Atlantic & Pacific Telegraph Co. v. Union Pacific Railway Co.

1 F. 745
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 F. 745 (Atlantic & Pacific Telegraph Co. v. Union Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic & Pacific Telegraph Co. v. Union Pacific Railway Co., 1 F. 745 (uscirct 1880).

Opinion

McCrary, J.

By act of congress, approved July 1, 1862, and acts amendatory thereof, the Union Pacific Railroad Company was created a corporation with power to “lay out, locate, construct, furnish, maintain and enjoy a continuous railroad and telegraph, with appurtenances,” from the Missouri river, through Nebraska and Wyoming, to a junction with the Cen[746]*746tral Pacific Railroad in Utah. Under this authority the said railroad company built, and early in 1869 completed, its railroad and telegraph over said route. The plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of New York.

On the first day of September, 1869, the plaintiff and said Union Pacific Railroad Company entered into a contract, whereby, among other things, the railroad company agreed to demise and lease to plaintiff “all its telegraph lines, wires, poles, instruments, offices, and all other property by it possessed, appertaining to the business of telegraphing, for the purpose of sending messages and doing a general telegraphic business; to have and to hold for and during the whole term of the charter of the party of the first part [the railroad company] and any renewals thereof, subject to the rights of the United States as set forth in the charter of the railroad company, and on the condition that the plaintiff would faithfully and fully perform all the duties imposed or to be imposed upon the railroad company by its charter or by the laws of the United States.”

On the twentieth day of 'December, 1871, a supplemental agreement was entered into between said parties, by which certain changes were made in the original contract. Among other things, it was provided in said contracts that the railroad company should receive from plaintiff, in consideration for the same, 17,800 shares of the capital stock of the plaintiff corporation, (the Atlantic & Pacific Telegraph Company,) which stock the railroad company received and applied to its own use. Said contracts were duly performed on both sides until the twenty-seventh day of February last, when the railroad company assumed, of its own motion, to rescind the same, and to resume possession and control of the property; for which purpose its agents cut the wires running from the general offices of plaintiff, for commercial business; at Omaha, and severed said offices from the main line. It is charged in the bill that this was done for the purpose of giving the business of said line at Omaha, and all the advantages thereof, to the defendant, the American Union Telegraph Company, [747]*747a competitor and rival of plaintiff in the business of telegraphing.

The Union Pacific Railroad Company, by consolidation ■with another company, has become the Union Pacific Railway Company, by which name it is sued.

The prayer of the bill is, among other tilings, for an injunction to restrain the defendants from disregarding the two contracts above mentioned, and from interfering with the property covered thereby, except as in said contracts provided, and from preventing the plaintiff from reconnecting the wires so as to restore them to their original condition before the same were cut. On the first of March it was ordered that the application for injunction be hoard before me, at chambers at St. Louis, on the sixth of April, 1880, and in the meantime a preliminary injunction was allowed.

The defendants have answered fully, and numerous affidavits have been filed. Upon the record thus presented counsel have been fully beard, both orally and by printed briefs.

The Union Pacific Railway Company, defendants, admit the cutting of the wires as charged, as well as their purpose to disregard the contracts, and retake the telegraph lines and property, and in justification allege that said contracts were beyond the power of the company to make, contrary to public policy, and in violation of the acts of congress chartering the Union Pacific Railroad Company, and that they are therefore void. The question of the validity of these contracts is the first to be considered.

1. The rides by which this question is to be determined arc now well settled, at least in the federal courts. They have been clearly stated by the supreme court in the recent case of Thomas et al. v. The West Jersey R. Co. (not yet reported.) From the opinion in that case, delivered by Mr. Justice Miller, I make the following extracts, as laying down the law by which I must he guided:

“We take the general doctrine to be in this country, though there may he exceptional eases and some authorities to the contrary, that the powers oí a corporation organized under legislative statutes are such and such only as those statutes [748]*748confer. “Conceding the rule applicable to all statutes, that what is fairly implied is as much granted as what is expressed, it remains that the charter of a corporation is the measure of' its powers, and that the enumeration of those powers implies the exclusion of all others.
*- » * *
“There is another principle of equal importance, and equally conclusive against the validity of this contract, which, if not coming exactly within the doctrine of ultra vires, as we have just discussed it, shows very clearly that the railroad company was without the power to make such a contract.
“That principle is that where a corporation, like a railroad company, has granted to it by charter a franchise intended in a large measure to be exercised for the public good, the due performance of those functions being the consideration of the public grant, any contract which disables the corporation from performing those functions — which undertakes, without the consent of the state, to transfer to others the rights and powers conferred by the charter, and to relieve the grantees of the burden which it imposes — is a violation of the contract with the state, and is void as against public policy. This doctrine is asserted with remarkable clearness in the opinion of this court, delivered by Mr. Justice Campbell, in the case of The York & Maryland Line Railroad Co. v. Winans, 17 Howard, 30. The corporation in that case was chartered to build and maintain a railroad in Pennsylvania by the legislature of that state. The stock in it was taken by a Maryland corporation, called the Baltimore & Susquehanna Bailroad Company, and the entire management of the road was committed to the Maryland company, which appointed all the officers and agents upon it, and furnished the rolling-stock.
“In reference to this state of things, and its effect upon the liability of the Pennsylvania corporation for infringing a patent of the defendant in error Winans, this court said: ‘This conclusion [argument] implies that the duties imposed upon the plaintiff [in error] by the charter are fulfilled by the construction of the road, and that, by alienating its right to use and its powers of control and supervision, it may avoid further [749]*749responsibility. But these acts involve an overturn of the relations which the charter has arranged between the legislature and the community. Important franchises were conferred upon the corporation to enable it to provide facilities for communication and intercourse required for public convenience. Corporate management and control over these were prescribed, and corporate responsibility for their insufficiency provided as a remuneration for their grant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-pacific-telegraph-co-v-union-pacific-railway-co-uscirct-1880.