32
79 FEDERAL REPORTER.
tent that the trust funds have been applied to the payment of the insolvent's debts. It may well be doubted whether the doctrine of this class of cases is sound, for it is by no means certain that the assets of the insolvent which fina.lly came into the hands of the receiver have actually been increased by the application of the trust funds to the payment of the insolvent's debts. However, it is not material to the decision of the present case to determine this question. Another rule has been established, which has been regarded as influential in the determination of some cases, but which is not important here. The rule is one resting on the doctrine of presumptions. That rule is this: If a trustee has two funds in his possession or on deposit, one a trust fund and the other his personal funds, moneys drawn by him for his private use, although purporting to be drawn by him in his trust capacity, will be charged to his personal funds or deposit. In the present case there is no evidence tending to prove that Mr. Haughey had any money on deposit to his personal credit in the bank at the time he drew his two checks as trustee. These checks were drawn by him in his trust capacity, and were paid by transferring from the trust fund standing in his name $9,000 to his individual credit; and these sums of money represented by these two checks were drawn from the bank by him on his personal checks, and went to pay his private debts, and not those of the bank. Hence no part of the trust funds was withdrawn in order to pay the debts of the bank, or otherwise went to awe]] the amount of the assets which came into the hands of the receiver. The testimony not only fails to trace the trust funds so misapplied into the receiver's hands, but, on the contrary, it shows that no part of such misapplied trust funds ever came into his hands; and it further shows that the bank received no benefit from the breach of trust complained of. The $9,000 of trust funds remaining in the bank at the time of its failure came into the possession of the receiver as a part of the mass of assets received by him. The complainant is entitled to have $9,000 of its claim paid in full as a preferential claim. The remaining $9,000 is allowed as an unpreferred claim, to be paid pari passu. Let a decree be prepared accordingly. STRATTON et al. v. DEWEY et al. (Circuit Court o! Appeals, Fifth Circuit. February 2, 1897.) No. 523. L EQUITY PnACTJOE-HEAI{lSG EVIDENCE ON DEMl'HREH.
It is contrary to correct practice for the court, upon a demurrer to a bill, to consider evidence submitted by consent of the parties; and an order entered upon such a hearing, overruling the demurrer and granting relief, is altogether irregular. ApPEAL-FINAl, DECHEES.
S.
An order which grants certain relie! upon the party's complying with conditions specified in the order, and provides that, if the conditions are not complied with, the relief shall be denied, is Dot a final decree, and is not appealable.
STRATTON V. DEWEY.
33
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Texas. The appellees, Charles P. Dewey and Albert B. Dewey, on September 29, 1894, ot a bill ot review," Jesse D. T. Stratton, Minnie Stratton and her husband (J. Thomas Stratton), and Horace E. Kelley, to review and set aside a final decree pro confesso rendered by the circuit court November 18, 1893, in equity cause No. 235, in which all appellants here except Kelley were complainants and the appellees were defendants. The decree in suit No. 235 adjudged the real estate in controversy to the appellant Minnie Stratton. And, without a reference to a master to state the account between the parties, the sum of $4,000 was further decreed in her favor against the appellees, as the rental value of the land for the years 1890, 1891, 1892, ana 1893. A more extended reference to the provisions of the decree is not considered necesfiary. Errors ot law apparent upon the face at the decree in suit No. 235 are principally relied upon by appellees to reverse the decree and reopen the case. And, as an excuse for their failure to seasonably file a bill of review, the bill alleges ignorance on the part of, appeJlees of the rendition of the decree in No. 235, which resulted trom the serious and protracted illness of their counsel, who had exclusive charge and control of the litigation in their behalf. Appellants filed a demurrer to the bill December 31, 1894. It appears from the briefs on file that counsel for the respective parties agreed that at the ,hearing ot the cause the court below should consider certain affidavits and other written evidence in connection with the bill and demurrer. The record discloses that the agreement of counsel was respected by the court, and the cause coming on to be heard March 19, 1896, in the manner suggested by ,the agreement, the following decree was rendered: "This cause came on to be heard at this term, and was argued by counsel; and thereupon, and upon consideration thereof, it was ordered, adjudged, and decreed as follows: That the demurrers of the defendants to compl!linants' bill are overruled, to which rulings defendants except; and the court having heard the bilt and exhibits and aftldavits in support thereof, and counter affidavits and exhibits submitted by defendants, it is thereupon ordered, adjudged, and decreed that complainants, Chas. P. Dewey and A. B. Dewey, shall within thirty days from this date 'pay all costs incurred in equity cause, in this court, No. 235, up to this date, and also all costs that have been incurred in this cause No. 294, and that they shall pay into the registry of this court the sum of tour thousand dollars ($4,000), with interest thereon from the 18th day of November, 1893, to the date hereof, at the rate of six per cent. per annum, to be held until the final decree shall be rendered in cause No. 235, to abide such order as may be rendered in said decree; and, upon complainants paying said costs and making said deposit within the time specified, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the pro confesso taken and entered upon the order book of this court on the - - day of August, 1893 (the same being one of the rule days of this court), and also the final decree of this court pronounced, passed, and entered on fue l/Sth day of November, 1893, in that certain cause then pending in this court upon the equity side of the docket, wherein the said Jesse D. 