Page:Federal Reporter, 1st Series, Volume 10.djvu/432

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e20 FEDEBaL bepobtbs. �stock and personal property of any one oi them by the city of New- York for the year 1880; that the New York, in a suit brought by it in July, 1881, against the Manhattan and the Metropolitan, obtained an injunction order restraining the Manhattan from parting with any monej'fl then in the possession or under the control of the Manhattan, which had been or might be received by it from traffic on any of the railways of the New York, except as required strictly for the opera- tion of the railways of the New York leased to the Manhattan, which injunction was in force on the iast dayof September; that the Man- hattan is not in default for not paying taxes assessed on the New York for the years 1879 and 1880 ; that as to the remainder of the taxes assessed on the New York, the Manhattan, because the taxes were excessive, unequal, and illegal, determined, with the concurrent consent of the New York and the Metropolitan, that payment of them should be refused and proceedings be taken to review such unlawful taxation, and such proceedings were taken and are pending in the name and at the request of the New York to contest the legality of said taxes and the obligation of the Manhattan to pay them ; that the alleged default of the Manhattan in not paying the taxes assessed upon the New York in the years 1879 and 1880 was in accordance with the express instructions of the New York to that effect, and the action of the Manhattan in relation thereto was essential to the pro- tection of the rights of the companies parties to the triparite agree- ment, and of the stockholders of each of said companies ; and that on or about the first of October, 1881, the New York and the Metropolitan demanded of the receivers the payment of rent alleged to be due to them respectively from the Manhattan under said leases. �Mr. Justice Westbrook rendered a decision on the petition of the New York, at a date stated in the bill in this suit to have been on or about the fourteenth of October, 1881. The decision refers to the fact that in the tripartite agreement the Manhattan agrees to issue and deliver to the New York and the Metropolitan its two bonds, each for $6,500,- 000, payable on demand, — one to a trustee for the stockholders of the New York, and the other to a trustee for the stockholders of the Metropolitan, with authority to the trustees respectively to use the same, if they see fit, in payment for the stock of the Manhattan at par ; and that the said bonds were executed and exchanged for stock in the Manhattan, so that the New York and the Metropolitan, or their stockholders, beeame the owners of the entire capital stock of the Manhattan, then amounting to $13,000,000. Mr. Justice Westbrook held that the mere appointment of the receivers did not terminate the ��� �