, and not for speculative purposes. We cannot accept the view that nothing passed by the ■mortgage sale except that property which was the property of the road at the time of the enactment of the statute. The railroad was a continuing property, and after-acquired property and rights which became merged into it, and appropriated for its purposes, became subject to its lien. The lots were purchased for the purpose of furnishing terminal facilities where a contemplated extensive system of roads was intended to reach the deep water of an Atlantic port. Although stretching along one street something over 1,200 feet, the depth of these 12 lots, or distance back from the street to the water, varied, as appears by the maps filed in the case, from about 125 feet to about 200 feet; and, had the road laid its tracks on the dry land of the lots, they would have been occupied for the entire surface, but, being water lots, the railroad was built out, by wharves and piers and by taking earth from some of the lots and filling in, until much of the railroad business is transacted on the extension of these lots. The map shows 11 lines of tracks running over and across these lots or their extensions, with passenger station, freight houses, platforms, etc. ■ Has the railroad company, by thus extending and enlarging these lots, and using more generally the extension than the original land, abandoned the original appropriation, and lost the right to have them considered and treated as railroad appurtenances? We consider not. The riparian rights went with them, and have not been separated from them. The very occupying and extending them for railroad purposes was, we consider, an appropriation. It is true that certain parts of them might be detached and sold without the railroad’s suffering any immediate inconvenience, and the same is probably true of a strip of land 25 feet wide on each side of the track for the entire length of the railroad, but that would not show that it did not appertain to it. The testimony
But the remaining ground of defense against this suit we consider more positive than that the lots were appurtenant to the railroad. Subsequent to the decree of foreclosure of the mortgage under which the sale of 1882 took place, Sir Edward J. Heed purchased, and was, at the time of sale of the road, owner of, 5,110 shares of the stock of the railroad, out of a total of 5,500 shares, and was president of the company. At the sale he purchased the property as sold, and in the organization of the new company, on the 8th day of February, 1882, in the articles of association he recited that he, and those associated with him, had purchased all the franchises, rights, privileges, and property of every description whatever belonging to the Florida Central Railroad Company. This was a positive recital, made in a public document, to be placed on file as the foundation of the incorporation of a new company, to which Reed conveyed by deed all the property thus purchased, and upon the strength of which bonds to the amount of upwards of $2,000,000 were issued and sold. We do not find in the record a copy of the deed from Reed to the newly-organized company, the Central & Western, but in the minutes of the boat'd of directors at which it was presented and entered we find that it is stated as having granted all the rights, privileges, franchises, and property of every description belonging to the aforesaid railroads, one of which was the Florida Central. Reed was at this time the sole owner of the shares of stock in whose behalf this suit is brought. There had, at that time, been no pledge or substitution of any of these shares of stock for the bonds of the Transit Railroad Company, as these bonds were in the hands of the creditors, Donnell, Lawson & Simpson, as late as the 8th July, that year, and by such recital in the articles of the association and the deed of conveyance, and his acquiescence in the possession and control for seven years of said lots, and the numerous transfers of the property, in one of which they are distinctly described as “all the terminal property of said railroad at Jacksonville,” until large amounts of bonds have been issued and sold, into the security of ■which these lots have apparently entered as being railroad property, and so held and occupied, and other interests have intervened, we consider that Reed, or any one claiming by, through, or under him, is estopped from now saying that he only purchased at that sale a part of the property of said railroad, and that a very valuable portion of it yet remains the property of its stockholders, he holding all but one-thirteenth of it. No one taking from him any interest in these shares subsequent to these recitals can take any greater right than he had. Trask v. Railroad Co., 124 U. S. 515, 8 Sup. Ct. 574.
Our conclusion is that upon the first point complainant is not.
Fed. Cas. No. 12,492a.