'r. Stratton, Minnie Stratton, and her husband, J. Thomas Stratton, defendants herein, were complainants, and said Charles P. Dewey and A. B. Dewey were defendants, and styled upon the equity docket of this court as '.Jesse D. Stratton et al. vs. C. P. Dewey et al.,' and numbered 235 on said equity docket of this court, be and the same are set aside, and said cause reopened, and that said complainants herein, Charles P. Dewey and A. B. 'Dewey, be now permitted to answer said bill in said cause No. :::35,-such answer to be a full answer to the allegations of the bill, and the interrogatories therein to them propounded, and to be filed on or befol'e the first Monday in May, A. D. 1896,and, upon said payments and deposit being so made within the time herein specified, said cause No. 235 will thereafter proceed according to the rules at practice in equity. It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that if said costs are not paid or said not made within thirty days from the date hen'of, or if said answers are not filed within the time herein specified, then said decree pro confesso and final decree In said cause No. 235 shall be and remain in full force, and not vacated by this decree, and complainants' bill in this cause will thereupon stand dismissed as on final hearing, and all costs in this cause incurred are in that event adjudged against them, for which execution may issue." From this decree the defendants in the court below appeal and assip error. f Jpd their, bill, which they designate as a "bill in the nature
79F.-3
34
79
FEDERAL REPORTER.
BranchiT.'Masterson; for appellants. S. W. Jones, for appellees. Before' pARDEE and McCORMICK, Circuit Judges, and MAXEY, District J lldge. MAXE¥, District Judge, after stating the facts, delivered the opin. ion of the court. The manner in which this cause was heard finds no warrant in the rules of correct chancery practice, and the order made upon the hear· ing of the demurrer is. altogether irregular. This court, however, cannot enter upon a consideration of these questions, nor determine those raised by the assignment of errors, as we are satisfied the motion to dismiss the appeal must be sustained because the order made by the court is not a final decree. It is in the nature of a conditional order, its finality depending upon certain contingencies that might or might not occur. The decree passed in suit No. 235, November 18, 1893, was ordered to be vacated and the cause reopened, and leave granted appellees to file an answer therein, if they should within 30 days deposit $4,000 in the registry of the court, and pay all the costs of this suit and in suit No. 235. But if the costs should not be paid, nor the deposit of $4,000 made, within the 30 days, or if the answer should not be filed within the time allowed, the decree in cause No. 235 was to remain in full force; and (using the concluding language of the decree) "complainants' bill in this cause will thereupon stand dismissed as on final hearing, and all costs in this cause incurred in that event adjudged against them, for which execution may issue." Something more was required to make the decree final than was done in this case. If appellees failed to do what the order required to be done within the prescribed time, appellants should have applied to the court for a final decree dismissing the bill. If the order of court was fully complied with by appelleel!l, a final decree should have been passed, upon their application, reversing the decree in suit No. 235, and reopening that cause for further proceedings. Speaking of an order similar in some of its aspects to the one now before the cour:, Mr. Justice Miller, as the organ of the court, in Jones' Adm'r v. Craig, 127 U. S. 215, 216, 8 Sup. Ct. 1175, says: "This order, made upon the hearing ot the demurrer to a bill in chancery, is wholly irregular. This court, however, has no jurisdiction of the case as it stllnds, because the order just cited is not a final decree. Something yet remains to be done in order to make it such, and that action depends upon whether or not the complainants will comply with the Order to bring in the sum due on the mortgage. If that order is complied with, then a decree should be made, upon the hypothesis on which the order was made, in tavor of the complainants in the bill, and quieting their title. If, however, the money is not brought into court, then, according to the theory of the order, the bill complaint should be dismissed. But, even assuming the right ot the court to make the order, as well as its validity, the circumstances under which the bill of complaint is to be dismissed or the relief granted to the complainants named therein, and the sum to be paid, are matters which are yet to be determined, which may turn out either one way or the other, and which, when ascertained, will be the foundation for a final decree. There is no final decree as the matter now stands."
