DocketNumber: 4865
Citation Numbers: 125 F.2d 260, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4353
Judges: Soper, Parker, Dobie
Filed Date: 1/6/1942
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
These are appeals in a three-sided controversy which has arisen in the receivership of the Seaboard Air Line Railway Company, with relation to a stock dividend and certain cash dividends on stock owned by the Seaboard in the Richmond-Washington Company and pledged with the predecessor of the Maryland Trust Company, as trustee. This stock, 4,450 shares in amount, was pledged in 1901 by the corporation to whose rights the Seaboard succeeded with the Continental Trust Company, predecessor of the Maryland Trust Company, as trustee under a first mortgage executed to secure a bond issue. On October 18, 1930 a 50% stock dividend was declared on this stock; and on October 31, 1930, certificates for 2,225 shares were delivered to the Seaboard as the stock dividend on its shares. On December 23, 1930, receivers were appointed for the Seaboard, and the certificates representing the stock dividend passed into their possession. The receivers collected cash dividends on the original shares of stock up to January 4, 1932, and on the stock dividend shares up to the time of the decree of the court below.
The Maryland Trust Company, the trustee under the first mortgage, claims both the stock dividend and the total of the cash dividends by virtue of the rights vested in it by the pledge of the original shares of stock under the first mortgage. The receivers deny the right of the first mortgage trustee to either the stock dividend or the cash dividends, claim a lien on both under the order appointing receivers and also under the orders authorizing" issuance of receivers’ certificates and assert that any rights of the first mortgage trustee have been lost by waiver and estoppel. The New York Trust Company" joins the receivers in denying the right of the first mortgage trustee to the shares of stock represented by the stock dividend and also to the cash dividends paid thereon, but claims for itself these shares of stock and cash dividends under the terms of a refunding mortgage executed by the Seaboard.
The controversy was referred by the court below to the late J. E. Heath, as
1. The Stock Dividend.
The Seaboard Air Line was one of six railroads which owned in equal shares the stock of the Richmond-Washington Company, a holding company which owned the Richmond Fredericksburg & Potomac Railroad, over which the trains of the Seaboard are operated between Richmond and Washington. It originally held 4,450 shares of this Richmond-Washington stock, which in the year 1901 it pledged with the Continental Trust Company, predecessor of the Maryland Trust Company, as trustee under a first mortgage to secure a bond issue. The stock is not expressly mentioned in the mortgage, which provides, however, for the pledging of stocks, bonds and other property to the trustee to be held subject to the terms of the mortgage. Section 1 of article III of the mortgage contains the following provision: “Unless (a) the ‘Railroad Company’ shall be in default in the payment of some interest upon any of the bonds secured by this indenture, or on any of said outstanding divisional bonds (other than bonds held by the ‘Trustee’ hereunder), and such default shall have continued for a period of six months; or unless (b) the ‘Railroad Company’ shall be in default in the due and punctual payment of the principal of any bond secured hereby, or of any of said outstanding divisional bonds hereinbefore mentioned; or unless (c) the ‘Railroad Company’ shall be in default in the payment of any tax, assessment or other governmental charge lawfully imposed or levied upon any part of the property and premises hereby mortgaged, or the income and profits thereof, and such default shall have continued for a period of six months, after written notice thereof from the ‘Trustee,’ or from the holders of five per cent in amount of the bonds secured hereby; or unless (d) the ‘Railroad Company’ shall be in default in the due performance and observance of any covenant or condition of this indenture, and such default shall have continued beyond the period of grace, if any, herein provided for, in respect of such default, and the ‘Trustee’ shall have .entered, or shall have elected to enter, into possession under the power of entry hereinafter conferred.; or unless (e) the ‘Railroad Company’ voluntarily shall have surrendered to the ‘Trustee’ possession of the mortgaged premises as hereinafter authorized — the ‘Trustee’ (except with the assent of the ‘Railroad Company’) shall not collect or be entitled to collect the interest of any of the bonds or claims or indebtedness now or hereafter pledged with or assigned to the ‘Trustee’ under this indenture, and the ‘Railroad Company’ shall’ be entitled to receive all interest paid or dividends declared in respect of any bonds or stocks transferred to or pledged with the ‘Trustee’ pursuant to any of the provisions of this indenture, * *
On September 18, 1930 the Board of Directors of the Richmond-Washington Company voted a stock dividend of 50%, payable in stock October 31, 1930; and on the last named date certificates evidencing 2,225 shares of the capital stock of the company were delivered to the Seaboard as stock dividend on the 4,450 shares which it held and which it had pledged with the first mortgage trustee. Receivers were appointed for the Seaboard on December 23, 1930, and these certificates, of which the first mortgage trustee had no notice or knowledge until some time later, passed into their possession. The evidence shows
The mortgage was delivered to the first mortgage trustee and accepted by it in Baltimore, Md., and the shares of stock which were pledged were delivered to it there; and there is no serious question but that the law of Maryland is the law properly applicable in determining the rights of the parties with respect to the stock dividend.
