159 U.S. 278 | SCOTUS | 1895
after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The decisive questions in this case turn on the character and effect of the decree entered on October 30, 1875. Did that decree leave the rights under the second mortgage, known as the income and equipment mortgage, unadjudicated, and thereby subject the purchasers at the sale under the decree to a future inquiry into those rights, or was the decree final, as respects the property sold thereunder, and do the purchasers, the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and. Northern Railway Company, hold the property free from the lien of the second mortgage?
The answer to these questions must be found in the allegations and proofs upon which the decree was based, as well as in the terms of the decree itself.
The record shows that all the parties to be affected by the decree were before the court — the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Minnesota Railway Company as a mortgage debtor in default, and the trustees in the several mortgages. The property against which the proceedings were aimed was a railroad consisting of a main road and several branches. That the railway company was insolvent and utterly unable to satisfy decrees for the payment of money was evident.
In such circumstances what kind of a decree would be probable, and in the natural course of events? Would it not be expected that the proceedings would eventuate in a sale, in such a way as to dispose of the questions raised in the several cases, and to vest in the. purchasers an unincumbered title to the entire railway system ?
We learn from the pleadings and evidence that such a plan of sale was apparently pursued, and resulted in the organization of a new company whose mortgage bonds and stock were distributed among the original bondholders upon terms satis
To constrain a court of equity to grant relief so apparently inconsistent with the previous proceedings, and so destructive of the rights.of persons who have since become interested, the case presented should be clear and free from doubt.
What, then, are the reasons urged in favor of the complainant in the amended and supplemental cross-bill ?
It is claimed, in the first place, that the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, a party in the'cause as trustee named in the income and equipment mortgage, had an equitable right to redeem, and that as the decree of October, 1875, contained no declaration or recital that said trustee was barred of the equity of redemption, and as no time was given to it to redeem from the first mortgages, the rights of the trustee and of the income bondholders were wholly unaffected by the decree and by the sales in accordance therewith. In. other words, the proposition is that, in a decree which orders a sale of the property to pay the first mortgage debt, an express - order cutting off. the
We are unwilling to accept this as a sound statement of the law, or, at all events, to concede it as invariably true. Where a junior mortgagee is a party defendant to a foreclosure bill in which, as in the present case, there is a prayer that he be decreed to redeem, and where-the priority of the plaintiff’s mortgage is found or conceded, and a sale is ordered in default of payment, declaring the right of the debtor to redeem to be forever barred, we do not deem a similar order as to right of redemption by the junior mortgagee'to be substantially or even formally necessary. He has, of course, a right to redeem, but if he chooses not to assert such right, and stands by while the sale is made and confirmed, he must in equity be deemed to have waived his right.
We think the law was correctly statéd by Mr. Justice Matthews in Chicago & Vincennes Railroad v. Fosdick, 106 U. S. 47, 68, where he said: “ In case the proceeding results finally in a sale of the mortgaged premises, the sale is made free from the equity of redemption of the mortgagor, and all holders of junior incumbrances, if made parties to the suit, and is of the whole premises, when necessary to the payment of the amount due, or when the property is not properly divisible; .it conveys a clear and absolute title as against all parties to the suit, or their privies, and the proceeds of the sale are distributed after payment of the amount due, for non-payment of which the sale was ordered, in satisfaction of the unpaid debt remaining, whether due or not.”
S.o in Lansing v. Goelet, 9 Cowen, 346, 391, in which case there was an elaborate examination of the subject, the law was expressed in the following terms: “ A judicial sale of the estate under the decree of the court, if the court has power to make the decree, whether it be in the form of a decree of sale preceded by a formal decree of foreclosure, or in the form of a decree of sale without a formal decree of foreclosure, effectually bars the right of the mortgagor to redeem; and the purchaser will hold it under the title he acquires to it by virtue
In 8 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., § 1228, it is said that “ the sale under a valid decree immediately cuts off, bars, and forecloses the rights of the' mortgagor and of all subsequent grantees, owners, incumbrancers, and other persons interested,' who were made parties defendant, and of all grantees, owners, and incumbrancers subsequent to the filing of a notice of lis pen-dens, although not made defendants.”
