UNION PAC.
Ry. co. ,V.
DEJSVEH & R. G. R. CO.
179
the assets of the insolvent til'm, and as fast as pay the funda into the registry of the court, and the cause will proceed with the utmost expedition
UNION PAc.Ry. Co.
'V.
DENVER & R. G. R. Co. et al.
(Oirc'Uit Oo'Urt, D. Oolorado. January 5,1889.) COURTS-,-FEDERAL COURTB-!NJUNCTION-AGAINST STATE COURT.
A circuit court will not restrain the exercise of a right. acquired by regular condemnation proceedings in a state court. to extend one raIlroad across an· other. where the complaining company, citizen of another state. has the possession and management of the road over which the right of way was ron· demned, by virtue of its ownership of a majority of the stock. since. if not bound, as a stockholder. by the decree of the state court. it could have made itself a party to those proceedings for the protection of its rights.
In Equity. On motion to discharge preliminary injunction. TeUer Orahood, for complainant. Wolcott &- Vaile, for defendants. Before BREWER and fuLLETT, JJ. BREWER, J. In reference to the case of the Union Pacific Railway Company against the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Company, and the Denver, Clear Creek & Western Railway Company, which was argued before usyestetday, we are both of the opinion that the restraining order must be set aside. The Union Pacific Railway Company is not a lessee of the South Park road; probably could not, under your statutes, be one. H is a stockholder, owns a majority of the stock, and by virtue of that ownership controls the South Park, and has obtained for itself the possession andmanagemel1t of the latter's line of railway. As stockholder it is absolutely concluded by the proceedin/1;s in the state court. Whether that does not conclude it altogether as to all its rights or claims, may be doubtful; but, assuming that it does not, and that as a party in possession it might properly be made a party to these condemnation proceedings, then we have a case in which the Denver, Clear Creek & Western Railway Company has proceeded in the state court in full compliance with all the requirements of the state statute, making all parties whose interests appear of record parties to that proceeding, and has obtained a decree of condemnation. Now, this condemnation of a right of way is an act of sovereignty, and the proceedings for it are, in a certain sense, quaai in rem.,-at least, until you come to the question of the assessment of damages,-and while it may be that this court would have jurisdiction in case a party, citizen of another state, whose rights were not apparent do not of record, was grossly wronged by condemnation say it would or would not have such'jurisdiction,-but if it does, it should be a very clear case, one in which the substantial rights of such party are seriouslythreatened, before thisc<)urt should interfere when proceed-
FEDERAL REPORTER.
ings have been carried to consummation in the state court. It would be unfortunate if proceedings could run in two courts,-in the one court a right of surface crossing being awarded, and in the other a decree forbidding surface independent and contradictory decrees of different tribunals in reference to the same matter; that is, the matter of crossing. And as the state court has unquestionable jurisdiction, as the proceedings have been in strict compli:t11ce with the statute, as they have passed into decree, as the Union Pacific Company could have made itself a party to that record, and have insisted upon its rights, even if it was not absolutely bound by that decree by virtue of its being a stockholder, we think it would not be proper for this court to continue the restraining order. We therefore set itaside. HALLETT,
J., concurring.
UNITED STATES '/J. TRINIDAD COAL
&
COKING
Co.
(Ot"rcuit Court, D. Colorado. January 10,1889.) PUlILIC LANDS-RIGHT TO PURCHASE-PRIOR CONVEYANCE.
A purchas'e of coal lands from the United States, made by one authorized .by law to buy such lands, for tbe benefit and at tbe expense of a corporation, under a previous agreement tbat the land sbouldbe conveyed to tbe corpora· tion wben tbe patent sbould issue, is legal, tboug-h tbe corporation could not by law have purchased the land, some of its members having already exer· cised their full rights to buy sucb public lands, as such previous contract is . not probibited under the statute relative to coal lands.
In Equity. On demurrer to bill. Bill by the United States against the Trinidad Coal & Coking Company to set aside certain patents to coal lands. H. W. Hobson, for complainant. Chas. E. Gast, for defendant. BREWER, J. The bill charges that defendant holds the title to six quarter sections of coal lands; that the entries were made and patents issued to six individuals, naming them, who immediately conveyed to the defendant. The purchase price and all expenses were paid by the defendant. It could not of itself purchase by reason of the fact that some of its members had exercised their full right to purchase. As it could not purchase directly, the contention is that it could not do indirectly that which it could not do directly, and that it could Bot through the instrumentality of these six individuals thus acquire title to these lands. There is nothing to show that these six individuala did not have the fight to purchase; and the act of congress gives a right to purchase to persons possessing certain qualifications, upon the payment of a certain amount of money, the maximulll being $20 per acre, wLich was paid in