Clark Pease v. Engineering Company No 360 Clark Pease v. Engineering Company No 419

Citation243 U.S. 273,37 S.Ct. 283,61 L.Ed. 715
Decision Date06 March 1917
Docket NumberNos. 360 and 419,RATHBUN-JONES,s. 360 and 419
PartiesCLARK PEASE, Petitioner, v. ENGINEERING COMPANY. NO 360. CLARK PEASE et al., Petitioners, v.ENGINEERING COMPANY. NO 419
CourtUnited States Supreme Court

Messrs. Perry J. Lewis and Frank H. Booth for petitioners.

Mr. Carlos Bee for respondent.

Mr. Justice Brandeis delivered the opinion of the court:

Pease and Heye were sureties on a supersedeas bond given on appeal to the United States circuit court of appeals in a suit to foreclose a vendor's lien. The district court for the southern district of Texas had entered a decree against the People's Light Company, declaring that Rathbun-Jones Engineering Company 'do have and recover' $6,804.90, with interest; establishing a lien on certain personal property; and directing that it be sold to satisfy the judgment, if the same be not paid within sixty days. The appellate court affirmed the decree. 133 C. C. A. 523, 218 Fed. 167. The mandate directed that the defendant and the sureties 'pay the costs in this court, for which execution may be issued out of the district court,' and 'commanded that such execution and further proceedings be had in said cause as, according to right and justice, and the laws of the United States, ought to be had.' Thereupon the district court, apparently without notice having been given specifically to sureties, entered its 'decree on mandate.' This decree ordered 'that said mandate be made the judgment of this court;' that a sale be made, as herein provided, 'to satisfy said judgment,' and that 'in the event said property does not sell for sufficient amount to satisfy said judgment, interest and costs, the clerk of this court issue execution against the defendant and against the sureties on the appeal bond, . . . for any deficiency that may remain.'

The sale was had. Pease, being the highest bidder, purchased all the property for a sum which, when applied upon the judgment, left a large deficiency. Immediately after the sale, and before execution issued, Pease and Heye's administratrix (he having died pending the appeal) filed, in the district court, a motion that execution be stayed and that so much of the 'decree on mandate' as directed its issue be set aside. On the same day a similar motion was filed by the trustee in liquidation of the People's Light Company (it having been dissolved pending the appeal). Both motions were presented by the counsel who had theretofore acted for the defendant. The authority of the court to issue the execution was attacked on several grounds. Both motions alleged that the original decree contained no provision for such execution, and that it could not be enlarged on return of the mandate, because the term had expired at which it was entered. They alleged that the order for execution was illegal because the People's Light Company had been dissolved and Heye had died, pending the appeal. They asserted that the 'decree on mandate,' so far as it directed the issuance of the execution, was 'wrongful and illegal,' because 'it was entered by the court without pleading, without notice, and without hearing, against, to, or of these petitioners,' and 'deprived them of their property without due process of law.' The motion on behalf of the sureties alleged also that they had been deprived of their constitutional right to 'trial by jury in actions at common law.' The prayers for relief were rested, also, on still broader grounds, which involved directly the whole merits of the controversy. It was alleged that the 'bond did not secure, . . . the payment of the amount of said judgment or any deficiency that might remain after the application of the proceeds of the sale of said property, but operated only as indemnity against damages and costs by reason of said appeal,'—and that the costs on said appeal had been paid. The motions, which were fully heard upon evidence introduced by the petitioners, were denied. An appeal was taken by all the petitioners from this denial; and by Pease alone from the 'decree on mandate.' Both the decrees were affirmed on appeal; and a rehearing was refused. 142 C. C. A. 565, 228 Fed. 273. Thereupon petitions to this court for certiorari to the circuit court of appeals were filed and granted.

After issue of the execution, Pease instituted still another proceeding,—a suit to restrain its enforcement. But when the injunction was denied by the district court, the marshal made levy, and Pease, 'as trustee for himself and the other stockholders of the People's Light Company,' paid to the clerk of court the balance due on the judgment. An appeal from the denial of the injunction was dismissed by the circuit court of appeals; but review of that decree is not sought here.

