183 F. 803 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern North Carolina | 1911
On July 1, 1908, complainant filed its bill in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Virginia against the Norfolk & Southern Railway Company, a Virginia corporation, for the purpose of foreclosing certain deeds in trust executed by said corporation to 'complainant for the purpose of securing the payment of certain bonds, all of which will fully appear by reference to the record 'in this cause. Complainant prayed the court to bring the property to sale, and, pending the suit, t.o appoint receivers, etc. The defendant’s property consisted of a railroad track, rolling stock,'and a large quantity of real estate, lying in the states of Virginia and North Carolina; said track running through the county of Currituck in said last-named state. Receivers were appointed by the judge of the Circuit Court for the Eastern. District of Virginia. On July 2, 1908, an ancillary bill was filed in the cause in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of North Carolina, and the same persons named.by the court of original jurisdiction were appointed ancillary receivers. They qualified, in accordance with the provisions of the .orders of the court, and took possession of and operated the property until April 30, 1910. On September 3, 1906, J. P. Talbott, a citizen of North Carolina,1 instituted an action in the superior- court of Currituck county, in said state, against the defendant company, alleging in his complaint as his cause of action that, while a passenger on defendant’s train, the conductor in charge of said train and in defendant’s employment, committed an assault and battery upon him, for which he demanded damages, etc. The defendant appeared by counsel in said cause and filed an answer to the complaint. The receivers were not made parties, but had notice of the pendency of said cause, and, by their- counsel, conducted the defense thereto. At the September term, 1909, of said court, Talbott recovered judgment in said action, upon the verdict of a jury, against defendant, Norfolk & Southern Railway Company, for $1,500, said amount being awarded as damages for the wrongful act of defendant’s emp-loyé, as alleged in the complaint. The judgment was duly docketed on the judgment docket of said county in
On the 19th day of October, 1909, an order was made by the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Virginia, in this cause, and in the said court for the Eastern District of North Carolina, directing that all of the property of defendant company in both states be sold, and appointing commissioners for the purpose of making such sale. By the provisions contained in said order, the purchasers, in addition to the amount bid at the sale 'for said property, among other things, assumed the payment of “all claims and demands heretofore filed under the order of reference heretofore entered herein, on the 33d day of October, 1908, which have been, or may hereafter be, established thereunder as prior in lien to said first and refunding mortgage hereby foreclosed, and which, at the time of the sale hereunder, may remain unpaid.” The usual provision was made, in said order, empowering the court to make further orders' to en force the performance of the terms of sale, etc: Pursuant to said order the commissioners made sale of the property of defendant on December 7, 3909. On April 30, 1910, said sale was confirmed, and the terms thereof complied with, in respect to the payment of the purchase price. It was provided in said order that the purchaser should pay $100,000 in cash to cover expense, etc., and the balance in the bonds secured in said deed. The commissioners were directed to make, title to the purchaser, the Norfolk-Southern Railroad Company, and to deliver and turn over the said property to said purchaser, all of which has been done. Talbott, plaintiff in the aforesaid action, alter demanding payment of his judgment, which was refused, sued out an execution on the 31tli day of June, 1910, and placed the same in the hands of the sheriff of Pasquotank county. The sheriff levied said execution on certain real estate, owned by defendant company, and advertised same for sale. The purchaser, the Norfolk-Southern Railroad Company, seeks to enjoin the sale of said property under said execution. An order directing the sheriff and said Talbott to show cause why an injunction shall not he granted, was issued, and, upon the return day, the parties were heard upon said motion. The foregoing facts are found by an inspection of the record and affidavits filed herein.
it further appears that, upon the institution of this suit, an injunction was issued restraining all parties to actions then pending in the state courts, from proceeding therein, and that said injunction was, in a few days thereafter, dissolved, it is conceded that the purchase price hid for the property is not sufficient to pay the bonded indebtedness secured by the morí gages.
By virtue of ihe provisions of section 1133, Revisal N. C. 1905 ; Code 1883, § 1355), the property of the defendant corporation is not
“If a railroad company contracts to carry a passenger there is an implied obligation that be will be carried with reasonable care for bis safety. A failure to exercise such care, resulting in injury to the passenger, gives rise to an action ex contractu for breach of the contract, or as well to an action for the damages on account of the negligence — an action sounding in tort.”
Talbott alleges that, after he had become a passenger by purchasing a ticket, he was prevented! from boarding the train and assaulted by the defendant’s conductor. These allegations are found by the jury to be true. It appears that the judge presiding reduced the verdict of the jury to the sum of $1,500. It is therefore manifest that Talbott had, on September 3, 1906', a cause of action in tort against the Norfolk & Southern Railway Company, with the legal right to sue upon and prosecute it to judgment in the superior court of Currituck county and that, by virtue of the statute law of the state, this cause of action, when reduced to judgment, was entitled to priority over the mortgages executed by the corporation; that is, the property was not exempt from sale by reason of the execution of such mort-gages. If the judgment had been rendered prior to July 1, 1908, the date upon which this spit was instituted in the Circuit Court of the United States, an execution issued upon such judgment would have been levied upon the property and sale made thereof, passing title to the purchaser exempt from any lien or incumbrance created by the mortgages.
