delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1913, the federal court for eastern Missouri appointed receivers for the St. Louis and San Francisco Eailroad. In 1916, the system was sold on foreclosure, was purchased for the Eeorganization Committee and was conveyed to the St. Louis-San Francisco Eailway Company, which has operated it since. In 1920, Spiller recovered in the federal court for western Missouri a judgment against the old company
in personam
for $30,212.31 and for counsel fees taxed as costs pursuant to § 16 of the Act to Eegulate Commerce.
1
Thereupon, he filed in the receivership suit,
2
upon leave granted, an intervening petition praying that the judgment be satisfied out of the property so acquired by the new company. The Master recommended that the prayers of the petition be granted. The District Court denied Spiller any relief and dismissed the intervening petition without costs to either party.
The judgment which Spiller seeks to enforce through, the intervening petition was entered by the trial court
*308
in 1916, after the foreclosure sale and before confirmation thereof; was reversed by the Court of Appeals in 1918; and was reinstated by this Court in 1920.
Spiller
v.
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co.,
The validity of the judgment as against the old company is not challenged in this proceeding. The question here is whether Spiller is entitled to have it satisfied but of the property of the new company. The railroads contend that in nature the claim is one not entitled to preferential payment; and that, in any event, Spiller is barred by laches or otherwise from obtaining any relief in this suit. The Court of Appeals held that the old company became liable as trustee ex maleficio for overcharges and that this liability is enforceable, as upon a constructive trust, against the property acquired by the new company on foreclosure. It held further that Spiller was not barred by laches or otherwise, because of the provision of the foreclosure decree, by which the purchaser became bound to pay, as a part of the purchase price, any unpaid claims of creditors of the old company which should be adjudged superior in equity to its mortgages, the court reserving to itself jurisdiction to determine the amount and validity of any such claim.
First. The contention that the judgment constitutes a lien or equity upon the property of the new company, *309 as úpon a constructive trust, rests upon the following argument. The freight rates b,eing Unreasonable were unlawful. The shipper was obliged to pay the charges exacted, although they were unlawful, because they were, the published rates. As the shipper was obliged to pay. the unlawful charges the payment was made under duress. One may be held as trustee ex maleficio of funds obtained by duress as well as of those procured by fraud. The old company by collecting the unlawful charges be^ came trustee ex maleficio of the funds collected. These can be traced and may be followed. They passéd to the receivers who took the funds with notice and without paying value. Upon the foreclosure they passed to the new company. It also took them with notice and is subject to the trust, either because the shipper’s equitable lien or interest was not cut off by the foreclosure sale, to one with notice, in a suit to which the shipper was not a party, or because the new company agreed to pay pursuant to the foreclosure decree claims prior in lien and superior in equity to the mortgages of the old company.
We need not consider whether, in the absence of legislation, charges illegally exacted by a carrier may be recovered under the doctrine of a constructive trust; or whether the alleged equitable remedy is applicable to overcharges subject to the Interstate Commerce Act, which provides a different remedy;
3
or whether the equitable remedy, if any, has been lost by proceeding to judgment at law. For, even if the overcharges when collected, were subject to a constructive trust in favor of the shipper, the contention that the money exacted by
*310
the old company in 1906, 1907 and 1908 can be traced into the hands of the receivers is unfounded. The money was not ear-marked. . It was mingled when collected with other, money received from operation. And no special account was kept of it. The latest exaction occurred five years before the appointment of the receivers. The assertion that the money collected can be traced into the receiver’s hands is confessedly without any support except the stipulated fact that, throughout the ten years, which elapsed between the earliest exaction and the transfer of the properties to the new company, the old one and the receivers had, at all times, in the several banks on which checks for current expenses were drawn, a working balance, in the aggregate, largely in excess of Spiller’s claim. Such a showing fails to bring the present case within the rule by which, when trust funds are mingled, with others, the
cestui
may assert an equitable lien upon the mingled mass to the extent of his contribution thereto.
4
American Can Co.
v.
Williams,
Second.
Spiller contends dhat he was entitled to preferential payment of his judgment for the excess charges, out of operating income accruing during the receivership; on the doctrine of
Fosdick
v.
Schall,
Third. Preferential payment is urged also on the ground of public policy. The argument is that the carrier is invested through its franchise with a part of the sovereign power; that in the exercise of the power conferred the old company exacted illegal rates which the shipper was obliged by law to pay; that when the old company’s property passed into the hands of the court it was augmented by the illegal exactions; that it became the court’s duty to make restitution; and that, having failed to do so while the property was in its hands, the court may require payment from the new company. It may be assumed that this claim for overcharges is meritorious in,character; but the fact that it arose many *312 years before the appointment of the receivers is conclusive against including it among those entitled to preferential payment.
