Louisville & Nashville R. R. v. Schmidt

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming-

After many years’ litigation and great expense, A. L. Schmidt, as trustee for various holders of bonds *232of the Northern Division of the Cumberland & Ohio Railroad Company, appellants’ lessor, finally compelled of appellant an accounting for the earnings it received from its lease of that company’s road accrued to July 1, 1890, and for the amount thereof, to-wit, $90,053.34, appellee obtained judgment against appellant as of March 21, 1898. The recovery was had under certain mortgages upon the roadbed and property of the Northern Division of the Cumberland & Ohio Railroad Company and its earnings received by appellant as lessee of the road. The sum thus recovered, less a credit for 250 coupons and 24'bonds of the Northern Division of the Cumberland & Ohio Railroad Company which appellant then claimed to own, was paid by it under rule into court and subsequently distributed. The order awarding the rule under which appellant paid the money into court is as follows: ‘ ‘ But the allowance of the said credit on account of the' 250 coupons, and on account of the 24 bonds, shall not he taken and held as an adjudication by the court herein that the said Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, as beneficiary under the trust held by plaintiff, is exempt from or liable for any part of the charges and expenses of the plaintiff trustee and said trust. If it shall hereafter appear upon the distribution of the fund herein that said coupons should not have been paid in full, but should have been paid' pro rata with other coupons, or that the amount allowed the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company on said 24 bonds is more than the pro rata share of said bonds, then the.amount of excessive payment made upon said coupons ■ or upon said bonds shall he adjusted in the distribution of the fund herein whenever the same shall be made, so as to equalize the beneficiaries under the said trust *233with'tire Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company as the owner of the 250 coupons and'said 24 bonds.” By a subsequent ruling of the court, an accounting for earnings from the same was-required of appellant from the year 1890 to the year 1898, and, after much delay in the lower court and an . appeal to this court (see Schmidt v. C. & L. R. C., 119 Ky. 287, 27 Ky. Law Rep. 21, 84 S. W. 314), appellee obtained judgment against appellant on March 1, 1905, for $128,431.75, with 6 per cent, interest from February 2-,. 1903. "When appellant was called-upon to settle this judgment, it amounted to $144,371.36, and, in addition, there was due appellee as ordinary costs in the action $523.10.

In settling this judgment appellant claimed the right to retain and did retain $11,549.70 on account of 20 bonds of the Northern Division of the Cumberland & Ohio Railroad Company it owned, and which it insisted should be paid out of appellee’s recovery. These bonds amounted to twenty 250ths of the amount recovered, and, after deducting the $11,549,70, appellant paid appellee $133,344.76. "When the payment was made, the lower - court entered the following order: “The plaintiff claims that the amount of $133,344.76, this day paid in by the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, is not in full of plaintiff’s claim under the judgment herein rendered ©n March 1, 1905, and this action is retained on the docket for the purpose of hereinafter by proper proceedings determining that question and any. other questions not heretofore finally disposed of.” Later appellee filed in the court below his affidavit setting forth the items and amounts of extraordinary costs, in the matter of attorney fees,' commissioners’ fees, and other necessary expenses he was compelled to *234incur in the prosecution of the claims of his oéstuis que trust, and asked a rule against appellant requiring it to pay into court the amount it retained when it paid over the $133,344.76, or enough thereof to pay its (appellant’s) proportion of the extraordinary-costs and expenses set forth in appellee's’ affidavit-By its response to the rule, appellant denied any liability on its part for the costs and expenses sought to be recovered, and presented various reasons for its unwillingness to pay .them; the principal ones being that appellee Schmidt, was. given no authority, express or implied, by- the instrument making him a trustee to bring or maintain the action in which such costs were incurred, that the interests of the trustee and his coplaintiffs all the while were adverse to those of appellant, and that .throughout the litigation appellant was. represented by counsel of its own choosing. The response, of appellant was held insufficient, the rule made absolute, and judgment entered compelling appellant to pay the costs claimed under the rule, amounting altogether to $8,901, with 6 per cent, interest .on $6,670 thereof from June 30, 1900, and like interest on $2,231 thereof from March .1, 1905. Appellant complains of that judgment, and by this appeal seeks its reversal.

The several items embraced in the aggregate of costs for which appellee was given judgment appear to be correct charges, and such in amount as should be apportioned to and accounted for by appellant.. We find in the record an opinion written by the judge of the circuit court which sets forth his views upon the questions of law arising on the rule and response supported by abundant authority. A careful reading of the opinion convinces us óf the soundness of the •conclusions therein expressed, for which reason, and *235because it aptly expresses our views upon the questions involved, we adopt and make it a part of this ‘opinion. The opinion is as follows: '

