No. 115 | 4th Cir. | May 28, 1895

SI.MOXTOX, Circuit Judge.

This is a writ of error to the circuit court of the United Stales for the district of West Virginia. The Wheeling Bridge & Terminal Railway Company, a corporation of the state of West Virginia, brought its action to October rules, 3892, against Robert H. Cochran. The declaration is in assumpsit on the common counts for §2,147.22. The bill of particulars hied with the declaration charges him with moneys of the plaintiff, received by him, and credits Mm with certain moneys paid out by him for plaintiff’s use, expenses incurred by him in plaintiff’s serv*142ice, and salary as president of the company to March, 1892. The defendant, on 4th April, 1S93, pleaded the general issue and filed-specifications of payments and sets-off. His bill of sets-off includes items of salary as president of a corporation subordinate to and controlled by the plaintiff, of services rendered plaintiff as agent and counsel, and other services rendered the Wheeling & Eastern Improvement Company, for which he held plaintiff responsible,- — -in all $7,000; and also of 24 coupons on the first mortgage bonds of the plaintiff, 12 of which matured 1st June, 1892, and 12 on 1st December, 1892, each for $30, and 6 coupons on second mortgage bonds of the same company, 3 of which matured September, 1892, and 3 1st March, 1893, each for $30, — in all $900. The cause was continued from time to time, and on 25th September, 1894, the defendant filed an amended bill of sets-off in which, in addition to the other items, he added coupons on the same first mortgage bonds maturing 1st June, 1893, 1st December, 1893, and 1st June, 1894, and on second mortgage bonds maturing September 1, 1893, March and September 1, 1894, making the total of sets-off $9,250. Pending this suit, on 20th September, 1893, the Wheeling Bridge & Terminal Bailway Company was placed in the hands of a receiver by an order entered in the case of the Washington Trust Company against said railway company and others, pending in the circuit court of the United States for the district of West Virginia, Charles O. Brewster being appointed such receiver. On 25th September he .interposed in this action, and prayed to be made a party plaintiff. This prayer was refused. The following extracts from the order appointing the receiver will show the scope and extent of his powers:

“Ordered, that Charles O. Brewster, Esq., of the city of New York, be, and he hereby is, appointed receiver herein of all and singular the premises and property described in the complaint, with the usual iiowers of receivers in such cases according to the law and practice of this court, and with all the powers provided for in the mortgage or deed of trust set out in the complaint, the property described in the said mortgage embracing all and singular the railroad and bridge of said defendant railway company, together with all the real estate, roadbed, rails, ties, piers, fences, lands, approaches, privileges, liberties, rights and franchises, rights of way, easements, licenses, depots, stations, buildings, rolling stock, equipment, tools, machinery, rents, incomes, tolls, and profits thereof, and all other property and rights whatsoever of said defendant railway company, wherever the same may be found, covered by the mortgage or deed of trust made by said railway company to the complainant, dated December 2, 1881). It is further ordered, that upon the approval and filing of said bond the said receiver is hereby authorized and directed to hold, manage, and operate the said railroad and bridge and other mortgaged property under the direction of this court, and to receive the rents, income, and profits thereof, and to employ such agents and servants as may be necessary for the proper operation and maintenance of said prop--erty, and to make such repairs as may be necessary to keep the same in good and serviceable condition. It is further ordered, that the defendant railway company and its officers and agents, and any other person having possession or control of any of said property, assign, transfer, and deliver the same, wherever it may be, unto said receiver, including any contracts for purchase of lands or rights of way, and all equitable interests, tilings in action, and other effects which belong to or are held in trust for said defendant railway company, which are covered by said mortgage, -and all books, vouchers, and papers relating thereto; and that said receiver have full power and authority *143to receive and take possession of suck property. It is further ordered, that said receiver be, and he hereby is, authorized and directed to prosecute and defend any pending suits by or against said railway company affecting said mortgaged property, or against others whom said railway company lias undertaken to indemnify, and to defend any suits hereafter brought against him as such receiver, or affecting the receivership, or hereafter brought against said railway company affecting said mortgaged property, with authority also to bring snch suits as may be necessary in the discharge of his duties as receiver for the securing and protecting said mortgaged property and the assets of said railway company; and said receiver may employ such attorneys and counsel as may be necessary to enable Mm to manage such suits, and to advise him in relation to the performance of his duties as receiver; and ho may use the property in his hands for any of the purposes set out in this order."

