8 Colo. App. 504 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
While the authorities are not entirely in harmony respecting the practice which must be adopted in order to successfully contend for the dismissal of an action because of the want of authority on the part of the attorney to commence it, we can affirm the ruling with very little difficulty. We do not attempt to determine whether the Railroad Company was a necessary or an indispensable part}*-, nor that the motion would not lie if it appeared the attorney had authority to proceed on its behalf in beginning the suit. It is quite pos
On principle, there should be no trouble with this proposition. While it is the privilege of the defendant to question the authority of the attorney who has brought the suit, his acts may be adopted; and, on general principles, an act ratified is the full equivalent of an act done under antecedent authority. The general law of agency disposes of the contention. We think the court was right in refusing to dismiss the suit.
The questions presented on the demurrer are of much greater difficulty, and of veiy large importance. In the numberless foreclosure proceedings brought against railroad companies with which the state and federal courts have been so largely occupied for many years, some phases of the question have come up and been frequently decided, yet the most difficult branch of the inquiry would seem only to have come before the courts of one state for adjudication. This does not of necessity signify that it has infrequently been presented to the profession. It may be that the particular remedy has not been often invoked, because the general professional judgment may have been against the action. At all events, we are so thoroughly satisfied with the basis on
The rights and remedies of mortgagor and of mortgagee at the common law, and generally under the statutes and practice of the states, are tolerably well settled. Except as varied by statute or practice, the mortgagee may pursue any one of several remedies. He may take possession and apply the rents and profits of the estate to the liquidation of the debt, or he may foreclose the mortgage, or sue on the bond or note. Speculation respecting the existence of one or all of these remedies in Colorado would be profitless, and the principle only is stated because it illustrates the general notion of all the decisions wherein it is adjudged the holder of the promise may sue at law and get judgment on his debt, or foreclose his security at his option. This is really the-basis of all those cases which hold that wherever one holds securities, whether of this class or any other, he may sue the debtor and obtain judgment, though he may not interfere with the property which is covered by the security. This rule is enforced in some of the cases and recognized in others. The authorities on which the appellant relies directly adjudicating the right of .the holder of the debt to sue at law rest on this doctrine, but they go no farther than to adjudge the general right to belong to the holder of the debt to sue at law on his obligation. Many of them undoubtedly hold that notwithstanding the mortgage may cover the rents, income, and profits of the company, these are not bound by the security, but the corporation has a right to devote them to its general purposes in the payment of its current obligations to the same extent as though they had not been included within the terms of the instrument. The cases also hold that this general right on the part of the mortgagor to enjoy the rents of his estate preserves the income to the railroad company freed from the obligation of the security, unless there has been some attempt on the part of the trustee or the bondholder to sequester the property and the income thereby become applicable to the payment of the security. Though
Many other authorities hold this same general doctrine. None are more exhaustive and satisfactory than these, and the opinion is therefore left unincumbered by the citation of the long line of cases which announce this proposition. It must be observed that the right to maintain the suit was either limited to those persons who come within the description of general creditors, or the right was limited to the seizure of property which was not embraced in the security. The right to maintain the suit and to prosecute it to judgment, so far as we have been able to learn, is always subject to one or the other of these limitations, and where neither the one nor the other exist, the right to prosecute the suit to judgment and to collect has never been affirmed.
This same eminent authority has likewise settled the right to maintain such a suit as that brought by the Railroad Company against Roberts. It has been pretty generally held that where there is an attempt by one of the creditors to the prejudice of those of his class, or by creditors generally whose rights are protected by the security, to interfere with the mortgaged property, an injunction to protect the others will be maintained. Macalester's Admr. v. Maryland, 114 U. S. 598; Gilman v. The Ill. & Miss. Telegraph Co., supra.
The only question remaining unsettled respects the real basis of the suit, to wit, the right of the trustee and the Railroad Company to restrain the individual bondholder from enforcing a judgment against the income, regardless of any
According to the force and effect of this decision, the earnings of the company are subject to its control as against the bondholders, rvho have no right to appropriate it to the payment of their security, so long as there are outstanding debts which are unliquidated, and which equitably have a right to have that income applied to the satisfaction of their claims before the bondholder may compel its appropriation to the liquidation of his debt. If this be true, it is not easy to see on what principle the bondholder may insist on his right to bring an action at law on the overdue coupon and seize by execution that which he might not appropriate if he intended to enforce his security, on which he has agreed to rely. The remedy of the bondholders for the enforcement of their debt, which is represented by the bonds and coupons, is through the trustee only, and by the adoption of some one of the remedies for which the security provides. Bradley v. Chester Valley Ry. Co., 36 Pa. St. 141; Commonwealth v. Susquehanna & Delaware River R. R. Co., 122 Pa. St. 306; Addison et al. v. Lewis et al., 75 Va. 701.
This in no wise infringes on the right of the general creditor to bring his action and collect his judgment, wherever he is able to establish a debt in his favor. The limitation is only operative and applicable to the bondholders, who are a numerous class which has accepted the security for the payment of the debts which provides a particular remedy to which they must look for the enforcement of these obligations. The character of these securities, their immense number, the diversity of their holdings, as well as the preservation of the mutual rights and obligations of the Railroad Company and the creditor, require the application of this
The judgment of the court below was in accordance with these views, and it will accordingly be affirmed.
Affirmed.