Kansas City, M. & O. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Latham
Kansas City, M. & O. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Latham
Opinion of the Court
The Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas has appealed from a judgment against it in favor of J. H. Latham for injuries to a shipment of cattle resulting from negligent handling of the cattle by the employSs of the receivers of that railway, who were appointed by the federal court and who were finally discharged prior to the institution of this suit.
The case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, which is a part of the record here. The defendant railway company expressly agreed that the claim asserted by plaintiff was a valid claim .against the receivers before their discharge for the amount awarded by the trial court; but by all the assignments of error presented it is insisted that appellant is not liable therefor. Appellant was the owner of the property at the time the receivers were appointed, and upon its application the receivers were discharged, and the property returned to the company without a sale.
In his petition in the present suit plaintiff sought to hold the company liable for the claim upon two special theories: First, that while the property was in the hands of the receivers, earnings derived from operating it, in excess of the aggregate of all debts and liabilities incurred by the receivers, were expended for betterments and improvements of the property, the benefits of all which were realized by the company after the property was restored; second, that by the terms of the railway company’s application for the discharge of the receivers and the restoration of the property to its possession and control and, as a condition precedent to the grant of such relief, it expressly agreed to assume all outstanding liabilities of the receivers, and that by the terms of the order of court granting the application the property was released to the company charged with all such liabilities.
But plaintiff also pleaded that appellant was liable for his claim by operation of law, and, in connection therewith, alleged that by order of court the receivers were discharged and the property in their hands returned to defendant without sale. The proof explicitly refuted any right to recover upon the first theory,mentioned.
*719 In the application for the discharge of the receivers, many claims were mentioned specifically, including those outstanding against the company prior to the appointment of the receivers, some of which had been allowed by the master in chancery and approved by the court, and others were still pending and undetermined. It was further alleged that there were outstanding receivers’ certificates in the sum of approximately $1,470,000, secured by a preference lien.on all the property of the company; and in addition thereto adjusted liabilities of the receivers in the sum of $250,000. A further allegation relative to outstanding claims reads:
“Your petitioner further states that there are pending undetermined and unadjudicated, by suit and in few instances by claims, other liabilities and demands against this company prior to the receivership, as well as against these receivers; but petitioner is unable to state what amount will finally be due upon the same.”
The application concludes with the following:
“Now the premises considered, your petitioner prays for a proper order and decree discharging such receivers, and directing that all of its property and assets be taken from the possession and control of said receivers and delivered to this petitioner, and that it be authorized to take charge of said property and operate same, and in order that the rights and indebtedness of all parties may be fully protected, it hereby agrees to accept‘said property subject to the charge of all indebtedness which has been or may be finally adjudicated against it, and it further assumes all of the liabilities and indebtedness accruing or to accrue against said receivers of every kind and character whatever, and is willing that the court may make all proper and necessary orders which will protect the indebtedness of all parties having any claims or demands, either against this petitioner, or against the receivers herein.
“Wherefore, the premises considered, your petitioner prays that all due and proper orders be made and entered herein by this court, as herein prayed for.”
The order of court granting the application contains the following:
V. “It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that said defendant, the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas, hereby takes and receives, and shall take and receive, all of the property and assets of every kind and description owned by it involved in this receivership, including the assets of every kind and description held .and delivered to it by the said receivers, involved in and conveyed by this order, directing the delivery of said property to the said defendant, the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas, by the said receivers, expressly charged with and subject to the following claims, demands, and liabilities, to wit:
“(a) All of the court costs incurred in this receivership which are or may be properly chargeable to or against the complainant herein, or to or against the defendant, the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas, or to or against said S. B. Hovey and M. L. Mertz, as x-eceivers.
“(b) All of the liabilities which have heretofore been adjudicated and determined, and which may hereafter be finally adjudicated and determined and found to be just, true, and connect demands against the said S. B. Hovey and M. L. Mertz, as receivers, arising out of the operation of the lines or property of the defendant by such receivers.
“(c) All of the indebtedness and liabilities owed by and due from the said the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas, which have been finally established and adjudged, or which may be hereafter finally adjudicated by this court, or by any other court of competent jurisdiction, and which may be found to be just and legal liabilities against the said defendant, the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas.
“(d) Any allowances for compensation of any officer or officers of this court appointed in this cause, or officer or agents of the receivers, if, in the opinion of the court, any of such are entitled to such compensation, reservation being hereby made by the court of its right to hereafter determine such question.
“And it is further provided by the acceptance of the said the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas of the provisions of this order and decree that it is deemed and held to have assumed all of such liabilities and indebtedness as herein provided for.