The plaintiff on the same day tendered its replication to- the amended bill of sets-ofi of the defendant, setting forth that the coupons therein set out, maturing December 1,1.893, and afterwards, became due after the corporation had gone into the hands of a receiver, and are uot a proper set-off. The court refused leave to file ihe replication. The cause, being at issue, was tried before the jury, who found a verdict in favor of the defendant below in the sum of $1,784.98.

Plaintiff filed its petition for a wait of error. The writ was allowed “upon the plaintiff giving bond according to law in the sum of one thousand dollars, which shall be for costs only, and shall not operate as a supersedeas bond.” This bond was given. The defendant in error moves to dismiss the writ on the ground that no proper or sufficient bond has been required or given by the plaintiff’ in error. This motion rests on rule 13 (11 C. C. A. ciii.) of this court, and is based on misconception. The rule operates only where a supersedeas is prayed. In this case no supersedeas was asked, and the order granting the writ and requiring the'bond distinctly declares that it should not operate as a supersedeas. The bond required in this case and approved by the judge granting the writ is in the words of the statute (Rev. St. U. S. § 1000). The motion to dismiss the writ is refused.

The assignments of error necessary to be considered are as follow's:

First. Because the court below admitted as sets-off, coupons accruing pendente lite. Bight of set-off does not exist at common law, and is everywhere founded on statutory regulations. U. S. v. Eckford, 6 Wall. 484" court="SCOTUS" date_filed="1868-04-18" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/united-states-v-eckford-87942?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="87942">6 Wall. 484. The Code of West Virginia (Ed. 1891, p. 812, § 4) provides:

“Tn a suit for any debt the defendant may at the trial, prove and have allowed against such debt, any payment of set off which is so described in his plea or in an account filed therewith as to give the plaintiff notice of its nature but not otherwise.”

This is an exact reproduction of the Code of Virginia on the same subject. 1 Rev. Code Va. 1819, c. 128, p. 510, § 87. The construction put upon this provision of the Code of West Virginia, followed universally in all the lower courts of that state, is to admit all matters of set-off accruing before the trial, when properly pleaded' even although they accrued pendente lite. This practice is also recog*144nized as existing in Virginia by Dr. Minor (4 Minor, Inst. 659), and admitted by Robinson (5 Rob. Prac. p. 1000). It is urged, liowever, that there is no decision of any court of last resort sustaining this practice. But when it appears that a certain practice exists, and that no case is reported in which it was questioned, or by which the opinion of the appellate court has been asked upon it, we have the highest proof of universal recognition of the practice, and of acquiescence in it. When this practice is proved so to exist without exception or demur, it is overwhelming evidence of the practice prevailing in the state, which in law cases this court must follow and adopt. Rev. St. U. S. § 914. But it is said that the courts of the United States are not bound to adopt a state practice of -which they do not approve. It is true that when the state practice conflicts with some statutory regulation of congress, or when it would confer jurisdiction on the court which otherwise had no jurisdiction, the federal courts will not follow it. Mexican Cent. R. Co. v. Pinkney, 149 U.S. 194" court="SCOTUS" date_filed="1893-05-01" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/mexican-central-railway-co-v-pinkney-93611?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="93611">149 U. S. 194, 13 Sup. Ct. 859. See, also, Phelps v. Oaks, 117 U. S. 239, 6 Sup. Ct. 714. But when the state courts have an established practice, universally followed, the federal courts do and should follow it. In all cases of concurrent jurisdiction it would be a great misfortune both to suitors and counsel if, when they entered into the federal courts, they would find themselves in a strange atmosphere, governed and guided by new and unknown methods of practice. Nor are we prepared to say that the practice prevailing in the courts of West Virginia should be disapproved.