In the absence of the provision of the mortgage quoted above, there could be no question but that the shares of stock issued as stock dividend would go to the first mortgage trustee, as pledgee of the original shares of stock, to be held by it under the terms of the pledge. Gemmell v. Davis, 75 Md. 543, 23 A. 1032, 32 Am. St. Rep. 412; Railroad Credit Corp. v. Hawkins, 4 Cir., 80 F.2d 818; Jones on Collateral Securities, 3d Ed., sec. 298. The question involved, therefore, is the interpretation of the word “dividends” as contained in the provision under which “dividends” were reserved to the. Seaboard, i.e. was the reservation to the Seaboard of the right to “dividends” until default under the mortgage intended to reserve to it the right to stock dividends? We think the answer to this must be in the negative, both because a contrary interpretation would be unreasonable in the light of surrounding circumstances, and because, even in the absence of such circumstances, a stock dividend is not ordinarily included in the term “dividends” as contained in a contract relating to dividends, in the absence of a clear indication that it was intended that they should be so included.
It must be remembered that the Richmond-Washington stock pledged by the Seaboard with the first mortgage trustee represented a one-sixth interest in the railroad over which the trains of the Seaboard between Richmond and Washington were operated; and the fair inference is that it was intended that this interest in the road was to remain pledged with the trustee as security for the bonds. Cash dividends on the stock, i. e. amounts paid in cash to stockholders from the earnings of the corporation, were to be enjoyed by the Seaboard so long as it was not in default; but it is hardly to be supposed that the parties could have intended that the Seaboard should have free of the pledge a stock dividend representing a mere capital readjustment, and that the proportionate interest of the first mortgage trustee in the property represented by the stock which had been pledged with it should be thus reduced. The fact that the mortgage contained specific provision that “consolidation, merger, sale or lease” of any company whose stock was pledged with the first mortgage trustee might be made only “upon such terms as shall not in any manner impair the value of the security hereunder” (art. Ill sec. 6) shows a clear intention that the value of the security pledged should not be impaired by corporate manipulation. And nothing to the contrary is to be inferred from the anti-dilution clause of article II section 8 of the mortgage. Provision was made therein for the preservation of rights in the properties of constituent companies, the majority of whose stock had been assigned to the trustee ; but this does not in any way indicate an intention that the rights of the trustee in properties represented by other stocks pledged might be decreased by allowing the Seaboard to have free of pledge stock dividends which might be declared with respect thereto. If any inference is to be drawn from this anti-dilution clause, it is favorable to the position of the first mortgage trustee rather than otherwise.
