BENEDIOT fl. ST. JOSEPH & W. R. 00.
173
NATION. The distinction between the cases rests on the question of public duty. When a party is bound to perform a public duty without discrimination, then an agreement to give preferences to particular persons is invalid. When, however, as in the case in the text, there is no such duty, then there may be a discrimination for the reasons given with much ability by Judge KEY. Had the defendant, Miss Whitesides, been under any public duty to permit no discrimination in the reception of persons visiting her estate. then a contract by her to admit only such persons as should come in a particular. line of travel would be invalid. This would unquestionably be the case did she undertake to receive guests as at a public inn; since, as is pointed out by Mr. .Justice BI,ADLEY in his opinions in the civil rights questions,l the proprietur of au inn or a hotel is not permitted to discriminate arbitrarily between different classes of guests. But Miss Whitesides was not in this position. ..A. visIt to her estate was not a necessity, as is the case with the accommodations obtained by travelers from hotel or common carrier. The visit was a matter of luxury, and on the enjoyment of this luxury she was entitled to impose whatever restrictions she chose. It is true that the line between the two classes of cases may sometimes be shadowy. When, however, we apply the criterion of public duty, the two classes of cases become readily distinguishable. We have this illustrated in some recent rulings as to contracts by which certain teillphone companies agree to deal exclusively with certain telegraph companies. In Connecticut such a contract has been held to be valid. 2 On the other hand, a similar contract has been held to be invalid in Ohio; and the reason of this ruling may be found in the fact that in Ohio a statute exists prescribing the impartial transmission of all dispatches. A similar statute no doubt exists in Conllecticut; but it was not regarded by the court as binding the telephone company. But, whatever we may think of this distinction, we may regard it as settled that the only cases in which a party is prevented from discriminating between persons seeking to do business with him are the following: (I) Where he has the monopoly of some staple whose use is essential to the community: (2) Where, as is the case with common carriers and innkeepers, he is required by law to place allapplicants, not subject to exclusion.on police grounds, on the same footing. FRANCIS WHARTON. >
(6) WHE:l" THERE IS NO PUBLIC DUTY THEN THERE :MAY BE DISCRIMI-
>
13 Sup. Ct. Rep.lS.
I Amer.Rapid Tel. Co. Co. 13 Reporter, 829.
v. >Telephone
BENEDICT
and others v. ST.
JOSEPH
& W.R. Co. ancf others.
(Circuit Court, D. Kafl,81U. 1.
November 30, 188il)
MORTGAGE OF RAILROAD PROPERTV-FoRECLOSURE-WAIVBR OF APPRAISEMENT-LAws OF KANSAS. >
Under section 3983 of the Compiled Laws of Kansas no order for the sale of railroad property mortgaged with a waiver of appraisement can be made by the court until the expiration of six months after the decree of .foreclosure. This statute regulates the transfer of land within the state, and is thetefore binding upon the federal courts. ., After such foreclosure the income of the road, being the property of the bondholders for the liquidation of their claims, should be received by a disin-
2.
SAME-APPOINTMENT OF RECEIVER.
174
FEDERAL REPORTER.
terested trustee nnm the time of the sale; and the fact. that certain of the bondholders are in possession, to the exclusion of others, is a sufficient reason for the appointment. of a receiver. unless the interval between the decree and the sale is very brief.
In Equity. John F. Dillon, J. P. Usher, and A. J. Pappleton, for Union Pacific Railroad Company. Wager Swayne, John Doniphan, and Melville Egleston, for St Joseph & Western Railroad Company. Winslow Judson, for complainant. Woodson, Gj'een x Burnes, for receiver. MOCRARY, J. In this case a decree of foreclosure will be entered. We have carefully considered the motion for the appointment of a receiver. We are entirely satisfied that the St. Joseph & Western Railroad Company is insolvent, and that the property covered by the mortgages is inadequate security for the bonds secured thereby. The facts that no interest has ever been paid, that the debt is over $6,OOO,00u, and that the current expenses have, until recently, about equaled the earnings, are sufficient upon this point. Weare also clearly of the opinion that the road should not remain in the custody of the present management, which is in fact, if not in name, the Union Pacific Railway Company, unless a sale under the foreclosure can be had at an early day. The objection to continuing the present management for any protracted period of time is to be found in the fact that to do so would be to leave the mortgaged property in the hands of one set of bondholders, to be by them managed and controlled for themselves and another and hostile sat of bondholders. The proof is satisfactory that there are two sets of bondholders,-the majority represented by the Union Pacific Railway Company, and a large minority whom that company does not represent. If a considerable tiJne.must inevitably elapse before a sale can be made and confirmed, we think the minority have a clear right to insist that the property shall, in the mean time, be in tbe hands of a disinterested party. It is not necessary to determine at present whether the charges of mismanagement made against the Union Pacific Company are sustained. It is enough to say that the holders of the minority of the bonds have a right to insist that the road shall not remain in the hands of an interest hostile to them. This court is very reluctant to appoint a receiver, and we have considered very carefully the question whether, in justice to the interests iIi hostility to the present management, we can refuse to do so. If the time to elapse before the property can be transferred to a purchaser under a decree to be now rendered 'Was not more than 60 or 90 days, wee.hould not be willing to appoint a receiver for so short a period, and when the argument closed we were under the impression that there was nothing in th,e way of closing the sa.le and transfer within that period. But upon looking into the statlltes of this state we find
v.
