delivered the opinion of the court.
The decree made below is assailed here for several reasons. The first is, that the court had no jurisdiction of the suit, in consequence of the want of proper and necessary citizenship of the parties. This objection was not taken in the Circuit Court, but it is of such a nature, that, if well founded, it must be regarded as fatal- to the decree. The bill avers that Dows and Winston, two of the complainants, are citizens and residents of the State of New York, and that Burnes, the other complainant, is a citizen and resident of the State of Missouri. The two original defendants, the Chicago and South-western Railway Company, and the Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Railroad Company, are averred to be citizens of the State of Iowa. Were this all that the pleadings exhibit of the citizenship of the parties, it would not be enough to give the Circuit Court jurisdiction of the case. In
The Lafayette Insurance Company
v.
French et al.,
The next objection urged against the decree of the court below is, that it is void so far as it directed the usual foreclosure and sale of property not within the territorial jurisdiction of the court. A part of the Chicago and South-western Railway is in the State of Missouri, and the mortgage which the bill sought to have foreclosed covered that part, as well as the part in the State of Iowa. The court decreed a sale of the entire property covered by the mortgage, and dirеcted the master, who-was ordered to make the sale, to execute a good and sufficient deed or deeds to the purchaser. It also declared that after the sale both the defendant corporations and thp complainants’ trustees named in the mortgage, as well as all persons claiming under them or either of them, be barred and foreclosed from-' all interest, estate, right, claim, or equity of redemption of, in, and to the property, reserving, .however, the rights of the holders of the bonds and coupons secured by the' first mortgage, then remaining outstanding and unpaid. ■ It directed that the two-defendant corporations should surrender to the purchaser the property sold and conveyed, upon the execution, approval,, and delivery of the master’s deed-; and that, as further assurance, the Chicago and South-western Railway Company should, on the approval and delivery of the master’s deed, convey all the property therein described to the purchaser,-by their good and suffi-' cient deed.
The next objection urged by the appellants is, that the bill for a foreclosure and all the proceedings therein were collusive. It is said the suit was instituted by collusion between the trustees and the Rock Island and South-western Railroad Companies, for the purpose of destroying the lien of the Atchinson branch bondholders on the main line of the South-western Railway, and to enable the Rock Island company to obtain the title to the main linе, discharged from any lien or claim on the part of such bondholders. After careful examination of the evidence, we have failed to find any thing that justifies this objection. And certainly, if there was collusion in bringing and conducting the suit, the appellants have not been injured by it. They were permitted to come in as parties defendant, and they had full opportunity to assert their equities.
The fourth objection is general. It is, that, at the time of filing the bill, no right of foreclosure existed in favor of the complainant trusteеs for the benefit of the Chicago and Rock Island Railway Company, or, if such a right did exist, that it had been waived. In respect to this objection we have to
But, in fact, there was no lease, nor any agreement for a lease, that could be enfоrced specifically. The language of the agreement of Oct. 1, 1869, and that of the agreement of July 27, 1871, warrant no interpretation that makes them a lease in law, or in equity. The first, it is true, contemplated the possibility of a lease of the main line, if the terms could be agreed upon; and the latter provided that when such lease should be agreed upon, if ever, it should also embrace the branch line. But the terms never were agreed upon. On the thirtieth day of October, 1871, at a meeting of the exеcutive committee of the Rock Island company, Messrs. Scott and Riddle were appointed a sub-committee “ to agree upon the basis of a contract for a running arrangement between the company and the South-western, with directions to report to the general committee when an arrangement should be agreed upon.” On the 4th of December, 1871, a proposition was.submitted by that sub-committee to the officers of the South-western, and accepted by them. It was a proрosition for a lease. But the sub-committee had no authority to agree for the Rock Island company to take a lease, and when, afterwards, they reported their action to the general committee, that committee refused to confirm it. It is vain, therefore, to contend that there was a lease, or any agreement for a lease, that can be enforced. And, even if there was, there is no evidence that one of its terms was that the rent should be sufficient for the payment, аnd should be applied to the payment of the Atchinson branch bonds.
It is next insisted on behalf of the appellants that the Rock Island company could not ask for a foreclosure of the mortgages until it had accounted for and applied the stock of the South-western company to its indemnification for its guaranty, for which purpose it held such stock as security. The company did hold a large amount of that stock. Whether it held it as an indemnity for the liabilities it had assumed, we do not care to inquirе. Assuming that it did, the fact is quite
The fifth particular in which the' decree is alleged to have been erroneous is, that it denied the relief for which the appellants prayed in their cross-bill. That relief was the enforcement of what is called the lease contract of Dec. 4, 1871, or the enforcement of the contract of July 27, 1871, by a lease of the branch line, on terms and conditions to be derived from the contract of Oct. 1, 1869; that is to say, the rental to be paid by the Rock Island company to be an amount sufficient to guarantee the principal, or at least the interest, of the Atchinson branch bonds. The answer to this is what we have heretofore said. There Avas no lease, nor any contract which bound the Rock Island company to take a lease, much less to pay a rental sufficient to guarantee the prinсipal or interest of the Atchinson branch bonds, or to apply the rent to the payment of that principal or interest.
The appellants also, in their cross-bill, prayed in the alternative that the bonds of the branch road, held by them, might be deemed to have been obtained under false and fraudulent pretences, and that the proceeds thereof were paid out by the Rock Island company knowingly, fraudulently, and in violation of a trust assumed by them, and that the said company might be decreed to pay to them the par value of the same and interest.
We have sought in vain for any evidence that would justify a decree that the Rock Island company obtained the bonds of the branch road by fraudulent pretences, or that it knowingly, fraudulently, and in violation of any trust assumed by it, paid out the proceeds of sale of the bonds. By the provisions of the branch mortgage the Rock Island company was made the custodian of the bonds, with power and direction to pay them and their proceеds to the president or other duly authorized agent of the South-western company, in three contingencies: First, upon the delivery. of an invoice of articles purchased, approved by the president; second, upon the presentation of monthly estimates by the engineer óf the South-western of work done and materials fur
The last objection to the decree is, that the relief prayed for by the cross-bills of the two defendant railroad companies should not have been granted, for the following reasons: 1st, If the original suit fails for want of jurisdiction, so must the cross-bills. 2d, The cross-bills were nullities, because filed without leave of the court, and because not mаking the intervening bondholders parties. 3d, Because collusive. .We have seen thp court had jurisdiction of the original suit. The permission of the court to file the cross-bills must be presumed from its action upon them, and the intervening bondholders were nob parties or necessary parties when the bills were filed. They became parties to the original bill, but they did not ask to be made parties to the cross-bills of the defendant corporations. That the cross-bills were collusive in their origin, purpose, and cоnduct, if such was the fact, which we do not perceive, is of no importance, since the appellants had an unobstructed opportu
The appellants are, no doubt, unfortunate. It may be that they purchased their bonds expecting that the Rock Island company woidd protect them, either by taking a lease of the branch road, or by holding the purchase-money of the bonds and expending it for their security. But the expectation of a guaranty cannot be treated as a guaranty itself. Decree affirmed.
