Central Trust Co. v. Seasongood
Central Trust Co. v. Seasongood
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The' motion of appellee to dismiss this appeal is denied. If, as contended by him, the order of December 8, 1883, was one from which an appeal would lie, the appeal prayed and allowed on the 20th of November, 1885, would bring that order before us; for, although the bond required by the court was made to operate as a supersedeas only of the order of the latter date, the appeal asked and granted was “ of this cause,” that is, of the whole cause as far as it had then progressed.
’ Conceding appellee’s lien on the • lots to be prior to its lien on so much of the railroad as crossed those lots, the appellant denies that appellee had a lien upon the entire road of the Cincinnati Northern Railway Company. The proceeds of the sale of the whole road, it is insisted, must be distributed between the appellant and the appellee, upon the basis of the proportionate value of the parts upon which their respective liens rested; not, necessarily, the mathematical proportion of the three hundred and twenty feet of the railroad covering the lots in question to the entire length of the road., forty-two miles, but in the proportion of the fair value, all things considered, of the former to the latter. The precise mode of . ascertaining this value was not suggested in the argument.
We are of opinion that the. appellant is not in a condition to raise the -question just stated. It was a party to the suit in the state court, the' decree in which provided for a sale of
The decree of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY v. SEASONGOOD
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- An appeal prayed and granted in a Circuit Court “of this cause to the Supreme Court” brings the whole case here, including orders previously made in it. A party to a decree in a state court in a matter subject to its jurisdiction cannot attack it collaterally in a suit commenced in a Circuit Court of the United States after the jurisdiction of the'state court had attached. It is immaterial whether the receiver’s certificates, which are in controversy in this suit were properly issued to the appellee, for the reason that: (1) it is apparent that the order of the state court under which they were issued was the result of an agreement between the parties to this suit; and (2) if they should he held to be invalid the appellee could not be restored to the rights under the decree of the state court which he' surrendered for them.