ít is contended in the next place that the rights of the junior mortgagee were saved by the express terms of the decree. The language relied upon was as follows: “And this decree is made subject to the rights of any intervening creditors now before this court, and the claim of the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company in the income and equipment mortgage to any of the cars and machinery named in that mortgage is to be submitted to this court, in term time or vacation, as soon as counsel can agree on the facts in relation thereto.” And again: “The. court reserves the power to make further orders and directions; and no sale under this decree is to be binding until reported to the court for its approval.”
• Reliance is also placed upon the language of a subsequent order of the eourt, on October 26, 1876, in -which, after affirming the sales and conveyances, it is said that said order “ shall in nowise be taken to affect any claim, right, interest, or lien upon or to the property sold and conveyed by said master’s deeds, now pending in this court, but that the said claim, rights, interests, and liens, are merely reserved, subject to future adjudication, and the said grantees in said deeds take the property hereby conveyed subject thereto.”
The construction sought to be put upon this language, namely, that the court thereby intended to make a future disposition of the claims-of the income and equipment mort
We do not find it necessary to determine whether those of the bondholders under the income and equipment mortgage, and who also held first mortgage bonds, estopped themselves from asserting a right of redemption by accepting the new securities issued under the plan of reorganization. If, indeed, those so acting constituted all of the income bondholders, such a determination might be a ready, method of disposing of the entire case. But as there seems to have been some who did not receive the new bonds in payment of first mortgage bonds, and would not, therefore, be brought within the range of the suggested estoppel, we prefer to pass by that question and consider whether all the holders of bonds under the income and equipment mortgage did not, by their inaction and acquiescence under the decree and sale, lose any right to redeem which they might otherwise have had as against the purchasers.
As we have seen, the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, in its answer and cross-bill, as they stood before and at the time of the decree of October 30, 1875, did not assert- any right or any intention to redeem, although in the bilí an opportunity was afforded it so to do. It restricted its allega
' The principle upon which this ground of defence rests has been so often vindicated and applied by this court that we do not feel it necessary to further enforce it by argument, nor to cite cases so numerous. It is sufficient to refer to Abraham v. Ordway, 158 U. S. 416.
The rule is aptly expressed by 2 Pomeroy’s' Eq. Jur., § 816, as follows: “ Acquiescence is an important factor in determining equitable rights and remedies in obedience to the maxims: He who seeks equity must do equity, and be who comes into equity must come with clean hands. Even when it does not work a true. estoppel upon rights of property or of contract, it may operate in analogy to estoppel — may produce a quasi estoppel — upon the rights of remedy.” And in § 965 : “ When a -party with full knowledge, or at least with sufficient notice or means of knowledge, of his rights, and of all the material facts,- freely does what amounts to a recognition of the transaction as existing, or acts in a manner inconsistent with its repudiation, or lies by for a considerable time and knowingly permits the other party to deal with the subject-matter under the belief that the transaction has been recognized, or freely abstains for a considerable length of time from impeaching it, so that the other party is thereby reasonably induced to suppose that it is recognized, there is acquiescence, and the transaction, although originally impeachable, becomes unimpeachable in equity. Even where there has been no act nor language
As these views lead to the conclusion that the so-called amended and supplemental cross-bill, filed by Simmons, trustee, in April, 1883, cannot be maintained against the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Northern Railway Company, nor against the trustee named in the new mortgage, it is unnecessary for us to enter into questions that arose affecting the title of alleged bondholders under the income- and equipment mortgage, and with respect to which a cross-appeal was taken from the decree of the court below.
It may be that whatever questions existed between the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Minnesota Railway Company and the trustee of the income and equipment mortgage were left open as between them, if, indeed, any property remained to which a decree of foreclosure could apply. As to this we express no opinion. But so far as the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Northern Railway Company ánd the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, trustee, under the new mortgage, are concerned, the so-called amended and supplemental cross-bill should be dismissed.
The decree of the court below, under the said amended and supplemental cross-bill, is therefore reversed, and the record remitted, with directions to enter a decree in accordance with this opinion, the costs in the court below and in this court to be paid by the appellants in No. 11.