176
19
FEDERAL REPORTER.
consented to help the corporation by the loan of his credit, with the expectation that the corporation would eventually be able to meet the note, and relieve him from liability thereupon, and with the expectation that he would probably never be called upon to pay the balance of his unpaid subscription to the stock. The decree dismissing the bill as to the defendant, Kinnear, is reversed, at the appellee's costs, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with· this opinion. BROWN et aI. v. OHIO 1. VAL.
RY. CO.
(Circuit Court, D. Indiana. March 15, 1897.) CONSTITUTIONAl, LAW-RAILIlOADS-PREFERRED DEBTS.
A state statute providing that citizens of the state shall have 8. Hen on the personal property of railroad companies thereafter organized, to the amount of $100, for all debts originally contracted in the state, superior to all other liens or mortgages (2 Burns' Rev. St. Ind. 1894, § 5179; Rev. St. Ind. 1881, § 3919), is valid both as against the railroad company and other lien holders. Only those who are injuriously affected by an unconstitutional act wlll be heard to complain of It. Therefore neither a railroad corporation nor its receiver will be heard to question the right of a claimant to have his claim paid as a preferred one, upon the ground that the statute upon which he bases his right discriminates against citizens of other states, as only a citizen of another state will be heard to make that complaint. m' STATUTE. ONLY THOSE INJURIOUSLY AFFECTED CAN QUESTION CONSTITUTION-
2. SAME AT,TTY
In Equity. Hamilton A. Madisoo, Francis B. Posey, and Andrew J. Clark, for petitioners. Gilchrist & De Bruler, for receiver. BAKER, District Judge. Hamilton A. Madison, Francis B. Posey, and Andrew J. Clark have filed an intervening petition in the above-entitled cause for the recovery of a decree against the defendant, the Qhio Valley Railway Company, and John MacLeod, its receiver, for the sum of $100; for services rendered by them as for said railway cOOlpany prior to the appointment of the above-named receiver. The right of recovery is predicated on the provision ofthe statute of Indiana relating to the organization of railroad corporations, which took effect on May 6, 1853, and which is as. fQlllows: . ",And the citiz,ens of this state shall have 8. lien upon all the personal property of sald (.'()rporations, to the amount of one hundred dollars, for all debts originally contracted wIthIn this state; which, after said lien of the state, shall take precedence of· all other debts, demands, judglIlents or decrees, liens or mortgages against suchcorporatlons." 2 Burns' Rev. St. 1894, § 5179 (Rev. .. 1881, § 3919).
The receiver; answering the petition, admits that the intervening petitioners 'are, andha"e been for many years, citizens of the state of and that, at the time of his appointment as receiver for the Ohio Valley Railway Company; it was indebted to them in the sum of $100 for a liability originally contracted within this
BROWN V. OHIO VAL. BY. CO·
177
·tate, for services rendered to and for said company. He allo admits that at the time of his appointment the Ohio Valley Railway Company had cars and other personal property, to a large amount, in the state of Indiana. It is admitted that the petitioners are entitled to have their demand allowed and paid as a preferential claim, unless, as the receiver insists, the above-quoted statutory provision is invalid by reason of its repugnancy to the following provision of the constitution of the United States, viz.: "The citizens of each state shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states." Article 4, § 2. Counsel who make the objection for the receiver have not argued the constitutional question, but have contented themselves with the single statement that "we do not find any authority which would throw any light on the subject, and do not think we can make any argument which would be of any assistance to the court." The provision in question has stood upon the statute book for nearly half a century, and, so far as the .court is advised, its constitutionality has never been heretofore drawn in question. A court will not, as a general rule, pass upon a constitutional question, and decide a statute to be invalid, unless a decision upon that very point becomes necessary to the determination of the cause. While the court cannot shun the discussion of a constitutional question, when fairly presented and its decision is essential, yet it will not go out of its way to find such a question. It will not seek to draw such a weighty matter into judgment collaterally, nor on a trivial occasion. A proper rel!lpect for a co-ordinate department should restrain the court from discussing the constitutionality of a statute, unless that question is the very lis mota, and its decision unavoidable. In the view which the court takes of the present case, the consideration of the constitutional question suggested is not necessary, and therefore the court will enter upon no such extrajudicial discussion as is invited. The power to create corporations resides exclusively in the legislative department of the state. With the exercise of this power, within constitutional limits, the cQlUrts have no concern. The legislature is possessed of the unquestionable power to provide that the debts of such corporations, to a limited amount, shall take priority over liens or mortgages. The corporation having been granted corporate on that express condition, it cannot repudiate the provision in question. It has taken the benefit of the statute, and it must bear the burden which has been made an essential condition of its right to become a railway corporation. Nor can a lienor or mortgagee complain because their rights have been acquired since the statute has been enacted, and with a knowledge of it. They will be presumed to have given their assent to the statute by entering into contractual relations with a corporation which has voluntarily accepted its provisions. The precise constitutional objection is not, and cannot be, that the legislature is not possessed of the power to provide for the payment of all small debts of the corporation by giving them a preference and priority over liens and mortgages subsequently originating, for such power is undoubted. The objection must be that the statute in question is unconstitn· 79F.-12