An order was made October 23, 1908, by the Circuit Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina, appointing a special master with permission to all persons having claims against the defendant company to file them with the master, etc. The Norfolk-Southern Railroad Company insists that, conceding Talbott’s judgment to be a valid claim against the Norfolk & Southern Railway Company, having priority over the mortgages held by complainant, he should be required to intervene in this suit and have his rights passed upon by the special master, and, upon exceptions to his findings, by the court: that this is his only remedy. When one court has taken possession of property by its receiver, no other court will be permitted to interfere with such possession. This is conceded to be the general rule. Mr. Justice Miller in Buck v. Colbath, 3 Wall. 334, 18 L. Ed. 257, says:
“Whenever property has been seized by an officer of the court, by virtue of its process, the property is to be considered as in the custody of the court*807 and trader its control fox the time being; and no other court has a right to interfere with that possession," etc.
See Moran v. Sturges, 104 U. S. 256, 14 Sup. Ct. 1019, 38 L. Ed. 981.
“It. is a general rule that property in the hands of a receiver cannot he sold under attachment or execution, unless leave of the court, before which the receivership is pending, is first obtained.” Street's Led. Eq. Prac. § 2002.
In Wiswall v. Sampson, 14 How. 52, 14 L. Ed. 322, Mr. Justice Nelson says:
“A party holding a judgment which is a prior lien upon the properly, the same as a mortgage, if desirous of enforcing it against the estate, after it has been 1akon into the care and custody of the court to abide ihe final determination of the iiligaiion. and pending that litigation, must first obtain leave of the court for this purpose. The court will direct a master to inquire into the circumstances, whether it is an existing, unsatisfied demand or as to the priority of the lien, etc., and take care that the fund he applied accordingly.”
In that case a judgment creditor issued execution and sold property while the suit in equity, in which the receivers had been appointed, was pending. The court held that the sale was void. The learned justice said that the creditor should have intervened, and! that, “in administering the fund, the court will take care that the rights of prior liens or incumbrances shall not be destroyed.”
In Heidritter v. Elizabeth Oil Cloth Co., 112 U. S. 294, 5 Sup. Ct. 135, 28 L. Ed. 729, the principle was applied when the government had instituted a proceeding in rent against certain real estate for violation of provisions of the internal revenue laws by the owner. Pending the proceeding, certain parties, claiming to have a mechanic's lien upon the property, instituted an action in the state court, obtained judgment, issued execution, and, subsequent to the sale under the proceeding by the government, sold the property. The court held the sale void. It is manifest that this court would not permit Talbott to enforce the payment of his judgment by sale while the property was. in the possession of the receivers, but it is insisted that the rule does not apply when the property has been sold by the commissioners appointed by the court — the sale confirmed and the property delivered to the purchaser. There is no longer any necessity for restraining • lie judgment creditor from enforcing his legal rights. Mr. Justice Miller in Buck v. Colbath, supra, after stating the rule and the reasons upon which it is founded, in his usual clear and forceful style, proceeds to say:
“This principle, however, has its limitations; or rather its just definition is to he attended to. It is only while the property is in the possession of the court, either actively or constructively, that the court is bound, or professes to protect that possession from tile process of other courts. Whenever the litigation is ended, or the possession of the officer of the court is discharged, other courts are at liberty to deal with it according to the rights of the parties before them, whether these rights require them to take possession of the property or not. The effect to be given in such cases to the adjudication of the court first possessed of the property, depends upon the principles familiar to the law; but no contest arises about, the mere possession, and no conflict tat such as may be decided without unseemly and discreditable collisions.”
“These opinions are expressly put upon tlie ground that the mortgages were void as to such claims, and that the property stood, so far as such claims are concerned, just as if no mortgage had been made.”
To the same contention made here, the learned justice said:
• “This is not disputed. But the defendant was not a party to that suit, and no rights that the defendant Burnett had are affected by this decree and order of sale. Therefore the fact that the plaintiff claims under a decree made of foreclosure and order of court does not affect the rights of the defendant Burnett. The order was based on the mortgage and conveyed no more than was conveyed by the mortgage. It conveyed no more than would have been conveyed by a foreclosure of the mortgage, under a power of sale contained in the mortgage.”
While the court noted the fact that Burnett’s claim had been filed with the master, thereby giving notice to the purchaser, the judge is careful to say:
“But this notice of the defendant’s claim is not involved in the principle upon which this case is decided. The principle underlying this decision, and upon which it is decided-, is that under section 1255 of the Code the mortgage conveyed nothing as against this claim, and, as it conveyed nothing as against the claim, the purchaser got nothing as against the claim, by the mortgage sale.”