And quite apart from the peculiar circumstances of the case, which show very clearly, we think, that stock dividends were not intended to be included among the “dividends” reserved to the Seaboard by the terms of the mortgage, the rule is well settled that the word “dividends” in contracts relating to the sale or transfer of stocks is not ordinarily to be construed as embracing stock dividends, which are not true dividends at all but a mere certified expression of an undivided surplus and its capitalization. Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U.S. 189, 210, 211, 40 S.Ct. 189, 64 L.Ed. 521, 9 A.L.R. 1570. The precise question is not covered by any Maryland decision;
And the distinction between the essential •character of an ordinary dividend and a stock dividend is thus drawn in the opinion of the lower court in Gibbons v. Mahon, 4 Mackey 130, 136, 54 Am.Rep. 262, quoted with approval by Mr. Justice Gray in the Supreme Court: “Certificates of stock are simply the representative of the interest ■which the stockholder has in the capital •of the corporation. Before the issue of •these two hundred and eighty new shares, •this trustee held precisely the same interest in this increased plant in the capital of the ■corporation, that she held afterwards. She merely had a new representative of an interest that she already owned, and which was not increased by the issue of the new .shares. A dividend is something with which the corporation parts, hut it parted with nothing in issuing this new stock. It simply gave a new evidence of ownership which already existed. They were not in any sense, therefore, dividends for which this trustee had to account to the cestui que trust. She stood, after the issue of the new shares, just as she had stood before; and the trustee was obliged to treat them just as she did, namely, as a part of the original, and to pay the dividends to the cestui que trust.” (Italics supplied).
A stock dividend is not a true dividend because not involving a severance of corporate assets for distribution to stockholders, but is in its last analysis a mere incident or process of corporate bookkeeping. 18 C.J.S., Corporations, § 466, p. 1110. The word “dividend”, when used without qualification or explanation, ordinarily signifies dividends paid in money. 13 A.J. p. 640. It involves a severance from corporate assets of an amount distributed to stockholders, but the stock dividend involves no such severance or distribution of assets. As said by the Supreme Court in Eisner v. Macomber,
In McDonald v. Maxwell, 274 U.S. 91, 47 S.Ct. 497, 499, 71 L.Ed. 942, the Supreme Court refused to allow executors in the District of Columbia commissions on stock dividends, on the ground that such dividends represented no increase in the principal of the estate in their hands, saying: “It is apparent, in the light of these decisions, that the stock dividends received by the executors represented no real increase in the principal of the estate during the accounting period. They- merely
In a controversy arising between a life tenant and remainderman as to the right to a stock dividend, the Supreme Court of Missouri, in Hayes v. St. Louis Union Trust Co., 317 Mo. 1028, 298 S.W. 91, 98, 56 A.L.R. 1276, 1285, a well considered decision, puts the matter thus: “A stock dividend is not in any true sense a dividend at all. The latter implies a division, a severance from the corporate assets of the subject of the dividend, and a distribution thereof among the stockholders. McLaran v. Crescent Planing Mill Co., 117 Mo.App. 40, 93 S.W. 819; 14 C.J. p.798 ; 5 Thompson on Corporations 2d Ed. p. 84, § 5270. The issuance of a stock dividend is, in its last analysis, nothing more than an incident or process in corporation bookkeeping. The important step is the increasing of the fixed capital of the corporation. The outstanding shares of stock are increased to balance, either by adding to their number or raising their par value. When the stock has no par value, it seems even this is unnecessary. Nothing is taken from the corporation. Nothing is given to the stockholders, rather the contrary, for corporate profits theretofore available for distribution in dividends are permanently appropriated to its fixed capital. The title to all corporate property remains in the corporation as before. The proportional interest of each stockholder continues the same; the only change is in the evidence of his interest in the corporation — that is, the number of his shares of stock is increased and the book value of each share correspondingly decreased, or the face value of his shares of stock is raised to or toward what their intrinsic value was before.”
A case directly in point here, because dealing with a reservation of dividends, is Lancaster Trust Co. v. Mason, 152 N.C. 660, 68 S.E. 235, 236, 136 Am.St.Rep. 851. In that case an offer to sell corporate stock, which was accepted, contained the following expression, “allowing the January dividend to us”. A stock dividend of 50% and a regular cash dividend of 4% and an extra cash dividend of 6% were declared in January. The Supreme Court of North Carolina held that both cash dividends were retained by the seller under this provision of the contract, but that the stock dividend went to the purchaser with the stock purchased. The court, citing the Maryland case of Smith v. Hooper, supra, said: "Upon a careful review of the correspondence between the parties and a further consideration of the case we are led to the conclusion that the words ‘allowing the January dividend to us,’ used in plaintiff’s letter of December 23, 1907, were intended to refer to dividends payable in cash only, and do not embrace the so-called ‘stock dividend’ of 50 per cent. That was not strictly or in the usual sense of the word a dividend. It was simply an increase in the capital stock by dividing the capital of the corporation into a larger number of shares and allotting them to each stockholder in proportion to the number of shares he owned before the increase. This is not infrequent in these days when ‘watering stock’ is no uncommon occurrence; not that we mean to intimate that such has been the case here. Therefore it has been held that where the word cdividend’ is used without qualification or explanation, it signifies dividends payable in money: 14 Cyc. 554, and cases cited; Black, Law Diet.; 3 Words & Phrases [First Series] pp. 2143, 2144; Smith v. Hooper, 95 Md. 16, 51 A. 844, 54 A. 95.” (Italics supplied)..