YI. “And it fuither appearing to the court that the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas, through a bondholders’ committee, has caused to be placed with S. B. Hovey and M. L. Mertz, receivers herein, the sum of three hundred fifty thousand dollars ($350,000), which said sum the said Hovey and Mertz accepted as trustees for the purpose of paying off and discharging the indebtedness and liabilities of the receivers finally adjudicated and determined, and of the class and kind named in the petition filed herein by the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas, and also paying off and discharging the indebtedness and liabilities of the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas, adjudicated and determined as set forth in said petition, and the court having confidence in the said trustees aforesaid, hereby orders and directs that the said S. B. Hovey and M. L. Mertz, as trustees, proceed with due diligence to expend the amount so placed in their hands as trustees toward paying off the liabilities and indebtedness as aforesaid named and provided for.
“It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that all questions not hereby disposed of are reserved for future adjudication, and the court reserves jurisdiction of this cause and of the property affected by this decree for the purpose of final disposition of all such questions and matters, and any party to this proceeding, and any claimant or intervener whose claims have been or shall be filed herein, may apply to this court for further orders and directions as may be deemed right and proper. And the court reserves jurisdiction, upon due hearing, subject to the right of all parties interested to contest, to charge the property hereby directed to be delivered to the said defendant as aforesaid, with any and all liabilities which have been or which may hereafter at any time b& finally adjudged against the receivers for or by reason of any act or omission of theirs in the administration of their trust as such receivers. And likewise, the court reserves jurisdiction, upon due hearing, subject to the right of all parties interested to contest, to charge the property here directed to be delivered to said defendant the Kansas City, Mexico & Orient Railway Company of Texas, or which may come into its hands under and by virtue of this decree, with any lien or liens which may be finally established to exist against such property, and to fix and determine the priority of such iiens.”
The receivers were appointed, qualified, and took possession of the property March 9, 1912. They were discharged and the property restored to the company on July 9, 1914. On March 25, 1912, Judge O. K. Bell was appointed special master in chancery, with power to hear and determine all claims pre *720 sented by intervention and asserted against the receivers, or against the company, permission to file such pleas of intervention being expressly given in the order; and the master in chancery was ordered to appoint dates and places for hearing the same convenient to the claimants. He was directed to give due notice of such appointment, and to report to the court his findings upon all such claims. On April 24, 1913, Wm. H. At-well was appointed special master in chancery to succeed Judge Bell, who had died, and was given the same powers. The duties imposed upon those appointees were duly performed.
November 23, 1913, was the date upon which the shipment of cattle in controversy in this suit sustained their injuries through the negligence of the receivers’ employes. On December 29, 1913, plaintiff, Latham, filed with the general manager of the receivers his written claim for such damages, which was expressly rejected by them March 17, 1914, nearly four months before their discharge. Plaintiff never at any. time filed said claim with the special master in chancery, and did not institute the present suit until September 7, 1914, nearly two months after the receivers were discharged.
Appellant contends that the decree of the federal court should be construed as limiting the liabilities which were fixed as a charge upon the property and which were assumed by the company to claims which were then pending or which already had been reduced to judgments either in that court or in state courts, or which might thereafter be asserted and adjudicated in the receivership court.
Appellant has cited several decisions, such as Fidelity Ins. Trust & Safe Department Co. v. N. & W. Ry. (C. C.) 88 Fed. 815; Stewart v. Wisconsin Central Ry. (C. C.) 117 Fed. 782, in which the rule is announced that if it be one of the terms of the contract of purchase of property sold by a receiver that the purchaser shall assume such liability of the receiver as may be fixed and determined by the court appointing him, then the purchaser has the right to claim that he is not bound by the judgment of any other court fixing such liabilities. See, also, 34 Cyc. 331.
But as the appellant in the present suit did not purchase the property from the receiver, clearly, the reasons upon which those decisions are based do not obtain if the property is returned without sale, and therefore the decisions are not applicable, even though we should be inclined to follow them.
We are of opinion, further, that independent of said order of court appellant assumed and became liable to pay plaintiff’s claim by force of the provisions of article 2141, 2 Vernon’s Sayles’ Tesas Civil Statutes, mentioned ^already, which reads:
“All parties and corporations whose property has been placed in the hands of a receiver by order of the count, and which was not sold by the receiver, and which property has been delivered back to the original parties or corporation, without any sale of said property, shall be liable and held to pay all of the unpaid liabilities of the receiver in causes of action arising out of and during the receivership; and, if there are any suits pending against the receiver at the date of discharge, on causes of action arising during the receivership, the plaintiff shall have the right to make the party or corporation to whom the receiver delivered the property which was in his hands as receiver a party defendant along with the receiver; and, if any judgment is rendered against the receiver for causes of action arising out of and during the receivership, then, the court shall also, at the same time (if the party or corporation receiving back the property have been made parties defendant), render judgment in favor of the plaintiff against defendants for the amount so found for plaintiff and all costs; and plaintiff shall have the right to foreclose his lien on the property delivered back by said receiver to said party or corporation.”
For the reasons indicated, all assignments of error are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.
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Reference
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- Kansas City, M. O. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Lathami.
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