Second. Because defendant was permitted to put in evidence coupons falling due after the receiver was appointed, and also because the court directed the jury to find a verdict upon them. The court, upon application, had refused to permit the receiver to intervene in the suit. Following this up, the court permitted the defendant to set 'off against the demand of the plaintiff coupons owned by him, which matured after the receiver was appointed, upon his first and second mortgage bonds. This leads to an examination of the scope of receivership. The receiver’s powers are those conferred upon him by the order under which he was appointed. If by this order the receiver was placed in control of the claim of the company against the defendant, then his application for leave to intervene should have been granted, and the defendant should not have been permitted to set off claims accruing during the receivership. 22 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 310, note 1. If the appointment of the receiver amounted to an equitable execution upon all the property and choses of the corporation, and the assumption of them by the court for distribution among creditors on equitable principles, the defendant would not be permitted to set up his coupons accruing during the receivership in extinguishment of the debt due by him, for by so doing he would have had a preference given to him to which he would not have been entitled over other creditors. He would thereby obtain payment of his debts, Avhile others holding claims equally meritorious would be compelled to accept a small proportion, or perhaps lose them entirely. Clark v. Brockway, *42 N. Y. 13; Beach, Rec. §§ 702, 703, 705. Upon examination, how*145ever, of the order oí the court under which the receiver was appointed, made apart of this record, it will be seen, that the powers of the receiver are those provided for in the mortgage, the property described therein being stated; that Ms authority is declared to be as follows: holding, managing, and operating the railroad and other mortgaged property; that the railroad company is directed to transfer to the receiver all property of every kind and deserip tion whatever “which are covered by said mortgage”; that he is authorized and directed to prosecute and defend any pending suits by or against said railway company “affecting said mortgaged property,” and to bring such suits as may be necessary in the discharge oí his duties as receiver for securing and protecting “said mortgaged property.” His powers are limited to the mortgaged property. There is noihing in the record from which it is made to appear that the moneys claimed in the suit by the plaintiff from the defendant constituted any part of the mortgaged property.

Under these circumstances the receiver could not himself have brought suit on the claim, nor have included it in the assets in his hands as receiver. He could not have been permitted to intervene in the suit as first brought before the defendant’s set-off was filed, not being a party in interest; and for the same reason the claim remained the property of the corporation, suable by the corporation itself, and subject to all proper defenses and sets-oif against the corporation. In Smith v. McCullough, 104 U.S. 25" court="SCOTUS" date_filed="1881-10-25" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/smith-v-mccullough-90418?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="90418">104 U. S. 25, this state of facts existed: A railroad mortgage was foreclosed in proceedings m which a receiver had been appointed. There were certain county bonds, the jiroperty of the railroad company, in the hands of one McCullough. Pending the receivership, sundry creditors of> the railroad company attached these bonds in the hands of McCullough for claims against the company. And a contest arose between them and the receiver as to the ownership of the bonds, and their right to recover on them. The court construed the mortgage, and held that these bonds did not pass under it; that they therefore never passed to the receiver, but remained the properly of the company, subject to its debts, and recoverable in suits against it to which the receiver was not a party. Hut, the court having refused to permit the receiver to intervene as a party plaintiff in the suit, was it proper afterwards to permit the defendant to set off against the claim of the plaintiff coupons upon the mortgage bonds maturing after the receiver was appointed? These coupons affected the mortgaged property, and were part and parcel thereof. • They were cut off the bonds secured by the mortgage. The duties of the receiver involved provision for their payment, and examination into their validity. The whole scope and purpose of the receivership were designed to secure as much as possible for all holders of Use bonds and coupons equally. It was the province of the receivin' to defend all suits affecting the mortgaged property. As a set-off is in the nature of a cross action, the setting up these coupons as sets-off was practically the bringing of an action upon them. To such an action the receiver, under the terms of the order appointing him, had the right to be a party. As the receiver had no right to *146be made a party to the suit on the cause of action set up because he had no interest therein, the defendant could not set off against this cause of action coupons in which he did have an interest. The claim set out in the declaration, and the coupons maturing after the receiver was appointed, were not in the nature of mutual credits or mutual debts. In permitting these coupons to be used as sets-off, the court below erred. Its judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court with instructions to grant a new trial

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