A bill in equity was filed by W. I). Tyler, the receiver of the Oregon & Washington Territory Railroad Company, against Hamilton and Eourke as defendants, and thereafter a supplemental bill was filed, in which the Washington & Columbia River Railway Company was joined with the receiver as complainant. In these two bills it is alleged that in a former suit, brought in this court by the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company against the Oregon & Washington Territory Railroad Company to foreclose its mortgage bonds (58 Fed. 639), W. D. Tyler was appointed receiver of the mortgaged property, which consisted of a railroad, right of way, rolling stock, and other property and assets. That after the issuance and sale of said mortgage bonds, and on or about November 11, 1890, the board of directors of said Oregon & Washington Territory Railroad Company, consisting of five members, held a pretended special meeting, at which, but three of the directors were present or notified, and that at such meeting
The evidence taken upon these issues shows that at the time the mortgage bonds were issued and sold there were no warehouses
; It remains to be considered what are the rights of the Washington & Columbia River Railway Company. That company is the successor in interest to the property purchased upon the foreclosure sale, and it has acquired all the rights that were vested
“All the lands, tenements, and hereditaments acquired or appropriated, and which may he hereafter acquired or appropriated, for the purpose of a right of way for said railroad and branch, or either thereof, and all the easements, appendages, and appurtenances thereunto belonging or iu any wise appertaining, and all the railways, ways and rights of way, depot grounds, and other grounds, tracks, side tracks, spur tracks, bridges, viaducts, culverts, fences, and other structures, depots, station houses, engine houses, car houses, freight houses, warehouses, fuel houses, machine shops, repair shops, water tanks, turn tables, superstructures, erections, and fixtures, whether now held and owned, or hereafter to be acquired and owned, for the company, for the use of said railroad and branch, or for either of them.”
Tbe lien of these mortgages extended to and covered all the real ■estate npon which the warehouse and platform improvements were subsequently erected by Hunt. By the, foreclosure of the mortgages, and the sale thereunder, the title to the property passed to the purchaser. The leases had been executed and placed of record before the foreclosure suit, and it is not contended that either the complainant in the foreclosure suit or the purchaser at the foreclosure sale was ignorant of their existence. The leases contain the provision that at the end of the term thereof the lessor may purchase the improvements placed npon the leased property by the lessee, or, in case of failure so to do, that the lessee may remove the improvements. That right was not destroyed by the foreclosure suit, and undoubtedly it still subsists in the defendants. They may sell their warehouses and platforms, or remove the same from the leased premises. I am unable to perceive that they have other rights. The leases were made subsequent and subject to the mortgages. The contract of leasing was wholly between the mortgagor and the lessee. The mortgagee had no privity with the lessee. It did not assent to the leases, and its rights were not affected thereby. The lessee, while in possession as tenant of the mortgaged premises, had no seisin thereof. His possession was the seisin of the lessor, who held the legal title. The tenants in possession were not necessary parties to the foreclosure suit. They had no lien npon the land, and no equity of redemption therein. The foreclosure sale operated to evict them by title paramount. From and after the sale they were trespassers, unless they attorned to the purchaser, or the purchaser recognized their rights as tenants. Rogers v. Humphreys, 4 Adol. & E. 299; McDurmot v. Burke, 16 Cal. 580; Teal v. Walker, 111 U. S. 248, 4 Sup. Ct. 420; Haven v. Adams, 4 Allen, 80. There is nothing in this case to show attornment upon the part of the tenants, or a recognition of their tenancy by the purchaser at foreclosure, or by his successor in interest. The defendants are before the court, not seeking the intervention of equity for the protection of their rights by redemption from the mortgage sale, hut contending that the failure of the mortgagee to bring them in as parties defend