The learned counsel for complainant insists that, notwithstanding the rendition of the judgment in the state court, before its payment may be enforced! against the property, its validity and right to priority ’must be passed upon and approved by the special master. This position is based upon two conceptions. One, that immediately upon the filing of the bill in the Circuit Court, followed by the appointment and qualification of the receivers, all judicial proceedings, suits, etc., pending in other courts, whether involving claims against the corporation for torts or for the enforcement of contracts, are drawn into
•‘It is not true that a court having obtained jurisdiction of the subject-matter of a suit, and of parties before it, thereby excludes all other courts from the right to adjudicate upon other matters having a very close connection with those before the first court, and, in some instances, requiring the decisions of the same questions exactly, for in examining into the exclusive character of the jurisdiction of such cases, we must have regard to the nature of the remedies, the character of the relief sought and the identity of the parties in the different suits. * * * The limitation of the rule must be much stronger, and must be applicable under many more varying circumstances when persons not parties 1o (he first proceeding are prosecuting their own separate interests in other courts.”
The present case illustrates the principle announced by the learned justice.
Talbott, before the suit in the Circuit Court was instituted, had begun his action at law for damages against the defendant for a tort. The mortgages held by complainant were of no validity as against his claim, and could, under no circumstances, be an obstruction to the enforcement, by final legal process, of such judgment as he should recover. He had a perfect legal right, enforceable in a court of law. His cause of action did not involve the title to the property of defendant or the right to possession. The court, in rendering judgment, made no deliverance nor adjudication in cither respect. The defendant litigated the action with Talbott in the state court from its institution on September 3. 1906. and the receivers from their appointment, until final judgment. September, 3 910, thus waiving any right to remove it into this court. Upon their motion, the first verdict of the jury was set aside, and on the last trial, reduced from $é,000 to $1,500. It is strongly urged, and supported by affidavits of counsel and the presiding judge, that this was done after consultation by counsel with the receivers and an agreement to pay the judgment, as rendered. While the action is pending and a recovery.being resisted, complainants prosecute their suit in equity to foreclose mortgages declared by the statute of North Carolina to be invalid as to plaintiff's cause of action. The decree of sale in this court is taken a few days after the rendition of the judgment in the state court, and the terms of sale, it would seem, carefully drawn to exclude this judgment from participation in the proceeds, and to relieve the purchaser from any liability for its payment. The purchaser is to pay his bid on account of a fixed sum, supposed to be sufficient to discharge cost, allowance, etc., and the balance of the purchase price is to be paid by the cancellation and delivery of bonds according to their relative priority, and, in addition to assume the payment of such claims as have been filed with the master, having priority over the mortgage indebtedness. The sale has been confirmed, the purchase price paid and satisfied in accordance with the terms of the sale, deed has been executed, and the property, in its entirety, turned over to the purchaser, the Norfolk-Southern Railroad! Company. .It will he observed that the Circuit Court of the United States for the East
It is well settled that when a court of equity undertakes to sell a perfect title to property and discharge all liens upon it, or pay off all existing claims entitled to share in the proceeds, it has the power, by appropriate process, to bring all such claimants before the court and
It will be noted that the statute (Act Aug. 13, 1888, c. 866, 25 Slat. 436 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 582]) permits parties to institute and prosecute actions against a receiver appointed by the federal courts “in respect to any act or transaction of his in canying on the business connected with such property without previous leave of the court,” subject to such equity jurisdiction of the Court, “so far as the same shall he necessary to the ends of justice.” In Wilcox v. Jones, 117 Fed. 810, 101 C. C. A. 84, it was held by the Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit, that when an action against a receiver, coming within the terms of the act, had been prosecuted to judgment, the federal • court had no power to call into question the validity of the judgment or the amount recovered in the state court. Judge Pritchard, in a well-considered opinion, shows, both from the language of the statute and the decisions of the federal courts, that the last clause in the act confers no other power on the court than to protect the possession of the receiver and provide for the payment of the judgment according to its priority over other claims against the property. It would seem that, by analogy, this court would have no other power in regard to the judgment against the defendant corporation upon claims accruing prior to the appointment of the receiver and in litigation at the time of such appointment. Assuming, for the purpose of discharging this duty, and for the purpose of protecting the title of the purchaser, under the decree of the court, that this court has the power conferred by the act in the class of cases coming within its provisions, and that it will inquire into the question of Talbott's alleged priority, why refer the matter to the master? It is manifest that the judgment is valid, that it is upon a cause of action having priority over the mortgages under which the purchaser claims title; that the purchaser holds title subordinate to the claim or judgment; that the court has no power to amend the decree of sale and confirmation. Why, then, should Talbott be delayed in the enforcement of his judgment? It must, in any possible view of the case, he paid by the purchaser of the property, and the only process which can be resorted to for this purpose is the execution from the state court.
I have examined a number of cases more or less in point, and find that the court has uniformly, in its decree of sale, made provision for dealing with and discharging claims having priority over the mortgages being foreclosed, out of the proceeds of the sale, or by expressly imposing the duty of paying them upon the purchaser in addition to the sum bid for the property. Com. Roofing Co. v. Trust Co., 135 Fed. 981, 68 C. C. A. 418; Atchison, etc., Ry. Co. v. Osborn,