Kaufman v. Charlottesville Woolen Mills Co., 93 Va. 673, 25 S.E. 1003, 1004, was another case in which dividends on stock sold were retained by the seller. In holding that the word dividends did not include a stock dividend, the court said: “In the case at bar it is clear, on reason and authority, that the proper construction of the contract between the parties is that Kaufman retained to himself whatever dividend was declared in January, 1896, as the ordinary and usual fruit of the investment he was parting with. This he received when the cash dividend of 10 per cent, declared for the stockholders was paid to him. The stock dividend of 27 per cent, represented part of the corporate property sold to Hotopp, in which Kaufman reserved no interest, and was therefore not entitled to the whole or any part thereof,”
See, also, Thompson on Corporations vol, 5, 5271; Towne v. Eisner 245 U.S. 418, 38 S.Ct. 158, 62 L.Ed. 372, L.R.A.1918D, 254;
In the light of these authorities as well as of the circumstances surrounding the transaction, we think there can be no doubt but that the reservation of dividends on the stock pledged should be construed not to include the stock dividend, and that this should go, under the general principles of the law relating to pledges, as recognized in Maryland, to the first mortgage trustee as an essential part of the thing pledged with it. As was well said by the able special master in his report to the court below: “I think that, upon principle, and in view of the meaning of the word dividend in Maryland, where the first mortgage became effective, as well as generally elsewhere, and especially in the States of Virginia and North Carolina, under the laws of which Seaboard No. 1 was incorporated, the first mortgage trustee’s position is sound. It will not do to say that this stock dividend represents only profits. It represents profits automatically turned into stock — stock which is not only capable of earnings far in excess of the ordinary return on investments, but which depletes to the extent of one-third the trustee’s original holding. * * * By consenting to waive its dividends, it (the trustee) did not consent that the principal of its security should be impaired, save to the extent that the payment of cash dividends would necessarily reduce the assets of the R-W Co. It has never consented that the one-sixth stock interest pledged to it should be reduced, which reduction would automatically result from giving the stock dividend in question to the railway, or to its successors, the receivers, or to the refunding mortgage trustee.”
The only argument against this position is based upon certain Maryland decisions, beginning with Thomas v. Gregg, 1894, 78 Md. 545, 28 A. 565, 44 Am.St. Rep. 310, to the effect that under a trust giving the income of property to a person for life with provision that the principal be paid to others upon his death, dividends, whether in stock or in cash, to the extent that they represent profits arising subsequent to the creation of the trust, will be distributed to the life tenant as income of the trust estate. We note in passing, that the rule of these decisions has been changed by statute in Maryland, as it has in New York. See Flack’s' Annotated Code of Maryland, art. 75B, sec. 5. The rule, however, does not solve'our problem; for the question with which it deals is, not the nature of dividends and what is to be included within the term, but the nature of corporate income and how it should be apportioned between life tenant and remainderman under a trust, the rule being applicable to true dividends paid in cash as well as to stock dividends representing capitalization of corporate surplus. No such question is presented here. There is no reservation of income to the Seaboard. Only dividends are reserved; and, as to these, there is no question as to who is entitled to them, once they are found to be dividends within the meaning of the reservation. Upon this question the rule as to apportionment of income of corporate stocks between life tenant and remainderman manifestly cannot be determinative ; for that rule, as applied to stock dividends, does not mean that stock dividends are to be. treated in all ■ respects as cash dividends, but m.erely that, when corporate income is capitalized and stock certificates are issued evidencing the capitalization, a life tenant entitled to the income of the trust property is entitled to the certificates. Since it is not income but dividends which is reserved to the Seaboard, our problem is to decide, not what is properly included in income, but what is properly included in “dividends”; and to the proper solution of this problem more helpful than the cases dealing with trusts for life tenants and remaindermen is what was said in the case of Smith v. Hooper, supra, 95 Md. 16, 51 A. 844, 54 A. 95, holding that an increase in the value of the corpus of an estate resulting from trading on the part of the trustees did not constitute either “dividends” or “income” to which the life tenant was entitled under the Maryland rule. In distinguishing Thomas v. Gregg, supra, and a number of other cases, Chief Judge McSherry said: “Those cases mainly determine, not what is income or what are dividends, but to whom income and dividends, confessedly such, belonged. In the case at bar there is no dispute as to who is entitled to this increase if it be income or dividends, but the question is, does that increase consti
