The answers admit the execution and delivery of the mortgages as alleged in the complaint, and that there is due thereon the sum of $520,000 principal and about $39,000 of interest. The sole defense alleged is that the defendant mortgagor had been adjudicated a bankrupt prior to the commencement of this action and that the sale of the mortgaged premises has been had free of the lien of said mortgages, pursuant to an order of the bankruptcy court, whereby the lien of the mortgages was directed to be transferred to the proceeds of the sale; that the premises were purchased at such sale by the defendant Davis for the sum of $4,000, and that the lien of the plain*725tiff’s mortgages has been transferred to such sum of $4,000. The plaintiff was a party to the proceedings in bankruptcy court and appeared therein by its attorney and objected to the making of the order for the sale of the mortgaged premises free of the lien of the trust mortgages. Ten days’ notice by mail of the application for the order directing the sale was also given, as prescribed by the Bankruptcy Law (30 U. S. Stat. at Large, 561, § 58, as amd. by 36 id. 841, § 9%), to all known creditors and all known bondholders under the mortgages described in the complaint, and such notice was also published ten days prior to the application in a newspaper published in Monroe county. Notice of said sale was published in said county once each week for six successive weeks preceding the sale, was posted in three public places in the city of Rochester and in three public places in the village of East Rochester, where the property is located, more than forty-two days prior to the sale, and also served by mail upon all the known bondholders. There were liens upon the property prior to the lien held by the plaintiff, amounting to about $93,000, and the sale in bankruptcy court was ordered to be made subject to such prior liens. At the time of the application for and the making of such order the mortgaged property was insufficient in value to pay the outstanding bonds secured by the trust mortgages.
It is urged by appellant that the bankruptcy court had no jurisdiction to order a sale free from hens when it appeared that the liens exceeded the value of the property, and that in any event the bankruptcy court was without jurisdiction to make the order of sale because the individual bondholders for whose benefit the trust mortgages were given were not personally served with notice of the application to sell free from such liens.
The power of the bankruptcy court to sell the mortgaged premises free from the lien of plaintiff’s mortgages, and to transfer the hen to the proceeds of the sale, was discretionary. “It is not a question of jurisdiction or of right, but of discretion. The fact which determines the exercise of this discretion is whether or not the general creditors of the bankrupt have any interest to be promoted by it. If it appear to the court that the liens are valid, and that they exceed in value the real *726estate incumbered by them, there can be no reason for the exercise of the powers of the bankrupt court.” (Matter of Dillard, 7 Fed. Cas. 703; 2 Hughes, 190. See, also, Matter of Cogley, 5 Am. Bank. Rep. 731.) The judgment of the' bankruptcy court is not, therefore, subject to collateral attack in this action upon that ground. However erroneous the judgment may have been, or however grave may have been the abuse of discretion in ordering the sale, plaintiff’s only remedy to correct it was by an appeal from the order.
The only remaining question is whether the bankruptcy court obtained jurisdiction of the parties so as to render the judgment binding upon the individual bondholders who did not receive personal notice of the application for the order of sale free from liens. The bonds were payable to the bearer or the registered holder thereof. Practically none of the bonds issued were registered. Proper notice was given to all such as were registered. We think the correct rule as to the right of the trustee to represent the bondholders in such cases in all suits affecting the mortgage security is correctly stated in section 294 of Jones on Corporate Bonds and Mortgages (3d ed.) as follows: “The rule of chancery pleading, which allows some parties to sue or be sued in behalf of all, where their right is the same and their number is so large as to render it difficult to bring them all before the court, is especially applicable in all suits for the foreclosure of railroad mortgages. Such mortgages are almost invariably made to trustees; and ordinarily the trustees represent the bondholders in all matters of litigation respecting their common and general rights. Whether they are plaintiffs seeking a foreclosure, or as subsequent mortgagees are made defendants, they represent the bondholders for whom the trusts are held, and a decree is ordinarily as binding on such bondholders as if they had been made parties. The bondholders are in such case quasi parties to the suit and have the right at any time to intervene and become actual parties. They may come in under the decree and take the benefit of it, or, so long as the proceedings are not definitely closed, they may obtain a hearing and show the proceedings to be erroneous.”
If the plaintiff were a mere depositary there might be pre*727sented a different question. (Daniel Keg. Inst. [4th ed.] § 1181a; Sherwood y. Roys, 14 Pick. 172; Atlantic Trust Co. v. Crystal Water Co., 72 App. Div. 539.) But here the plaintiff is the trustee for the bondholders and is charged with certain duties to perform. It has the right to declare the whole of the principal sum due and to institute foreclosure upon default in payment of any installment of interest or principal. We are of the opinion that it was charged with the duty and had the right to represent the bondholders in the bankruptcy court, and that the judgment of that court is binding upon the bondholders.
It follows that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.