125 Mass. 490 | Mass. | 1878
The Grand Junction Railroad and Depot Company became embarrassed, and ceased to pay the coupons on its bonds, in the latter part of the year 1856. Its property was incumbered by mortgages of a large amount, and it was understood to be hopelessly insolvent. The plaintiff held fifty of its bonds, dated January 1, 1850, unsecured by any mortgage, amounting to $25,000, (besides interest in arrear,) which had become due on July 1, 1855, and were not paid. Upon these bonds it commenced a suit in August, 1865, in which an attachment upon all of the debtor corporation’s real estate was returned upon the writ, which suit was pending at the date of the filing of the plaintiff’s bill. Ho part of the debt has ever been paid.
At a term of the Superior Court for the county of Suffolk, held in April, 1862, George W. Gordon, one of the defendants, then the treasurer of the corporation, obtained a judgment, against it for about $26,000, upon which an execution was issued; and the execution so issued was levied upon and satisfied by the sale of its franchise, with all the rights and privileges thereof, “ so far as relates to the receiving of toll,” to the East Boston Freight Railroad Company, for the term of ninety-nine years. This last named corporation was chartered by the Legislature of this Com
Under the authority given by the St. of 1866, c. 278, the Boston and Worcester Railroad Corporation, in November, 1866, took the railroad property known as the Union and Grand Junction Railroad, including all the railroad franchises and lands, “being all the property of the East Boston Freight Railroad Company,” subject to the condition of paying to the owners such damages as should be awarded to them by the verdict of a jury upon proper proceedings. A hearing was accordingly had before a jury in December, 1867, and those damages were assessed at $536,260.20, and a verdict was rendered for that amount. At a term of the Superior Court in March, 1869, (viz.: June 8, 1869,) by agreement of the parties, judgment was rendered in favor of the East Boston Freight Railroad Company for the sum of $235,566.33, that being the amount of the verdict after deducting the amount of certain incumbrances assumed by the respondent in that case. And. in addition tc
In its bill, the plaintiff insists that, however formal and regu • lar the incorporation of the East Boston Freight Railroad Company, and its acquisition of the franchise and property of the Grand Junction Railroad and Depot Company, may appear on paper, the whole transaction was essentially fraudulent. The claim is that Gordon was not a bond fide creditor of the last named company; that the notes upon which his judgment was founded had been paid, or were originally without consideration and void; that the East Boston Freight Railroad Company was really Gordon and Lewis, under another name and form; and that the whole arrangement was merely a scheme to place the entire property in the hands of Gordon and Lewis and their associates, at an insignificant price, and to enable them to sell it at an enormous advance, leaving the plaintiff and perhaps other creditors wholly unprovided for.
The judgments in favor of Gordon were rendered in May, 1862. The new corporation was chartered about two months earlier; the franchise was sold on execution in June to that new corporation, and in July of the same year, in pursuance of a vote of the stockholders of the Grand Junction Railroad and Depot Company, the conveyance of the franchise and the property to the new corporation was executed and delivered. In other words, the fraud complained of was carried into effect about seven years before the plaintiff filed the present bill. It is not denied that the insolvency of the Grand Junction Railroad and Depot Company and the supposed worthlessness of its franchise and property were notorious, and as well known to the plaintiff as to the creditors generally. There is no evidence that, in the proceedings of Gordon and Lewis, and in the formation of the new company, there was any secrecy or concealment. They apparently were creditors seeking such security as they might be able to obtain from the wreck, and using such means for obtaining security as could be furnished by putting their de
In view of all these facts, and taking into consideration the inevitable publicity of most of the proceedings, the dates at which they occurred, and the ample means of knowledge, or at least the opportunities and inducements for inquiry, which the plaintiff had, we find it impossible to avoid the conclusion that there has been a great delay and neglect on its part to put its claim of right in force. It is a well settled rule in equity, that if a party is guilty of loches or unreasonable delay in the enforcement of his rights, he thereby forfeits his claim to equitable relief. Tash v. Adams, 10 Cush. 252. Fuller v. Melrose, 1 Allen, 166. Equity regards diligence as one of its important elements, and it discountenances loches as inequitable. Unreasonable delay to prosecute an existing claim is a bar to a bill in equity, especially when the parties cannot be restored to their original position, and injustice may be done. Peabody v. Flint, 6 Allen, 52. The right of a party injured to rescind a fraudulent transaction remains only for a reasonable time after the discovery of the fraud. Evans v. Bacon, 99 Mass. 213. Learned v. Foster, 117 Mass. 365. In one case, after a delay of three
We do not find, on examination of the facts reported, that anything was done which is charged to have been a fraud upon the plaintiff, after the time when the property of the Grand Junction Bailroad and Depot Company was appropriated, as the bill charges, by Gordon and his associates to their own use, in 1862. We do not find that any new fact occurred after that time which could enlarge the plaintiff’s rights, or give it any new right. The increased value of the property, produced by causes which came into operation after that time, certainly could have no such effect. We cannot avoid the conclusion that the plaintiff slumbered on its rights, and has only been roused into activity by the discovery that the value of the property had in various ways become unexpectedly large. It hardly need be said that this fact does not relieve its long delay of the imputation of the want of reasonable diligence in seeking its remedy Upon this ground, therefore, we must order that the
Bill be dismissed.