It is true that the presumed intention of the creator of the trust that the life tenant should have the income of the trust property lies at the basis of the former Maryland rule for apportionment of dividends; and, of course, if any intention that the Seaboard should have the increment in the value of the property represented by the pledged shares of stock could be spelled out of the reservation in the mortgage, there would be reason in the position that the stock dividend was intended to be included in the reservation of dividends. But no such intention can be found either in the mortgage itself or in the surrounding circumstances. As indicated above, it is more reasonable to assume that the intention of the parties was that the Seaboard, in the absence of default, should have paid to it the cash dividends declared on the stock, but that, except for these, the one sixth interest in the R-W Company represented by the stock should remain as security for the bonds, without impairment or diminution as the result of stock dividends or other book-keeping devices of that character. As was well said by the special master in his report to the court below: “But because a court would adopt such a rule as this m order to protect a life tenant, it does not follow that it regarded a stock dividend as a real dividend —especially when, as in the case of the Maryland court, it had expressly said that such a dividend was not a real dividend. And because a court might think it would be just to give such a dividend to the life tenant rather than to the remainderman, in order to prevent the former from being prejudiced by the refusal of a corporation to declare cash dividends, it does not follow that it would consider it just to give it to a pledgor as against a pledgee, if, by so doing, it would impair the principal of the pledgee’s security.”
The effect of the Maryland decisions, now superseded by statute, is that income of an investment represented by corporate stock belongs to the life tenant, whether included in a stock-dividend or a cash dividend. The question before us is whether a stock dividend is a true dividend so as to be included in the reservation of dividends contained in the mortgage; and, as stated, the Maryland decisions are not determinative of this question. To apply the rule which they lay down with respect to the rights of life tenant and remainder-man to the question before us, instead of the rule prescribed by reason for such a situation, is not required by Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 58 S.Ct. 817, 82 L.Ed. 1188, 114 A.L.R. 1487, or by any other decision. To reason from analogy and apply the rule because of what we may guess the Maryland court would have decided if the case had been before it, is to indulge in vain speculation. If the Maryland court, in any of the cases before it, had expressed an opinion on the question before us, which it did not do, it would have been a mere dictum, and one which we would have been under no obligation to follow. Carroll v. Carroll, 16 How. 275, 286, 14 L.Ed. 936; New England Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Mitchell, 4 Cir., 118 F.2d 414, certiorari denied 62 S.Ct. 60, 86 L.Ed.
In Carroll v. Carroll, supra, the Supreme Court, after stating that the construction put by the state court upon a statute is not a decision to be followed within the stare decisis rule unless this was necessary to the determination of the rights of the parties before the court, went on to give the reason for the rule that dicta are without binding authority (and a fortiori the same is true of mere reasoning by analogy) as
After quoting the above in our opinion in New England Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Mitchell, supra [118 F.2d 420], we said: “Nothing in recent decisions has in anywise weakened this rule or the sound basis of reason upon which it rests. In ascertaining the applicable law of the state, we are to consider court decisions and other available sources of local law; and we are to apply court decisions in the light of the well-established stare decisis rule and its limitations. Cf. West v. American Tel. & Tel. Co. [311 U.S. 223], 61 S.Ct. 179, 85 L.Ed. 139 [132 A.L.R. 956], We are not required, however, to speculate as to how the state court might decide the question before us if it has not already decided it. Nor should we surrender our own judgment as to what the local law is on account of dicta or other chance expressions of the judges of the local courts. The respectful attitude towards the local court, where there has been no decision on the precise question before us, is to consider that question in the light of the common law of the state, with a view of reaching the decision which reason dictates, and with the faith that the local court will reach the same decision when the question comes before it. To base a decision upon dicta, or upon speculation as to what the local court might decide in the light of dicta, would be to depart from our solemn duty in the premises and embark upon a vain and illusory enterprise.”