“In support of defendant’s response to the,rule, it is earnestly contended that the mortgage of the earnings does not impose any duty upon the trustee and under it he had no authority to sue as trustee alone, and that the instrument merely created a naked or dry trust. From this viewpoint, it is urged that the action was maintained by the bondholders and by Schmidt in his individual right as a bondholder associated with other bondholders, and as the proceeding was not for the benefit of the defendant, and was contrary to its wishes, the rule underlying the case of Thirwell’s Adm’r v. Campbell, 11 Bush, 163, is here applicable. Counsel in this contention hás fallen into the error of considering the mortgage of the earnings by itself, and not in connection with the other contracts and deeds made by the parties contemporaneously. The mortgage of the earnings standing alone would indeed create only a naked trust in Speed, or Schmidt, his successor, but the Court of Appeals has said in L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Schmidt, 112 Ky. 721, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 2097, 68 S. W. 639: ‘It has been held by this court several times that these papers executed contemporaneously, not. only for the benefit of the lessor and lessee; but also for the benefit of the bondholders, must be read together as one contract’ — citing four previous decisions of the court upon these same contracts to the same effect. See, also, Phillips v. C. & O. Ry. Co., 110 Ky. 33, 60 S. W. 941, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 1530.

“Looking, therefore, to the other instruments and particularly to the other mortgage made to the same trustee, dated July 2, 1879, we find many important *236duties devolving upon the trustees in the event of a default in the payment of the interest upon the bonds. By that instrument the trustee is authorized, after such default in the mortgage, to enter upon and take possession of the railroad, and its franchises and property, and operate the road, or under certain circumstances' sell the property. Under the law of this State existing at that time and now in force, the mortgagee could not take possession, but was compelled to enforce his lien by a suit in equity. A fair construction of that instrument made the trustee the active and responsible representative of the bondholders, and he was under said deed, by implication, clothed with authority to institute and conduct any suit for or on behalf of his trust as might become necessary for the preservation of the estate committed to him, or for the benefit of his oestuis que trust, the bondholders. The mortgage of the earnings was an addenda to the original mortgage, and gave the bondholders additional security, and must be read with the mortgage of July 2, 1879. An examination of this record shows that, although the trustee Schmidt formally associated with him some of the holders of the bonds in the institution of the proceedings and sued alone in his own right as a bondholder, he has, nevertheless, throughout this long litigation prosecuted the action as trustee and recovered as such. The other bondholders associated with him formally in the petition have not been seen or heard from so far as the record before me shows since the filing of the petition, and from start to finish the trustee has borne the heat and burden of the contest. The respondent or defendant resisted the efforts of the trustee as lessee of the mortgagor, and not as bondholder. If this controversy had been between the trustee and a *237bonholder for an adjustment of some difference between them1, then the action would have been what is characterized in equity practice as litigious, and only ordinary costs would have been allowed, but the controversy was not between the trustee and a bondholder. It was between the trustee, seeking to carry out the provisions of the trust, against one in open hostility to the trust, seeking to defeat its provisions, although itself a small holder of bonds and interest coupons.

“The entire question at bar seems to have been thoroughly gone into and disposed of by the Court of Appeals in the case of Phillips v. Southern Division of the C. & O. Ry. Co., 110 Ky., 33, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 1530, 60 S. W. 941. The defendant in this proceeding was a defendant owning all the issue of bonds, amounting to $3,000, except $500 thereof, and one of the contentions made was that the action should not be allowed, as ‘it will put the Cumberland & Ohio or Louisville & Nashville Railroad to a great expense in the matter of fees to the trustee and his attorney.’ Answering this, the court said: ‘That certainly is no argument against the sufficiency of the petition, or in favor of the right of appellee to maintain its plea in abatement. The parties- to- the lease and mortgage contemplated that it was possible that just such a condition would arise, which would render this action necessary; and that to administer the trust and to enforce the provisions of the contract the trustees would be entitled to compensation, and likewise the attorneys which it might be necessary to employ. Hence it was expressly agreed by the parties that this expense was to be paid before anything else, out of the proceeds of the mortgaged property. The parties to that contract should not complain of the *238expense which, may be incurred, for- they had reason to believe such might be incurred, and provided for its liquidation. ■■ It is likewise without reason to complain of the trustee proceeding to do the very thing which contracting parties made it his duty to do, to wit, to look to the collection of the fund to pay the bonds, receive the net income-for operating the road under the lease, to- cancel the bonds when paid, and, if there was default in their payment, to forthwith institute a proceeding like this one.’ The only difference between this ease and the casé there decided was that in that mortgage it was expressly provided for compensation to the trustee and for his* costs. In this case the deed is silent as to the compensation for the trustee or the reimbursement of costs and expenses. When the contract creating the trust was executed, there arose an implied obligation on the part of holders of bonds that the trusted should be reimbursed any necessary expenditures he might be required to make in the discharge of the duties cast upon him as such trustee. It formed a part of the consideration between the trustee and his cestuis que trust, and bound the holder of each bond or interest coupon. The recovery was by the trustee and for the trust estate, and the money withheld by the respondent as the owner of the bonds was a part of the recovery, and it should bear* its proportion of the costs. The response is adjudged insufficient and rule made absolute. ’ ’

Judgment affirmed.

Barker, J., not sitting,