178
79 FEDERAL REPORTER.
tional because it limits the right to citizens of this: state, and to debts originally contracted therein, and thus discriminates injuri· ously against the citizens of other states. If it should be granted that nonresidents of this state have equal constitutional rights in respect to enforcing the collection of small debts with the citizens of this state, it might f()lllow that as to those who were injuriously affected, or as to those against whom the statute discriminates, it would be invalid, while as to those to whom it assumes to grant a special privilege it would be valid. When a nonresident of the state assails the constitutionality of the statute on the ground that it injuriously affects him, or (lID the ground that it denies him a privilege granted to the citizens of this state, it will be time to consider the constitutional question suggested. Courts will nm listen to those who are not aggrieved by an invalid law. The railway company and its receiver are not aggrieved by the statute. The only ground of complaint O'pen to them is that the statute limits their liability within too narrow bounds. If it granted the right to sue for debts amounting to $100 to everyone, it would confessedly be a valid enactment. Can the receiver object that the statute is unconstitutional because it is less burdensome to railway c()'l'porations than it might and ought to have been? It has been held that a state law which excluded colored persons from service on grand and trial juries deprived them of the equal protection of the law, but that a white person could not complain of the statutory exclusion. Com. v. Wright, 79 Ky. 22. So it has been held that a white person could not raise the question whether the exclusion of colored persons from participation in the benefits of the commooschool system was a violation of the constitution of the state. Marshall v. Donovan, 10 Eush, 681. A male inhabitant of the state cannot assail the constitutiooality of a statute regulating the granting of licenses to vendors of intoxicating liquors on the ground that the exclusion of women and nonresidents from participation in its benefits is an unjust discrimination. Wagner v. Town of Garrett, 118 Ind. 114, 20 N. E. 706. These cases are agreeable to the principle that only thO'Se who are injuriously affected by an unconstitutional act will be heard to complain of it. Cooley, Const. Lim. (5th Ed.) 163, 164; Smith v. McCarthy, 56 Pa. St. 359. The receiver, having admitted the rights of the complainants unless the statute in question should be held unconstitutional, is in no situa· tion to object to the allowance of the demand ()If the petitioners as a preferential claim. An order may be entered di· recting the receiver to pay the intervening petitioners the sum of $100, as a preferential claim, with costs to be taxed.
SEATTLE, L. S. & E. RY. CO. V. UNION TRUST CO.
179
SEATTLE, L. S. & E. RY. CO. v. UNION TRUST CO. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit. February 8, 1897.) 1. FORECLOSURE OF MORTGAGE-PLEADiNG-DEFAULT IN INTEREST-PRINCIPAL DECLARED DUE.
When a suit for the foreclosure of a mortgage has been commenced, based upon a default in interest alone, and, while the suit is pending, the trustee of the mortgage, under the provisions thereof, elects to declare the principal of the bonds secured by it due because of the nonpayment of interest, such election is properly the subject of a supplemental bill, but, if introduced into the suit by amendment to the original bill, objection must be made by demurrer, plea, or answer: otherwise it is waived. TO ANSWER.
2.
8UBP<ENA-A)1EKDED
The sale office of the writ of subpmna is to bring a defendant Into court, in order that the court may acquire jurisdiction of his person: and, when a defendant has appeared generally in a cause, and subsequently, upon the filing of an amended bill containing a new cause of action, stipulates by his solicitor to file an answer to the merits of such amended bill, no sUbpcena thereon is required. A decree for a deficiency upon the foreclosure of a mortgage, may be rendered, under the ninety-second equity rUle, without a special prayer therefor in the bill, though it is the better practice to insert such a prayer. When, in a suit for the foreclosure of a mortgage, the parties have stipulated that certain property is covered by the mortgage, no objection can afterwards be made to its Inclusion in the decree of foreclosure Which coulU have been obviated by the introduction of any proof.
8.
MORTGAGE FORECLOSURES-PLEADING-DEFTCTENCY DECREE.
4.
SAME-STIPULATlOK AS TO PROPEltTY COVEltED.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the Bnited States for the Northern Division of the District of Washington. Crowley & Grosscup, for appellant. E. C. Hughes, for appellee. Before GILBERT and ROSS, Circuit Judges, and HAWLEY, District Judge. ROSS, Circuit Judge. This was a suit for the foreclosure of a mortgage, executed August 10, 1886, by the appellant, Seattle, Lake Shore & Eastern Railway Company, to the appellee, Union Trust Company of New York, in trust, to secure the payment of 5,675 b(}nds, of the denomination of $1,000 each, payable to the holder or holders thereof on the 1st day of August, 1931, with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum, payable semiannually. The bonds had annexed thereto interest coupons for the respective semiannual installments of interest. After the delivery of the bonds, and before the institution of the suit, 117 of the bonds were redeemed and canceled by the railway company, leaving 5,558 outstanding at the time of the commencement of the suit, in the hands of the various parties to whom they had been sold for a valuable consideration. Each of the bonds contains this provision: "The payment of the principal and interest of this bond, with others of like tenor and same date, not exceeding, in all, twenty-five thousand dollars per mile of railroad and branches authorized by the articles of incorporation or charter of the company, is secured by a mortgage or deed of trust duIy made by the said railway company to the Union Trust Company of New York, trUI-