2. The Cash Dividends.
As heretofore pointed out, it is well settled in Maryland, as elsewhere, that, in the absence of express provision to the contrary, the pledgee of stock is entitled to the dividends declared thereon. The question here, then, is whether the reservation of dividends applies to cash dividends paid after the appointment of receivers. By sec. 1 of art. Ill of the mortgage the right to dividends is reserved, only if there is no default in the payment of interest which has continued six months, or no default in the payment of principal. Section 17 of art. IV goes further and provides that, upon the appointment of a receiver, the trustee shall be entitled forthwith to exercise the rights which by the terms of the mortgage it was authorized to exercise in the case of the occurrence and continuance of a default. Sec. 17 of art. IV is as follows: “Sec. 17. In case the ‘Railroad Company’ shall make default in any of the respects mentioned in section 2 of this article, and at the time of such default there shall be any existing judgment against the ‘Railroad Company” unsatisfied and unsecured by bond on appeal; or in case, in am.y Jwdicial proceedings by any party other than the ‘Trustee¡ a receiver shall be appointed of the ‘Railroad Company,’ or a judgment or order be entered for the sequestration of its property, the ‘Trustee’ shall thereupon be entitled forthwith to exercise the right of entry herein conferred and also any and all other rights and powers herein conferred and provided to be exercised by the ‘Trustee’ upon the occurrence and continuance of default as hereinbefore provided, and as matter of right the ‘Trustee’ shall thereupon be entitled to the appointment of a receiver of the premises hereby mortgaged, and of the earnings, income, revenue, rents, issues or profits thereof, with such powers
We think it clear that the Seaboard was to have the dividends only while it was not in default under the mortgage; and that by the express terms of the mortgage itself the appointment of receivers at the suit of creditors on the ground of insolvency constituted a default within the meaning of the terms as there used. Brackett v. Middlesex Banking Co., 89 Conn. 645, 95 A. 12. And since the reservation of dividends was for only so long as the Seaboard was not in default, no action on the part of the trustee was necessary to perfect its right thereto, once the default had occurred.
And we do not think that a different conclusion is permissible with respect to the $20,025 dividend paid December 31, 1930. Although the dividend had been declared, prior to the appointment of receivers, to stockholders of record on December 18, 1930, which was also prior to their appointment, the dividend was not paid until after default had occurred as a result of the appointment of the receivers on December 23, 1930. The last clause of sec. 1 of art. Ill expressly provides that “until actually paid or discharged, every such * * * right to dividends * * * shall in all respects remain subject to the lien of this indenture." Under this provision the date of payment, we think, and not the date of the declaration of the dividend, is determinative of the effect of the default upon the rights of the parties. The special master so held, and we think correctly. The receivers .contend that the clause quoted has application only to securities of underlying companies; but we do not think so. It is a part of the very section upon which the receivers base their claim of reservation of dividends in this particular stock, and = is contained in a proviso limiting the general provisions of the section.
3. The Question of Liens.
We do not think that any lien in favor of the receivers was impressed upon the stock dividend shares or the cash received by the receivers as cash dividends, . either by the order appointing the receivers or by the orders authorizing the issuance of receivers’ certificates. Although the •certificates representing the stock dividend shares were in the possession of the Seaboard at the time the receivers were appointed, the stock evidenced thereby was subject to the pledge which had been made to the first mortgage trustee, and .the trustee was entitled to the stock dividend certificate as pledgee of the original shares. The position of the trustee was stronger even than that of a person holding an equitable pledge of the shares (see Union Trust Co. v. Townshend, 4 Cir., 101 F.2d 903) ; for there was a valid legal pledge of the original shares and these stock dividend shares were merely a part of the thing already pledged. They were not merely something which the Seaboard had agreed to pledge when they came into existence, but an essential part of what it had already pledged and which were subject, for that reason, to the pledge already created. So far as the cash dividends are concerned, these were funds to which the pledgee of the stock was entitled under the pledge. As officers of the court, the receivers held these for the benefit of the person or persons lawfully entitled to them. Leonard v. Gage, 4 Cir., 94 F.2d 19, 23, 24.
