64 F. 499 | 9th Cir. | 1894
In the year 1881, Moran Bros., the appellants in this case, were the owners of 310 bonds of $1,000 each of the Oregon & Nevada Railroad Company, which bonds were secured by a mortgage deed of trust to the Union Trust Company of New York. The .total issue of the bonds was 600, but the validity of the remaining 290 was denied by Moran Bros. In March, 1883, the trust company began a suit in the United States circuit court for Nevada to foreclose the deed of trust and sell the mortgaged property, and to have the proceeds of the sale applied to the 310 bonds held by Moran Bros., and such other bonds, if any, as had been legally issued. The trust company and the railroad company were the only parties to the suit. On April 14, 1883, and while that suit was pending, Moran Bros., as complainants, brought, in the same
Whether there was error in enteriug the order and decree subsequent to the decree of February 2,1891, depends upon whether or not the decree of that date was final, and- was such as to carry out in all respects the decree and mandate of the supreme court. The decision of the supreme court was that the appellees herein- were entitled to their pro rata share of the proceeds of the sale, and the mandate required that such execution and proceedings be had in the circuit court as ought to be had in conformity with the decree and the opinion of the supreme court. In short, the mandate directed the circuit court to take such steps as should be necessary to place the appellees
The appellants were allowed, under the permission of the court, to make other assignments of error, one of which is that the appel-lees are not entitled to the relief afforded by the amended decree, for the reason that such relief is not within the issues made in the pleadings, since the appellees were content to answer the bill, denying the complainants’ equities, and filed no cross hill asking for affirmative relief. The answer, as we.have already seen, declared affirma
“Although a defendant can, by his answer, obtain the benefit of any defense he may have against the plaintiff's claim, he can, except in a very few cases, obtain no relief against the latter in the same suit beyond what results necessarily from the denial of the prayer of the bill.”
In Bradford v. Bank, 13 How. 69, the court said:
“The more modern course of proceeding is to dispense with the cross bill, and make the same decree upon the answer to the original bill that would bo made if a cross bill had been filed, if the defendant submits in his answer to a performance of the real agreement between the parties. The answer is viewed in 1he light of a cross bill, and becomes the foundation for a proper decree by the court.”
But, in any view of the case, the objection that the affirmative relief which was prayed for in the answer should have been sought by a cross bill is one that could be waived, and an objection upon that' ground, first made after the entry of a decree of the supreme court decreeing defendants to be entitled to the relief so prayed for, certainly comes too late. Kelsey v. Hobby, 16 Pet. 269, 277.
It is next contended that the decree in the foreclosure suit, holding the bonds of the appellants to be a first lien upon the mortgaged property, estops the appellees to enforce their decree in this suit. It is urged that the bondholders were all represented by the trustee in the foreclosure suit; that the decree in that suit remains unap-pealed from, and unreversed; and that the question of the validity of all the bonds was there litigated and determined. The appellees cannot be said to have been parties to the foreclosure suit in any sense other than that the complainant therein, the trustee, represented the holders of all the bonds for the purpose of foreclosure. The trustee sustained that relation only for the enforcement of the lien and the collection of the debt. So far as concerned the debtor and other lien holders, if any there were, it represented all the bondholders
H, is further contended that the court erred in rendering a personal judgment against the appellants for the proportionate amount due the appellees upon their bonds, and interest thereon, it is said that Moran Bros, paid, not money, but bonds, for the mortgaged property, and that it is not, within the issues presented in this case to enter a, personal judgment, against them for money, and enforce its payment by execution. In tin; theory of the law the sale was made for money, and the purchase price was paid in money, and paid into court. The decree ordering the sale directed that tin; proceeds be brought into court, and held for disbursement according to the further order and decree of the court. Bubsequentlv the orden* of distribution was made decreeing that the money be paid first to the costs of sale; second, to the complainants’ costs of suit; third, to an attorney’s fee for complainants; and, fourth, to the payment of íhe 310 bonds of the complainants, if. may be true that the complainants, in making the purchase, paid no money to ihe master who made the sale, save; and exc<;pt sufficient to ceiver the costs, and that payment of the remainder of the; purchase price; was made by the; surrender of their bonds; but that fact eloes not altee; t the question mielen1 consideration. If the complainants, under the terms of the mortgage1 and the decree, we*re; permit(e;d to pay in bonds, it was for their conveniene;e only. If the circuit court had arrived at a different conclusion concerning the appellees’ bonds, and had decreed in the orden* of distribution that they share equally with the others, Moran Bros, would have beam required to pay into court at that time; a sum of money su Hieden t for that purpose. From the decision of the
An appeal was taken from this decree to the supreme court, complainants in their assignment of errors alleging that the decree should have been in their favor, “for the reason that the term had elapsed at which said original decree was made, and the said circuit court had lost jurisdiction of said suit, and had no power or authority to modify or amend said original decree, or to make any order or decree in said suit in any manner affecting the rights of the parties herein.” The supreme court dismissed the appeal because of the absence of a formal certificate of the “question of jurisdiction,” which precluded any review of a cause directly appealed from the circuit court, under the fifth section of the act of March 3, 1S91, on the ground that the jurisdiction of that court was in issue. 151 U. S. 329, 14 Sup. Ct. 354.