ST.' JOSEPH et W. R. CO.
175
a provision which seems to require in a case of this character a stay of execution for six months. The provision referred to is section 3983 of the Compiled Laws of Kansas, 1881, and is as follows: "That if the words "appraisement waived,' or other words of similar import, shall be inserted in any deed, mortgage. bond, note, bill, or written contract hereafter made, any court rendering judgment thereon shall order, as part of the jndgment, that the same and any process issued thereon shall be enforced, and sales of lands and tenements made thereunder without any appraisement or valuation made of the property to be sold: provided, that no order of sale or execution shall be issued upon snch judgment until the expiration of six months from the time of the rendition of said judgment."
Here the mortgages contain a waiver of appraisement, so that the case seems to fall clearly within the terms of the statute. This statute, in our opiniou, confers upon mortgagors a substantial right, and if so, it must, we think, be respected and enforced by this court. It is the settled practice of this court to follow this provision of the statute in foreclosure cases'. If the question were at all doubtful we should not be willing to take the chances of ordering the sale of prop-· arty of the great value of that now in 'controversy, without following the statute and ordering the stay of six months which it requires. It is contended that this statute has no application to a mortgage of railroad property, and Hammock v. Loan «Trust Co. 105 U. S. 86, is cited as supporting this oondition. That oase undoubtedly holds that, the statute of Illinois providing for the redemption of real 6gtate soia under a decree of mortgage foreclosure will not be followed by the federal courtB of equity in that state in cases of the foreolosure of mortgages upon property, real,personal, and mixed, of a railroad' company. The reason given for this ruling is that the property of suoh aco::J.pany, oonsisting of real estate, personal property, and a corporate franchise, must be treated as a unit, and sold altogether, because, to at.tempt to divide it, and sell the real estate separately from the personal estate, would destroy its It is held that to apply the statute to such a Cf1se would leave the oonrt with "no discretion, if the corporation or its judgment creditors so demand, except to order the sale of the real estate separately in parcel,S, when susceptible of division and subject to redemption, leaving the franchises and personal property to be sold absolutely and without redemption. 1,1hus ()lie person might become the purchaser of the real estate, another of the franchise, and still others of the personal property." Such a reJ;mlt, the court held, could not have been oontemplated by the legis. lature. It was shown that among other oonsequences one person might acquire title to the real estate, another to the personalty, and still another to the corporate franchise, eaoh being practically value.. less without the other. It is evident that no such serious results will follow from a oompllance with the statute of Kansas now sideration. It relates only to the time when an execution or order of sale shall issue. It is always within the power of of equity, in foreclosure cases, to fix a time when a sale of the mortgaged prop-
176
EEDEBAL BBPOBTEB.