The appointment of receivers-could not fix a lien either upon the stock dividend shares or upon the cash dividends which came into the hands of the receivers, for the reason that both were subject to the pledge made to the first mortgage trustee; and it is well settled that the appointment of receivers for a corporation does not affect the rights of others to property in its possession. As said by the Supreme Court in Quincy, etc., Railroad Co. v. Humphreys, 145 U.S. 82, 97, 12 S.Ct. 787, 792, 36 L.Ed. 632, as to the status of receivers: “They were ministerial officers, appointed by the court of chancery to take possession of and preserve, pendente lite, the fund or property in litigation; mere custodians, coming within the rule stated in Union Nat. Bank of Chicago v. Bank of Kansas City, 136 U.S. 223, 236, 10 S.Ct. 1013 [34 L.Ed. 341], where this court said: ‘A receiver derives his authority from the act of the court appointing him, and not from the act of the parties at whose suggestion or by whose consent he is appointed; and the utmost effect of his appointment is to put the property from that time into his custody as an officer of the court, for the benefit of the party ultimately proved to be entitled, but not to change the title, or even the right of possession in the . property.’ ”
So far as the claim of lien by reason of the issuance of receivers’ certificates is concerned, it is a sufficient answer that no holder of any of these certificates is before us claiming any such lien. We do not interpret the orders authorizing the certificates, however, as creating such lien. These orders created a first lien on the property of the Seaboard “in the possession or under the control of the receivers”, but this did not reach the shares of stock of the R-W Company since they were not in the receivers’ possession or under their control. It is true that the certificates covering the stock dividend shares were in their possession, but these certificates were not the shares of stock, which are intangible rights, but mere evidence thereof. The original shares had been pledged with the trustee and were not in any sense in the possession of the receivers; and the stock dividend shares, as we have shown, attached to these as a matter of law. The stock certificates, of course, had none of the attributes of negotiable paper.
The shares, it should be noted, were not mentioned in the orders authorizing the certificates. It is true that they were listed as free assets in an inventory furnished the court at the time of the application for the orders; but the inventory was furnished to show the financial condition of the company as a justification for the orders. No issue was presented as to whether the shares were free assets or not; and the orders contain no provision which could properly be construed as subjecting to the lien of the receivers’ certificates any stock subject to the lien of a pledge. There is no contention that the original 4,550 shares were subjected to the lien of the certificates; and we think that stock dividend shares stand on precisely the same footing. No question is raised as to the power of the court to subject pledged property as well as mortgaged property to the first lien of receivers’ certificates; but we agree with the court below that nothing was done which would subject to such lien the stock here in controversy or the dividends arising therefrom. It was certainly not intended to impress the lien of the certificates upon cash in possession of the receivers, who were charged with the duty of operating the railway system.
4. Waiver and Estoppel.
The point as to waiver and estoppel is based upon the fact that not until 1937 was demand made by the first mortgage trustee for the stock certificates covering the stock dividends and that, in the meantime, the receivers had been allowed to collect the cash dividends thereon and to retain the cash dividends paid on the original shares prior to 1932. No question of laches or the statute of limitations is involved; and there is no showing either that the trustee, with knowledge of its rights, intended to waive any rights as to either stock or cash dividends, or that, as the result of anything that it did, there was any change of position on the part of any of the parties which would render it inequitable for the receivers to be required to turn over to the trustee the funds and property of the trustee in their hands, to which, as we have seen, it is rightfully entitled under the pledge. As to waiver, the special master very aptly said in his report: “The fact that the first mortgage trustee allowed several years to pass before it demanded the stock dividend and the cash dividends paid thereon, and certain cash dividends on the original 4,-450 shares which had been collected by the receivers, is not sufficient evidence of an intention on its part that the receivers should retain these dividends. Rather, I think, the fair inference is that the first mortgage trustee was uncertain of its rights and acted upon the assumption that the dividends would be held by the receivers, as officers of the court, for the benefit of those entitled to them — whether these should turn out to be the receivers them
As to estoppel, nothing need be added to the statement of the special master as follows :
“(1) There was no false representation or wrongful misleading silence. As a matter of fact, the trustees had to apply to the receivers in order to ascertain when the stock dividend had been declared, what was its amount, when the cash dividends had been declared, and their respective amounts.