Fourth. In order to establish as against the new. company either the alleged equity or a right to preferential payment, it was moreover assumed to be necessary that the claim should be one of those which the purchaser, under the decree of foreclosure, agreed to pay, as part of the purchase price. The decree provided that the purchaser would not be required to pay any “ claim or demand which has not been presented in this causé in accordance with the orders heretofore made requiring presentation thereof 1 ” unless it be “ a claim or demand which may arise after the entry of this decree.” An interlocutory decree had ordered that all claims be presented béfore February 1, 1916 or be barred of enforcement against the property in the hands of the recéivers or the proceeds thereof. Due notice of the order had been given by publication. Spiller did not file his claim within the time limited. He contends that the time limit has no application .to his claim, because it arose after entry of the decree.
The argument is that, while the claim accrued in 1914, when the reparation order was entered, or earlier, when the overcharges were illegally collected, it did not “ arise ” until 1920, when this Court, reversing the Court of Appeals, reinstated the judgment sought to be enforced by the intervening petition; that, in this connection, the term “ arise ” must have been used by the District Court in a sense different from “accrue.” For, knowing through its receivers, that their counsel were, at the time of the entry of the decree of foreclosure, hotly contesting Spiller’s claim, and that he was asserting that it was superior in equity to the mortgages to be^ foreclosed, and knowing also that the claim had not been filed in the receivership suit, the court must have intended that, if
*313
Spiller ultimately prevailed, his claim should be satisfied by the new company. Unless so construed, the provision for claims which may “ arise ” after the decree would be practically inoperative. The argument is not persuasive. We are of opinion that the term “ arise ” was used in the decree as the equivalent of “ accrue that Spiller’s claim arose at least as early as 1914, when the reparation order was entered, not when the judgment was recovered; and that the new company did not assume to pay it. See
Phillips
v.
Grand Trunk Ry. Co.,
Fifth.
Spiller contends also that he is entitled, under the doctrine of
Northern Pacific Ry. Co.
v.
Boyd,
Sixth.
While the Court of Appeals erred in granting the specific relief prayed in the petition for intervention, it does not follow that Spiller must be denied all remedy. He was guilty of a serious inadvertence in not filing his claim in the receivership suit within the time limited by the interlocutory order. But it is clear that he has not been guilty of laches.
Southern Pacific Co.
v.
Bogert,
Before Spiller recovered judgment in the trial court, the sale on foreclosure was had; but' the hearing on the order to. confirm the sale was yet to be held. At that hearing Spiller gave, before the confirmation of 'the sale, notice in open court, and otherwise to the old company, to the. receivers, to the Reorganization Committee and
*315
to the new company, that he had recovered judgment fourteen days before. He notified them that he claimed that the purchaser would take the property subject to all his rights; and that these included a charge upon the property in the hands of the purchaser for full payment of the judgment. With knowledge of Spiller’s claims, the Reorganization Committee and the new company took over the property. Later, the new company assumed the further defense to the action in which the judgment had been recovered. The issue of the securities of the new company and the distribution of its stock among stockholders in the old occurred after these notices of Spiller’s claim had been given. Under such circum- . stances, neither the long delay, nor the failure, to file claims as required by the interlocutory and final decrees, should operate to prevent the appropriate relief;
5
and the District Court had jurisdiction to grant it. Compare
Julian
v.
Central Trust Co.,
' The new. company contends, that since the shipper’s claim was not filed within the time limited by the interlocutory decree, it was among those declared barred by the terms of the final decree; and that by intervening he estopped himself from obtaining any relief. 6 No good reason is shown why relief may not be had as well upon an intervening petition as upon an original bill. As this may be done, he should be put, as nearly as may be consistently with the rights of others, into the position which he would have occupied had he filed his claim in the *316 receivership proceedings in the proper time. It does not appear that it is not possible for the new company to give him, the benefit now of the offer which waS made by the Reorganization Committee to the other unsecured creditors of the old company; nor that such a course would be inequitable to others in interest. The ascertainment of the relevant facts and the precise form of the relief must be left to the District Court. The decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals is affirmed in so far as it reversed the decree of the District Court dismissing the intervening petition; and is reversed in so far as it di- . rected that the judgment is a prior lien enforceable for the full amount exclusive of. counsel fees against the property of the new company.
Decree affirmed in part, and reversed in part.
Notes
The intervening petition and the decree cover also another judgment for $3,652.97 in favor of Spiller and others.
There were in fact four suits; two brought by unsecured creditors and two by the trustees of mortgages under which the foreclosure was bad, All the suits were consolidated in May, 1914.
See §§ 8, 16(1), and 16(2) of the Interstate Commerce Act as it stood at the time of the overcharges in question, Act of Feb. 4, 1887, c. 104, 24 Stat. 379, 382, 384, as amended by the Act of June 29, 1906, c. 3591, 34 Stat. 584, 590. See also
Texas & Pacific Ry. Co.
v.
Abilene Cotton Oil Co.,
Compare
National Bank
v.
Insurance Co.,
See
Williams
v.
Gibbes,
Compare
Swift
v.
Black Panther Gas Co.,
