Central Trust Co. v. Wheeling & L. E. R.

211 F. 515, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1123
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 5, 1914
DocketNo. 25
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 F. 515 (Central Trust Co. v. Wheeling & L. E. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Trust Co. v. Wheeling & L. E. R., 211 F. 515, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1123 (N.D. Ohio 1914).

Opinion

DAY, District Judge.

In the year 1901 and for some time prior thereto, the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railroad Company owned and operated a steam railroad, extending from Toledo, easterly across Ohio, to Wheeling, W. Va.; also a line of railroad extending from Cleveland to Zanesville; and also had a branch line to Huron on Lake Erie, several other branch lines, and a belt line in Cleveland. At Toledo, connection was had by means of Belt lines with the line of the Wabash Railroad Company, which company operated' extensive lines of railroad in the Middle West, and branches running to St. Louis, Chicago, and Toledo. Throughout this memorandum, the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railroad Company will be referred to as the “Wheeling,” the Wabash-Pittsburgh Terminal Railway Company will be referred [517]*517to as the “Terminal,” and the Wabash Railroad Company will be referred to as the “Wabash.”

Prior to 1901, there had been no community of interest between the Wheeling and the Wabash, but early in that year a plan was devised to give the Wabash an entrance into Pittsburgh. Under date of February 1, 1901, the Pittsburgh-Toledo Syndicate was formed by written agreement. Louis Fitzgerald, president of the Mercantile Trust Company of New York, George J. Gould, a director of the'Wabash, and Joseph Ramsey, Jr., vice president and general manager of the Wabash, were designated as synditate managers. Later others were added to this managing board. The object of this syndicate was the building of a line of railroad into Pittsburgh to connect with the Wabash from the Wheeling, for the purpose of giving the Wabash an entrance into Pittsburgh. To accomplish this main purpose, at first $15,000,000, which was presently increased to $20,000,000, were subscribed. Immediately after the organization of the syndicate, the syndicate managers who had previously conferred with Andrew Carnegie, and received assurance of an extensive traffic in the steel business, entered into a contract with the Union Railroad Company and the Carnegie Steel Company, at Pittsburgh, whereby the syndicate managers, in consideration of receiving certain traffic, agreed to do all that was necessary to secure or lease such lines of railroad as would be required to make a continuous connection with these two small railroads in the vicinity of Pittsburgh, to Toledo, and thence from Toledo with the Wabash, and to arrange a close traffic contract, or alliance, with the Wabash or secure trackage rights over the tracks of the'Wabash to Chicago, or both.

Within a few days after this agreement, Mr. Gould proceeded to acquire a large interest in the stock of the Wheeling. The syndicate managers later acquired or constructed several small railroads near Pittsburgh, which on May 7, 1904, they consolidated into the Terminal. The stock of the Wheeling acquired by Mr. Gould for the syndicate enabled the syndicate in May, 1901, to reorganize the board of directors of the Wheeling and its executive committee, to elect Mr. Ramsey president of the Wheeling, and name' a finance committee of three, including Mr. Gould and Mr. Ramsey. Thereafter, the New York offices of the Wheeling were transferred to the New York offices of the Wabash, and Mr. Ramsey’s office as president of the Wheeling was moved to St. Louis, where was also his office as president of the Wabash. The syndicate also acquired all of the stock of the West Side Belt Line, a small railroad in the vicinity of Pittsburgh, by purchase of the stock of the Pittsburgh Terminal & Railroad Coal Company.

On October 10, 1902, the Wabash, the Wheeling, and the Pittsburgh, Carnegie & Western Railroad Company, one of the constituents of the Terminal Company entered into the so-called traffic and trackage contract, which plays an important part in this litigation. This contract was authorized by the Wheeling directors on May 1, 1901. The board at this time consisted of Mr. Gould, Mr. Ramsey, and two other men at that time directors of the Wabash, certain other directors who were [518]*518connected with the Pittsburgh-Toledo Syndicate, ■ and certain other directors who might be termed “dummy directors,” as that term is now well understood. This contract was prepared by the general counsel of the Wabash, and Mr. Ramsey, and authorized by the Wabash directors on August 8, 1901, after the approval of Mr. Gould had been secured.

The agreement recited, among other things:

“Whereas, the first party (the Wabash) owns, controls and operates certain lines of railroad, extending from Toledo in the state of Ohio, to the cities of East St. Louis and Chicago in the state of Illinois, and other western points, and a line extending from East St. Louis in the state of Illinois, via Detroit to Buffalo, with various branch lines; and
“Whereas, the second party (the Wheeling) owns, controls and operates connecting lines of railway in the state of Ohio, extending from the city of Toledo to the cities of Wheeling and Steubenville and a road extending from Cleveland to Zanesville in said state, with various branches; and
“Whereas, the said third party (Pittsburgh, Carnegie & Western Railroad Company) proposes to build, and is now constructing a line of railroad extending in a westerly direction from the city of Pittsburgh in the state of Pennsylvania, through West Virginia and Ohio to a connection with the main line of the railroad of the second party, in the state of Ohio; -and
“Whereas, the said first party has no line of its own extending eastwardly from Toledo, through Ohio, West Virginia and Western Pennsylvania (all lines of railway in that territory except the Wheeling and Lake Erie Railroad being under control and operated by railway companies competitive with said first party), and said first party is therefore unable to secure the amount of freight and passenger traffic to or from said territory which it is desirous of securing; and
“Whereas, the said second party has no line of its own west of Toledo, and is desirous of friendly connection with lines extending to Chicago, East St. Louis and the West, and also desires the construction of a railroad from a point on its main line in Ohio, to Pittsburgh; and
“Whereas, the third party is ready and willing to construct said extension and secure the necessary freight and passenger terminals in said city of Pittsburgh, and operate its said railroad in close and friendly alliance with said first and second parties, provided said first and second parties will enter into the friendly traffic 'and trackage relations hereinafter set forth and provided for, and which said third party believes will justify it in expending the large sums of money necessary to construct such extension and furnish such terminals in the city of Pittsburgh.”

Section 3 of article 2, also shows that the contract was for the purpose of aiding in the construction of the Terminal Company line; it reading as follows:

“Sec. 3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 F. 515, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-trust-co-v-wheeling-l-e-r-ohnd-1914.