“(2) There has been no statement of fact by the trustees to the receivers, nor indeed any statement of opinion as to the law.
“(3) The receivers were in full possession of all the facts, so that, as we have seen, it was necessary that the trustees should apply to them in order to learn them.
“(4) The receivers have not been adversely affected in any way by the silence of the trustees.”
Under the facts as found, there is no basis for the application of the principles of either waiver or estoppel, and no reason in law or in equity why the court should not order the certificates and funds in its possession turned over to the person rightfully entitled to them. If, through error of law, or mistake as to the rights of the parties, dividends have been paid to the receivers, who are mere officers of the court, or certificates evidencing the stock dividend have come into their possession, there is no reason why the court should not direct that its officers respect rights which it would enforce through the medium of a resulting or constructive trust in other cases. As said by Lord Justice James in Ex parte James, L.R. 9 Ch.App. 609, 614, in a passage quoted by this court in Leonard v. Gage, supra [94 F.2d 24]: “The court, then, finding that he has in his hands money which in equity belongs to some one else, ought to set an example to the world by paying it to the person really entitled to it. In my opinion the Court of Bankruptcy ought to be as honest as other people.”
The first mortgage trustee complains that the District Judge, without requiring a supersedeas bond, stayed the order for the delivery of the stock certificates covering the stock dividend shares for a period of three months or until the final determination of any appeals taken therefrom or application to the Supreme Court for certiorari. It appears, however, that the receivers were required to hold the stock certificates and deposit the amount of the cash dividends in a special account, separate from their other funds, pending the determination of any appellate proceedings that might be taken, and that this requirement was complied with. Rule of Civil Procedure 73(d), 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c, provides that, where property is in the custody or control of the court, “the supersedeas bond shall be fixed at such sum only as will secure the amount recovered for the use and detention of the property, the costs of the action, costs on appeal, interest, and damages for delay”. A cost bond was duly filed; and, if the first mortgage trustee felt that any security was necessary in addition to the deposit required by the court, it could have applied to this court for relief under Rule 75(j). No such application was made, and we assume that, in as much as the appellants were trust companies and receivers of a great railway system, no additional security was deemed necessary. The question as to whether additional security should have been required by the court below as a condition of the stay order, pending appeal to this court, has now become moot, and we need not decide it. The stay order was too broad in providing for stay pending application for certiorari from the Supreme Court to this court; and it will be modified by elimination of that provision. Of course, the stay will be operative pending the receipt of our mandate by the court below ; and our mandate will be stayed in accordance with our rules and upon such terms as may be just to permit application for certiorari.
For the reasons stated, the decree appealed from will be modified by adding the amount of the dividend of December 31, 1930, $20,025, to the amount of the dividends which the receivers are ordered to pay over and deliver to the first mortgage trustee, and by eliminating therefrom the provision as to stay pending application for certiorari; and as so modified it will be affirmed. The first mortgage trustee will recover its costs of the other appellants, against whom the costs of the various appeals, will be taxed.
Modified and affirmed.
There is nothing to the contrary in such cases as Koshland v. Helvering, 298 U.S. 441, 56 S.Ct. 767, 80 L.Ed. 1268, 105 A.L.R. 756, and United States v. Phellis, 257 U.S. 156, 42 S.Ct. 63, 66 L. Ed. 180, which hold that, for purposes of taxation, distinction must be drawn between a stock dividend which, like the one here involved, works no change in the ■corporate entity, the same interest in the same corporation being represented after the distribution by more shares of precisely the same character, and a stock dividend which involves changes of corporate . identity or a change in the nature of shares issued, whereby the proportional interest of the stockholder after distribution is essentially different from his former interest.