The petitioners still contend, on various grounds, that the proceedings below are void for lack of due process of law, or should be set aside for error:

First. It is contended that the 'decree on mandate' was void so far as it ordered execution to issue for any deficiency; because that direction was not contained in the original decree or in the mandate of the circuit court of appeals. We are referred to cases holding that the lower court must enforce the decree as affirmed without substantial enlargement or alteration. But the original decree ordered that the plaintiff 'do have and recover' $6,804.90. This is the customary language used in personal judgments which are, without further direction, enforceable by general execution. If the defendant desired to insist that, because the suit was a foreclosure proceeding, the decree in this form was not proper, the objection should have been taken on the first appeal; and, not having been so taken, must be considered as waived. The 'decree on mandate' obeyed the command of the mandate 'that such execution and further proceedings be had in said cause as, according to right and justice, and the laws of the United States, ought to be had.' The amount of the deficiency was fixed by the sale; the insertion of the amount in the execution was but a clerical act.

Second. It is contended that all suits pending against the People's Light Company abated upon its dissolution. As we read the Texas statute (Rev. Stat. 1911, art. 1206), such a consequence is carefully avoided. It is there provided that upon dissolution the president and directors shall be trustees of the creditors and stockholders of the corporation, 'with full power to settle its affairs,' and with power 'in the name of such corporation . . . to collect all debts, compromise controversies, maintain or defend judicial proceedings.' This general language makes no distinction between pending and subsequent 'judicial proceedings,' which the trustees are empowered to maintain and defend in the corporation's name; and there seems no reason why such a distinction should be read into the statute. There is also the further provision in the article that 'the existence of every corporation may be continued for three years after its dissolution from whatever cause, for the purpose of enabling those charged with the duty to settle upon its affairs.' The People's Light Company, which takes this appeal and gives bond for its successful prosecution, is hardly in a position to assert that it is nonexistent and incapable of maintaining and defending pending suits. Third. It is contended that the district court had no power under the Constitution to render a summary judgment against the sureties upon affirmance of the decree appealed from, and that resort should have been had to an action at law. The method pursued has been introduced by statute into the practice of many states, including Texas. Rev. Civ. Stat. art. 1627. See cases in the margin.1 Pursuant to the requirements of the Conformity Act (Rev. Stat. § 914), this practice is followed by the Federal courts in actions at law. Hiriart v. Ballon, 9 Pet. 156, 9 L. ed. 85; Gordon v. Third Nat. Bank, 6 C. C. A. 125, 13 U. S. App. 554, 56 Fed. 790; Egan v. Chicago G. W. R. Co. 163 Fed. 344. The constitutional right of trial by jury presents no obstacle to this method of proceeding, since by becoming a surety the party submits himself 'to be governed by the fixed rules which regulate the practice of the court.' Hiriart v. Ballon, 9 Pet. 156, 167, 9 L. ed. 85, 89. Although the adoption of state procedure is not obligatory upon the Federal courts when sitting in equity, they have frequently rendered summary judgment against sureties on appeal bonds. See cases in the margin.2 Some of the district courts, by formal rule of court require the bond to contain an express agreement that the court may, upon notice to the sureties, proceed summarily against them in the original action or suit. See Rule 91, Ariz. Dist. Court Rules, adopted March 5, 1912; Rule 90, Wash. Dist. Court Rules, 1905. But this is not a general provision; nor is it a necessary one. For, as this court has said, sureties 'become quasi parties to the proceedings, and subject themselves to the jurisdiction of the court, so that summary judgment may be rendered on their bonds.' Babbitt v. Finn (Babbitt v. Shields) 101 U. S. 7, 15, 25 L. ed. 820, 822. The objection that a court of equity has no jurisdiction because there is an adequate remedy at law on the bond is not well taken. A court of equity, having jurisdiction of the principal case, will completely dispose of its incidents and put an end to further litigation. Applying this principle, equity courts, upon the dissolution of an injunction, commonly render a summary decree on injunction bonds. See cases cited in the margin.3

Fourth. It is contended that notice was not given to the surety of the motion for summary judgment. It is a proper and usual practice to give such notice; but it may be questioned whether notice is always...

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