ot
The appeal is therefore dismissed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
SAVANXAH, F. & W. BY. CO. V. JACKSONVILLE, T. & K. W. BY. CO.
3b
SAVANNAH, Ii'. & W. RY. CO. v. JACKSONVILLE, T. & K. W. RY. CO. et al. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Fifth Oircuit. February 23, 1897.)
No. 533. RAILROAD RECllIVERSTIlPS-PREFERRED CLAIMS-RE)/TALS OF TEUMIXAL FACILITIES.
A receiver of a railroad having been appointed in a foreclosure suit, with instructions to pay, out of moneys and income in his hands, for supplies and operating expenses, and for expenses of operation during the six months previous to the receivership, another railroad company presented an intervening petition in the suit, setting up a contract with the insolvent railroad company to furnish it with terminal facilities at a stipulated rental, alleging that such facilities had been used up to the appointment of the and b::r him after his appointment, and claiming a preference, for the rental due, over the mortgage debt. Held" that as the intervener, whether entitled to its whole claim or not, was at least entitled to a fair rental for the time during which its terminalfaciIities were used by the receiver, it was error to susUlin a demurrer to the whole petition.
Appeal from the Oircuit Oourt of the United States for the Southern District of Florida. On July 23, 1892, the Pennsylvania Company for Insurances on Live! and Grant· ing Annuities filed its bill against the Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway Company for the foreclosure of a mortgage executed to it, as trustee, May 15, 1890, by said railway company. 1'his mortgage is subsequent in point of time to three others executed by the constituentll of the Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway Company to the Mercantile Trust Company, to secure bonds aggregating $2,216,000. Agreeably to the prayer of the bill, a receiver was appointed, who went into possession of, and is now operating, the railway. By the order of appointment, the receiver was authorized, out of the moneys and income coming into his hands, to pay all state and municipal taxes chargeable against the property; to pay for such repairs, supplies, labor, and services as should, in his judgment, be necessary or proper to conserve and operate the railwll7 and other property; and to pay the indebtedness of said railway company incurred for expenses of operation during the six months next preceding the date of the order. He was further authorized to pay the maturing interest coupons attached to the bonds issued by the three constituent companies to the Mercantile Trust Company. Subsequently, the appellant, the Savannah, Florida & Western Railway Company, filed its petition of intervention in the original suit, in which it claimed an indebtedness of $45,352.32 against the Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway Company, and, to secure the payment of the same, prayed that an equitable lien be declared in its favor superior to that of the bondholders. 1'he debt of appellant is alleged to have arisen out of a contract entered into between it and the Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway Company, August 1, 1888, by the terms of which appellant agreed to furnish to the Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West Railway Company certain terminal facilities at the city of Jacksonville, as follows: "The necessary track room at its terminal station grounds, in the city of Jacksonville, Florida, for the arrival, departure, standing, and making up of its trains, both passenger and freight, and the necessary facilities for the proper accommodation of its traffic at the said city of J acksonviIIe, for the period of ninety-nine (99) years, with the privilege of renewal on like terms and conditions." In the contract, the term "first party" refers to the appellant, and "second party" to the appellee, the Jacksonville, 1'ampa & Key West Railway Company. 'l'he third, fourth, and fifth clauses of the contract provide for the payment of the terminal facilities, as follows: "Third. 'l'he second party covenants and agrees to pay to the first party, for the use of such of the premises aforesaid as may be exclusively set apart and accepted for its purposes, an annual rental as follows: Six per cent. on the actual cost 'thereof, and the actual annual expenditure for maintenance and operating expenses, including taxes and insurance. Fourth. The second party covenants and agrees to pay to the first party, as annual rental for the use of such of the premises aforesaid as may be used by it in common with the first party, such part of the interest at six per cent. on the actual cost thereof, and of