154 F. 629 | 8th Cir. | 1907
The question which this appeal presents is whether or not the Rodger Ballast Car Company, a corporation, had a lien superior in equity to those of the bondholders secured by two prior mortgages upon the property of the Omaha, Kansas City & Eastern Railroad Company which were foreclosed in the court below. The question was presented by an intervening petition and was decided after, the foreclosure sale. The record is voluminous, but in our view of the facts, all of which have been carefully considered, these alone are material to the determination of the case: The Eastern Railroad Company had a railroad about 34 miles in length and a lease of the railroad of the Quincy, Omaha & Kansas City Railroad Company, which was about 134 miles long, and it was operating both of these railroads. In 1896 and 1897 it had given two mortgages upon
In Illinois Trust & Sav. Bank v. Doud, 44 C. C. A. 889, 414, 105 Fed. 123, 148, 52 L. R. A. 481, this court reviewed with some care the decisions of the Supreme Court prior to the year 1901 upon the right of the unsecured creditor of a quasi public corporation to a preference in the payment of his claim out of the income and out of the corpus of the mortgaged property over creditors secured by prior mortgages, and deduced from them these propositions:
“A mortgagee of the property, acquired and to be acquired, and of the income of a quasi public: corporation, such as a railroad company, obtains a lien upon the not income of the company after the current expenses of operation incurred in the ordinary course of business are paid, and impliedly agrees that the gross income shall be first applied to the payment of these current expenses before the net income to which he is entitled arises.
*632 “A court of equity engaged in administering mortgaged railroad property under a receivership in a foreclosure suit may prefer unpaid claims for current expenses of the ordinary operation of the railroad, incurred within a limited time before the receivership, to a prior mortgage lien, in the distribution of the income or of the proceeds of the mortgaged property.
“If such a mortgagor diverts the current 'income from the payment of current expenses to the payment of interest on the mortgage debt, or to the improvement of the mortgaged property, so that current expenses remain unpaid when a receiver is appointed, the court may, out of the income accruing during the receivership, restore to the unpaid claims for current expenses the amount so diverted. But, if there has been no diversion, there can be no restoration, and the .amount of the restoration cannot exceed the amount of the diversion.
“The class of claims which may be awarded a preference in payment over tbe prior mortgage debt in equity is limited to claims for current expenses incurred in the ordinary course of the operation of the mortgaged property within a limited time before the appointment of a receiver. ⅜ ⅜ *
“If the consideration of a claim is not a part of the current expenses of the ordinary operation of the mortgaged property, but is a part of tbe expense of constructing a permanent addition or improvement to it, out of tbe ordinary course of its operation, neither the fact that it tended to conserve and improve the property andl increase the security of the mortgagee, nor the fact that it was necessary to keep the mortgagor a going concern, nor the fact that the mortgagor pledged or mortgaged the current income to secure it, will give the claim a preferential equity over the lien of a prior mortgage.”
An examination of the opinions of the Supreme Court upon this subject since the decision in the Doud Case was rendered discloses no modification of these propositions of law, save that the class of claims which may be preferred has been still farther restricted by the holding in Gregg v. Metropolitan Trust Co., 197 U. S. 183, 25 Sup. Ct. 415, 49 L. Ed. 717, that claims incurred within six months prior to the receivership for the purchase price of cross-ties essential to the replacement of ties decayed in the current operation of a railroad may not be preferred to the claims of bondholders secured by prior mortgages in payment opt of the corpus of the mortgaged property in the absence of a diversion of income. It would be a useless task to again review and discuss the numerous opinions of the Supreme Court from which the controlling rules announced in the Doud Case were derived, and an application of them to the facts of this case must suffice.