erty may be had. The complainants in the present case have no abe solute right to an immediate sale even of the personal property and corporate franchises. It is not, therefore, necessary, in order to follow the statute, that we divide and dismember the mortgaged railroad property. The stay can be ordered as to the entire property and its unity thereby be preserved, and the statute at the same time en· forced, and all rights under it maintained. We are bound to follow the statute, since it is clearly a statute regulating the transfer of title to property in the state; unless, upon some such ground as that stated in Hammock v. Loan cf; Trust Go., we can hold that it was not intended to apply to such a case as that now before us. McGoon v. Scales, .9 Wall. 23; Brine v. Ins. Go. 96 U. S. 627. Compliance with this statute must postpone the sale until it will probably be too late to obtain confirmation at the next June tert:j1. If that term is passed a delay of one year is inevitable. For reasons already suggested we cannot see way clear to leave the property so long after default and decree of foreclosure in the hands of one portion of the bondholders, acting in hOl:ltility to another portion having equal equities. The net income of the road, from this date, at least, (we decide nothing now as to past earnings,) is the property of the bondholders, and must be applied to the liquidation of their claims. Whoever controls the property, and collects and disburses the earnings, from this date, must do 80 as a trustee of the bondholders. The bondholders out of possession have a right to object to the collection and disbursement of this increase by other bondholders in possession and hostile in interest to them. They have aright to insist that a disinterested representative of all the bondholders shall perform that duty. The party to be left in possession and anthorized to collect, care for, and pay over the income, being a trustee, and acting in a fiduciary relation, should have no personal interest in hostility to that of any of the cestuis que trust. The amount of the net increase to be divided among bondholders will depend upon the amount of expenditures, what improvements and repairs are made, and the like. Many questions must arise in the course of administration which should be deby an unbiased representative of all the interests concerned, or by the court. It might be to the interest of the bondholders in possession to make extensive improvements. To this the bondholders out of possession might object. If a receiver is appointed, the court can direct and control these matters. As at least a year must probably elapse before a sale can be made and confirmed, we are constrained, most reluctantly, to appoint a receiver; but we give notice now that no delay that is not unavoidable shall be allowed in closing the receivership and delivering the property to the purchaser at the foreclosure sale; and, if possible, the sale shall be made and confirmed, and the property turned over, before the end of the year. FOSTER, J., concurs.
CHICAGO,
M. &
ST.
1'. BY.
CO. v. CITY OF SABULA..
177
CHIOAGO, M. & ST. P. Ry. CO.
V.
UITY OF SABULA. and another. \
(Circuit Court, N. D. Iowa, E. D. January 3,1884.) RAILROAD BRIDGE-TAXATION-LAWS OF IOWA.
The constitution of Iowa requires the property of all corporations for pecuniary profit to be taxed in the same way as that of individuals. In 1872 the legislature passed an act providing that railroad property Within the state should be assessed for taxation hy a special board appointed by the state, lind not by·the local authorities, This statute was held by the courts to be consti. tutional, on the ground that it applied to all railroad property whether· owned by corporations or by individuals. Section 10 of the act of 1872 declared that no ptovisions of the act should apply to any railroad bridge across the Mississippi or Missouri river, buy that such bridges should be taxed as individual property. At'the time the act was passed none of the bridges over those rivers were owned by railroad companies, but tlie companies paid rent or toll for the use of them. Ln 1880 the Chicago, Milwaukee & St, Paul Railroad built a bridge of its own across the Mississippi at Sabula. Held, that the nature of the property and not the ownership determined whether it fell witbin section 10 of the act, and that the bridge was therefore suhject to be taxed by the local taxing district.
Bill in Equity. Motion for temporary injunotion. W ··J. Knight and J. W. Cary, for oomplainant. Fouke ct Lyon, W. C. Gregory, and J. Hilsinger, for defendants. SHIRAS, J. The bill in this cause sets forth that the complainant is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Wisconsin, and ia the owner and lessee of about 5,000 miles of railroad in the states of Wisconsin, Illinois, and Iowa; that, among others, it operates a line running from Chicago, Illinois, to Council Bluffs, Iowa, which crosses the Mississippi river at the town of Sabula, by means of a bridge constructed by complainant under the authority of the act of congress, approved April 1,1872, the said bridge being used solely for the passage of the trains of complainant, and being owned solely by complainant, the same as other portions of its track. The bi'} further alleges that in the years 1881, 1882, and 1883, the general manager of complainant made a statement of the number of miles of railroad operated by complainant in the state of lowa,.with the number of cars, and the amount of earnings, as required by the statute of Iowa, and furnished the same to the executive council, which sts.tement included the length of so much of said railroad bridge at Sabula, Iowa, as is within the state of Iowa, and that the executive council, as required by law, assessed the total valuation of complainant's property, including so much of said bridge as is within the state of Iowa, and apportioned the same over the entire road of complainant, in accOl·dance with the requirements of the statutes of Iowa, regulating the assessment and taxation of railroad property. The bill further charges that the town of Sabula, and county of Jackson, have each assessed the bridge in question and levied taxes thereon for the years 1881, 1882, and 1883, and are threatening to enforce the payment v.19,no.3-12