119 F. 391 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana | 1902
This is a contest between two receivers, appointed by different courts, each claiming the right to the possession and control of the assets of the defendant corporation. To show the points in controversy, it is necessary to state the facts as shown by the pleadings and the evidence offered at the hearing.
The parties to the immediate controversy are J. J. Lewis, who was
On September 25, 1902, D. R. Lewis, a citizen of the state of North Carolina, and W. P. Lewis, a citizen of the state of Alabama, residing in the Southern district of that state, filed their bill -in the United States circuit court for the Southern district of Alabama, against the American Naval Stores Company, a corporation organized under the laws of New Jersey. Plaintiffs are stockholders in the defendant corporation, having $20,000 of stock, and are creditors of the corporation to the amount of $2,650. The capital stock of the corporation is $250,000, but only $106,000 of the stock has been issued and paid for. The debts of the corporation amount to about $100,000. Its assets consist of real estate, part of which is situated in the Southern district of Alabama and part in the Eastern district of Louisiana,—that in Alabama worth about $3,834.48, and that in Louisiana worth about $12,659.74; of bills receivable and accounts, secured and unsecured, amounting to about $125,000; of rosin in Florida worth about $8,000, in Illinois, worth $18,000, and in Kentucky, worth $5,000; and other personal property in Mobile and in New Orleans. These facts appear by the bill, which elaborately states the grounds and reasons why it became and is necessary to appoint a receiver, and why it would be to the interest and advantage of the stockholders and creditors of the corporation to appoint one. The prayer is that a receiver may be appointed to take possession and control of all the assets, credits, and property belonging to the defendant company, and that the company may be liquidated, adjusted, and wound up under the supervision of the court, and for an injunction restraining any and all parties from prosecuting or instituting any suits against the defendant company, and for general relief. A subpoena in equity was issued on the day the bill was filed, and served on that date. On the same day (September 25, 1902) the defendant, the American Naval Stores Company, answered the bill, admitting its allegations, and consenting and agreeing that a receiver be appointed. It is shown in the answer that the board of directors of the- defendant company, having had notice of such billf had authorised and directed the president to file an answer consenting to the appointment of a receiver. The answer is under seal of the defendant corporation, and is verified by the president. The defendant corporation had complied with'the constitution and laws of the state of Alabama by filing in the office of the secretary of state a certified copy of its articles of incorporation, designating its known place of business in Mobile, Ala., and an agent on whom process might be served. A foreign corporation may be sued in any co'unty in Alabama where it does business. Const. Ala. 1901, art. 12, § 232; Ex parte
The claim and title to the assets asserted by the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company as receiver must now be stated. Its claim is asserted in two separate petitions, which will be considered together. On September 26, 1902, Charles E. Pearce, a citizen of Mobile, Ala., filed a petition against the American Naval Stores Company in the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, La. He is a stockholder in the defendant company to the amount of $1,000, being the owner of one share. The petition alleges that the company has assets in New Orleans, and that the president and secretary of the company have resided there during the last 18 months, and that none of the officers of the corporation are domiciled in New Jersey, except one director, who has never been present at any of the meetings of the directors, and who was elected and holds office solely to comply with the statute of New Jersey, which requires that one director of a corporation created under its laws should be a resident of the state. Irregularities in the management of the company are then alleged, and it is prayed that an injunction should be issued enjoining and restraining the defendant corporation and its agent from selling, pledging, or
1. The United States circuit court for the Southern district of Alabama unquestionably had jurisdiction of the case made by the bill. The fact that the defendant corporation was chartered under the laws of New Jersey does not, under the pleadings, affect the question of jurisdiction. If it be conceded that the corporation could not be sued, without its consent, except in New Jersey, the record in .this case shows that it submitted to the jurisdiction of the court. It has been held by the supreme court that exemption from being sued out of the district of its domicile is a privilege which a corporation may waive, and which is waived, by pleading to- the merits. It is so held in Trust Co. v. McGeorge, 151 U. S. 129, 14 Sup. Ct. 286, 38 L. Ed. 98, in which case a receiver was appointed for a defendant foreign corporation. The American Naval Stores Company having appeared and voluntarily submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the court,' its action cannot be overruled at the instance of a stockholder or creditor, who was not a party to the original suit, but who has been permitted to intervene. Trust Co. v. McGeorge, supra; Railway Co. v. McBride, 141 U. S. 127, 11 Sup. Ct. 982, 35 L. Ed. 659; Ex parte Schollenberger, 96 U. S. 369, 24 L. Ed. 853; Bank v. Morgan, 132 U. S. 141, 10 Sup. Ct. 37, 33 L. Ed. 282; 5 Thomp. Corp. § 6860; Winans v. Navigation Co., 6 Blatchf. 215, Fed. Cas. No. 17,862.
2. The decree appointing J. J-. Lewis receiver vested in him a qualified title to the property of the corporation, together with the right of possession for the purpose of administration. 5 Thomp. Corp. § 6918. By this is not meant that the ownership of the property is-changed, or even the right to possession as between the parties. The effect of the appointment is to put the property, from the time of the appointment, in his custody as an officer of the court for purposes of administration, and for the benefit of the party ultimately shown to be entitled to it. Union Bank v. Kansas City Bank, 136 U. S. 223, 10 Sup. Ct. 1013, 34 L. Ed. 341. The right to obtain the custody, control, and possession of all the property within the jurisdiction of the court making the appointment is conferred on the receiver by the decree.
