100 Ky. 745 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the opinion oe the couet.
This is an appeal from an order of the Barren Circuit Court appointing a receiver of the property of the Mammoth Cave Railroad Company and taking the road out of the hands of the Louisville & Nashville
The petition alleges the execution of the lease by the Mammoth Cave R. R. Co. to the L. & N. R. R. Co. on September 15, 1886. By this lease, after a recital of the mutual benefits to be obtained by the respective parties thereto, the road was leased to the second party for a period of twenty-five years from its completion, the first party agreeing to build the road so as to admit of its operation with reasonable safety and economy, and the second party agreeing to take possession thereof “and furnish the necessary rolling stock without rent, and other material and means therefor, and to operate said railroad, and furnish the officers thereof monthly statements of the earnings and expenses, and after deducting the actual expenses necessary in operating and maintaining the said railroad and the engines and rolling stock needed therefor, to pay over quarterly to first party the net earnings arising from the operation of the said Mammoth Cave railroad. No part of the main office expenses of the second party were to be charged to the operating expenses of the first party. There were a number of other provisions in the lease, as to rates of transportation, and l’ooking to the protection of both parties against competiton.
The petition further avers that on September 1,1886, in order to raise money with which to build the road, the Mammoth Cave R. R. Co. executed a deed of trust
It is further alleged that the Mammoth Cave R. R. Co. is insolvent, unable to pay its floating debts, its bonds or the interest thereon, and is in peril of the breaking up and destruction of its business; that the property embraced by the mortgage will be inadequate to pay the bonds and interest; that its business is decreasing, and that it has nothing with which to pay the principal or interest, and can not borrow; that since the possession of the L. & N. R. R. Co. it has never paid the Mammoth Cave R. R. Co. any net earnings sufficient to pay semi-annual interest; that its monthly statements usually show actual expenses in excess of
It is charged that if the property were properly and frugally managed it would yield a considerable net income over running expenses, but that it is in the hands of parties inimical to the interests of the bondholders; that it is likely the L. & N. R. R. Co. will assert a lien for its claim for operating expenses, superior to the lien of the bondholders.
On account of the dissolution of the trustee and the fact that no successor had been appointed appellees asked to be allowed to proceed in their own right. Two holders of bonds are made parties defendant.
The suit is brought by certain persons claiming to hold |58,000.00 of the bonds. In the body of the petition they pray .judgment for the amount of their unpaid coupons and for a sale of. the property to pay the amount, but nowhere in the petition is there any prayer for a sale of the property to pay the bonds except as it may be implied from the averment that the rights of the parties in interest can not be protected otherwise than by a judicial sale of the premises and property covered by the mortgage.
The deed of trust does not include the rents, profits,
It may be observed here that while the deed of trust: was acknowledged on August 31, 1886, by the trustee, the certificate of acknowledgment by the Mammoth Cave R. R. Co., is dated September 29, after the date-of the lease to the L. & N. R. R. Co. Upon the hearing of the motion for a receiver the testimony of J. Hill Eakins was taken on behalf of the appellees, he being one of the appellees and also vice president and secretary of the Mammoth Cave R. R. Co. The answer of that company was also read as evidence. On the part of the appellants there were read the affidavit of Mr. Smith, the president of the L. & N. R. R. Co., and its answer, counter-claim and cross-petition. . In the answer are included a general and three special demurrers, one of the special demurrers being based upon the theory that the trustee of the deed of trust alone has the right to bring and prosecute an action, for the enforcement of the mortgage lien, and another upon the ground that there is a defect of parties de
It is further averred that while the bonds bear date September 1,1886, no bonds were issued or sold on that day, nor until long after September 15th. It is further averred that the contract of lease was entered into, executed and delivered by the parties thereto at the urgent request of the Mammoth Cave E. E. Co., and with the knowledge and earnest assent of the appellees. It further avers that the road has been operated in as prudent and economical manner as possible and sets up a claim for nearly $5,000 deficit in .the receipts above the actual expenses of operation, and claims a superior lien therefor. Both the answer and the affidavit of Mr. Smith allege that the independent operation of the road would be much less convenient and more expensive than its operation by the L. & N. R. R. Co., and would result in a decrease of the gross revenues.
In Mr. Lacey’s testimony in chief and in rebuttal certain statements are made as to the manner of keeping the accounts by the L. & N. R. R. Co., tending, if com
Upon the hearing the lower court appointed a receiver with full powers in the operation of the road, with power to borrow money if needful, in his judgment, to make payment for rent and other charges, including the rent of locomotives and rolling stock, to pay current necessities,, for labor and supplies, but for no other purposes without an order of the court.
On behalf of appellees it was urged that the trustee,, notwithstanding the provision of the deed of trust,, was not the only person who could maintain the suit for foreclosure, and that it was not necessary that a new trustee should be appointed, as provided in the deed of trust, before such a suit could be brought* Equity will not permit a trust to fail for lack of a trustee. But the other special demurrer raises a more serious question, viz.: That there was a defect of parties defendant unexplained by any averments or any prayer that the bondholders who were made parties be allowed to defend for them.
Appellees claim that this special demurrer can not be here considered, because the record does not show the filing of the demurrers or of the answer in which they were included. As to this, it may be said that none of the pleadings coined in this record are by the-record shown to have been filed; they are, however, re
It is well settled, as claimed by appellees, that the appointment of a receiver is largely in the discretion of the court (Douglas v. Cline, 6 Bush, 608; Harman v. Ky. C. I. & D. Co., 15 R., 12; Woodward v. Woodward, 17 R., 464). In Douglas v. Cline, however, the receivership was not resisted, and in the other two cases the lower court declined to appoint a receiver.
Some stress is put in the argument for appellees