Eor the purposes of this decision the concession is made that the purchase of the ballast cars was necessary to keep the Eastern Company a going concern and to continue its .business and operation, and, that their purchase conserved and improved the mortgaged property and increased the security of the bondholders secured by the mortgages. But neither the fact that the consideration of a claim preserved and improved the mortgaged property and increased the security of the mortgagees, nor the fact that it was indispensable to keep the mortgagor a going concern and to continue its operation and business, will give to the claim a preferential equity over the lien of creditors secured by a prior mortgage. Illinois Trust & Sav. Bank v. Doud, 44 C. C. A. 415, 105 Fed. 149, 52 L. R. A. 481; Atlantic Trust Co. v. Dana, 138 Fed. 309, 337, 63 C. C. A. 657, 675. There is another indispensable attribute of a preferential claim. It is that its consideration was a current expense of the operation of the mortgagor incurred in the ordinary course of its business within a limited time,
In Southern Ry. Co. v. Carnegie Steel Co., 176 U. S. 257, 259, 296, at page 296, 20 Sup. Ct. 347, at page 362 (44 L. Ed. 458), the Supreme Court said:
■‘Before, however, such a creditor [an unsecured creditor] is accorded a preference over mortgage creditors in the distribution of net earnings in the hands of a receiver of a railroad company, it should reasonably appear from all the circumstances, including the amount involved and the terms of payment,'that the debt was one fairly to be regarded as part of the operating expenses of 1I>e railroad incurred in the ordinary course of business, and to be met out of current receipts.”
. In Lackawanna, etc., Co. v. Farmers’ Loan, etc., Co., 176 U. S. 298, 803, 315, 20 Sup. Ct. 363, 44 L. Ed. 475, in which a preference was denied to a claim for the purchase price of a large amount of rails which were indispensable to the continuance of the business of the company and of the operation of its railroad and which conserved the property and increased the security of the mortgagees, that court used these words:
“This court lias uniformly held that in the distribution of the current earnings of an insolvent railroad company, whose property is being administered by a receiver, morigage creditors could not lie postponed to unsecured creditors, unless tlie debts due the latter were of the class known as current debts arising in the ordinary course of business and properly chargeable upon current receipts. The decision in each case has been more or less controlled by its special facts. But we are of opinion that such expenditures as those incurred in the making of the contracts with the Backawanna Company were not such as are made in the ordinary course of the operations of a Railroad, and cannot be deemed current debts within the- rule that a railroad mortgagee when accepting his security impliedly agrees that the current debts of a railroad company contracted in the ordinary course of its business, in order to keep it a going concern, shall be paid out of current receipts before he has any claim upon such income.”
A current expense incurred in the ordinary course of business within six months prior to a receivership is a usual expense incurred in the customary course of the business of the company. The evidence in this case fails to convince that the purchase of these 33 cars for $26,192.05 by a railroad company operating 168 miles of railroad was the incurring of such an expense. There was no evidence that the company had ever bought such a lot of cars before, or that in the ordinary course of its business it was accustomed to purchase such a lot once in three months or in six months or in any specific number of months, as a part of the current expenses of its operation. On the other hand, the record demonstrates the facts that the expense of this purchase was not a current or a customary, but an unusual expense, that it was not incurred in the ordinary course of the business of the company, but on an extraordinary occasion to answer an unprecedented demand and to provide for an unparalleled situation. Eor this reason, the debt of the railroad company to the appellant for these cars lacks an indispensable element of a preferential claim, and there was no error in the dismissal of the petition.
There is another established rule .upon this subject which argues
“The ease of a corporation for the manufacture and sale of cars, dealing with a railroad company whose road is subject to a mortgage securing outstanding bonds, is very different from that of workmen and employés, or of those who furnish from day to day supplies necessary for the maintenance of the railroad. Such a company must be regarded as contracting upon the responsibility of the railroad company, and not in reliance upon the interposition of a court of equity.”
While ballast cars to move earth along a railroad for the purpose of surfacing and maintaining the roadbed are provided to make it possible for a railroad company to earn its income, while engines, freight cars, and passenger cars are usually obtained for the purpose of directly earning it, the latter are as necessary for the continuance of the business and of the operation of the company, and they contribute as much to increase the security of the mortgagees as the former, and the reasons urged by counsel for the Rodger Company why the same rules should not apply to both have failed to convince.
The decree below must be affirmed; and it is so ordered.