3. In Booth v. Clark, 17 How. 322, 335, 15 L. Ed. 164, it was held that the appointment of a receiver by a court of chancery under a creditors’ bill does not confer the right to sue in a foreign jurisdiction. In that case, which was decided in 1854, Mr. Justice Wayne said: “Our industry has been tasked unsuccessfully to find a case in which, a receiver has been permitted to sue in a foreign jurisdiction for the property of the debtor.” That case has been often cited to sustain the proposition that a receiver appointed in one state has no right to sue in another state. The doctrine is generally recognized that a foreign-receiver has no right to sue in another state, but, while the right is denied, the modern practice is to permit him to bring such suits, on. the ground of comity, in all cases where such permission will not conflict with the rights of citizens or creditors in the state where the suit
4. But Lewis’ claim as receiver to hold the property against the contention of the receiver of the state court is not based alone on the decree of the circuit court of the Southern district of Alabama. On the same day that that decree was entered, a decree was rendered on ancillary proceedings in equity in the United States circuit court for the Eastern district of Louisiana and in other districts of the Fifth judicial circuit, as stated above. This procedure and practice of bringing auxiliary suits originated from the limitations imposed upon the territorial jurisdiction of the circuit courts, and from the fact that many railroads run into or through two or more states, constituting one property and one continuous line. 2 Bates, Fed. Eq. Proc. 617; Southern Ry. v. Carnegie Steel Co., 176 U. S. 257, 20 Sup. Ct. 347, 44 L. Ed. 458; Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. Northern Pac. Ry. (C. C.) 72 Fed. 26. While the practice is especially applicable to such cases in which the title to real estate in different jurisdictions will be conveyed, it is applied also to cases involving the property of corporations engaged in business and owning property in different judicial districts and in different states. The courts in which the auxiliary suits are brought are entirely independent in fact of the court of primary jurisdiction. The end to be secured—the collection of all the assets of the corporation, and their uniform and equitable administration and distribution—moves the discretion of the court to treat its jurisdiction as ancillary, and to aid in the collection of the assets, and to transmit them to the court of primary jurisdiction; and this course secures equality among creditors and stockholders and economy in the administration. Shinney v. Building Co. (C. C.) 97 Fed. 9; Towle v. Society (C. C.) 60 Fed. 131; Miles v. Association (C. C.) 95 Fed. 919.
5. The first suit was brought in the circuit court of the United States for the Southern district of Alabama. That court has been recognized as the court of primary jurisdiction by the several federal courts in the
“But in view of what has transpired in these foreclosure proceedings,— especially in view of the fact that a portion of line of road owned by the Northern Pacific Railroad Company was and is within the state of Wisconsin, and at the time of the filing of the creditors’ bill (in which the trustee in the mortgage was a eoplaintiff) the Northern Pacific Railroad Company was operating its road through the Eastern district of Wisconsin, although that part of its line so operated belonged to another company, and was under lease to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company for ninety-nine years,—and in view of the further fact that the railroad company entered its appearance, and assented to the act of the circuit court for the Eastern district of Wisconsin in taking jurisdiction, and as such exercise of jurisdiction has been recognized by the circuit court in every district along the line of the Northern Pacific Railroad, and all parties, for the space of about two years, during which time many orders in the course of administration have been entered, we are of opinion that the circuit court for the Eastern district of Wisconsin has jurisdiction to proceed to a decree of foreclosure which will bind the mortgagor company and the mortgaged property, and ought, therefore, to be recognized by the circuit courts of every district along the line of the road as the court of primary jurisdiction; and that proceedings in the latter court, while protecting the rights of local creditors, should be ancillary in their character, and subordinate to the proceedings in the court of primary jurisdiction.”
In view of the facts shown by the record, we think the court in which the first bill was filed should be recognized as the court of primary jurisdiction. 2 Bates, Fed. Eq. Proc. § 617.
6. But the claim of the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company does not rest alone on the decree of the New Jersey federal court. On September 26, 1902,—one day after the date of the decree of the federal court in Alabama,—Charles E. Pearce, a citizen of Mobile, Ala., living within the jurisdiction of that court, filed a petition in the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, La., against the defendant corporation. He sued as stockholder. His suit resulted in an injunction granted that day, and in service and citation served on September 27, 1902, and in the appointment of the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company as receiver.
The Alabama federal court first obtained jurisdiction by the filing of the bill and service of process, and by first appointing a receiver, and also by obtaining, through its receiver, actual possession of the property involved before the filing of the petition and service of process thereon in the state court. By the application, therefore, of any one of the rules stated, the Alabama federal court first acquired jurisdiction ; and, having acquired jurisdiction of the controversy, and possession, through its receiver, of the property involved, the subsequent proceedings and decree in the state court conferred no authority or right on the receiver appointed by' the latter court to take or obtain by suit the possession of the property. Gluck & B. Rec. (2d Ed.) 97.
A decree will be entered denying the petitions of the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company. Petitions denied.