Court Opinion

ID: 6834986
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 20:02:50.091308+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:04:40.343214
License: Public Domain

MOORMAN, Circuit Judge
(after stating the facts as above). The questions argued deal in one form or another with two inquiries : Whether the court was right in modifying the contract, and allowing Sherman compensation thereunder as modified; and whether it was right in ordering the amount allowed paid out of the fund which he collected from the government. Neither of them involves, in our opinion, a determination of the ownership of the balance of the fund as between other claimants.
There can be no doubt that the receiver entered into a contract with Sherman, agreeing to pay him for prosecuting the claim 50 per cent, of the amount recovered. We assume, as seemingly it is conceded by counsel for Sherman, that the making of such a contract without authority from the court was beyond the power of the receiver, and we disregard wholly the questions of fact argued, as there is ample, if not compelling evidence to support the findings of the master.
Proceeding upon the hypothesis that the contract with the receiver was unenforceable, the inquiry arises whether, after it was carried out in good faith by Sherman, the court might, in the exercise of its equity powers, adopt and approve it, rendering it retroactively effective. Upon this proposition we have no doubt — certainly as to claimants, who in the meantime had not acquired unqualified rights. It is a principle of equity jurisprudence that courts of equity are at liberty to use a wide discretion in dealing with unauthorized contracts made by their receivers, and may modify, approve, or disregard them entirely, as shall appear to he just. Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co. v. Central Railroad Co., 35 N. J. Eq. 429; Wigton v. Coal Co., *116270 Pa. 420, 113 A. 425; Chicago Deposit Vault Co. v. McNulta, 153 U. S. 554,14 S. Ct. 915, 38 L. Ed. 819.
Having the right to exercise this power of approval to the detriment of the receiver or creditor, the question is whether the same right exists as against an intervening purchaser, such as appellant, who, without any knowledge of the existence of the pending claim, purchased the railroad and all its assets, “except cash in the receiver’s hands and receiver’s accounts-and bill receivable.” Sherman does not contend that the excepted property included the claim against the government, but insists that he is entitled, under many authorities cited, including Trustees v. Greenough, 105 U. S. 527, 26 L. Ed. 1157; Hobbs v. McLean, 117 U. S. 567, 6 S. Ct. 870, 29 L. Ed. 940, and Harrison v. Perea, 168 U. S. 311,18 S. Ct. 129, 42 L. Ed. 478, to compensation out of the fund which he reclaimed. Appellants are not concerned with his compensation, if it is not to be paid out of that fund. Their position is that reimbursement for attorney’s fees and expenses incurred in recovering a trust fund cannot be had by any one except a person who had a common interest with others in the fund and who at his own expense took proceedings to recover it; that the contract with Sherman was not an assignment of the claim against the government, which was unassignable under section 3477 of the Revised Statutes (Comp. St. § 6383) as construed in Ball v. Halsell, 161 U. S. 72,16 S. Ct. 554, 40 L. Ed. 622; and even if the court had the power to modify and approve the contract and, as between Sherman and other claimants, to allow him compensation out of the fund recovered, that it was without power to make such an allowance as against them because, as they claim, their rights as purchasers became fixed as of the date of the sale and conveyance.
The contract with Sherman was clearly not an assignment of any part of the claim against the government; but, under the principles announced in the cases relied upon by him, it was, we think, within the power of the court, in the absence of an unqualified legal or better equitable right in others, to charge against the fund the expenses incurred by the receiver in its collection. The contention of appellants as to their equitable rights overlooks, we think, important considerations of which a court of equity must take cognizance, among them the fact that appellants did not know such a claim was in existence when they purchased the railroad, and did not, in making their bid, expect to receive anything more than they have already received., After they have received all that they thought they were purchasing, are they in position, upon learning of the'claim, to ask a court of equity to give them the proceeds thereof, and to impose upon others the burden of paying for its collection, or else deprive appellee of the compensation to which he is justly entitled ? This goes only to the ethical view of their position, and, while entitled to great weight, must obviously yield to any clear legal precept that confers upon them an unqualified or superior right. It is said for them that the right is found in the fact of their purchase of the property between the making of the contract and its approval by the court, under which they acquired a vested right which even a court of equity may not disregard.
The contention would have great force in some circumstances, but it is founded necessarily upon the foreclosure decree and the rights acquired thereunder; and in that decree the property, although conveyed free from all claims and rights of the railroad company, receiver, or any creditor, stockholder, or other person claiming by, through, or under any of them, was sold “subject to compliance by the purchaser with all the conditions imposed upon the purchaser by this decree and by any order hereafter entered in this consolidated cause.” We are told by counsel, and we assume it to be true, that such a clause as this is always inserted in a decree of sale or order confirming a transfer of railroad property after receivership; and it seems very probable, as we are also told, that it is added for the very purpose of giving the court the power to dispose of equitable controversies not known at the time, but which may develop afterward, and which, except for such a clause, would unfortunately be foreclosed by the generality of the earlier language in the decree. If construed to mean nothing more than a reservation of power to enter formal or the usual orders touching the sale of the property, such as setting aside or confirming the sale, a power that otherwise existed, the provision would be meaningless. It was, we think, intended to and did reserve in the court the right to dispose of conflicting claims to .the property during the pendency of the consolidated cause, including the right, when the occasion arose, to subject this fund to the equity of the one whose efforts brought it into court. Appellants took the property subject to the exercise of this power, and, regardless of who owns the balance, the court rightly held that appellee should receive his compensation from the fund that he had brought into court. In doing so there was no deprivation of any vested right in the property, nor any modification of the order of sale.
Judgment affirmed.