Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Western Railroad v. Indianapolis Union Railway Co.

270 U.S. 107, 46 S. Ct. 221, 70 L. Ed. 490, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 402
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 1, 1926
Docket328, 329
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 270 U.S. 107 (Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Western Railroad v. Indianapolis Union Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Western Railroad v. Indianapolis Union Railway Co., 270 U.S. 107, 46 S. Ct. 221, 70 L. Ed. 490, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 402 (1926).

Opinion

*110 Mr. Chief Justice Taft

delivered the opinion of the Court.

These are appeals under § 238 of the Judicial Code, allowed February 18, 1925, in two cases between the same parties from identical decrees of the District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. By agreement they are to be treated in every respect as one. The certificate of the District Court is that the petition as amended “ does not show the existence of the requisite diversity of citizenship, nor the existence of a Federal question, and that this Court, not having found the said petition to be ancillary to any prior suit, but having found the said petition to be original, did thereupon dismiss the same upon the sole ground of want of jurisdiction.” The question of jurisdiction is whether a petition by the purchasing company at a railway foreclosure sale, in seeking to *111 reform, because of mistake, its contract of purchase in imposing upon it liability for rentals under a terminal facilities contract, is a suit ancillary to the original foreclosure suit so that jurisdiction exists in the Federal District Court to hear it, without regard to the citizenship of the necessary parties to the petition.

The two original foreclosure suits were brought, one by the Equitable Trust Company of New York and Elias J. Jacoby, as trustees, against the Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Western Railway Company, and the other by the Central Trust Company of New York and Mason, trustees, against the same railway company. There was the necessary diversity of citizenship in each case, and the appellant in this present suit, the Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Western Railroad Company, is a newly organized company, the assignee of the purchaser at the foreclosure sales of the whole railroad property covered by all the mortgages foreclosed. It became a party to each cause as such assignee, as permitted in the decree of foreclosure in each case, and it will be hereafter called the purchasing company.

The Indiana, Decatur & Western Railway Company owned the part of the railway from Indianapolis to Springfield, Illinois. The Cincinnati, Hamilton & Indianapolis Railroad Company owned the part from Indianapolis to the East. In 1902 they were merged into a corporation called the Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Western Railway Company, which gave a first refunding mortgage upon the two properties. It was expected that the bonds secured by this mortgage would be used in refunding two underlying mortgages on the eastern part, and a single underlying mortgage on the western part. The refunding was not completed and' the two foreclosure suits, already referred to, were filed at the same time in the same court, so that by an identical decree in each case the purchaser was enabled to acquire title to the con *112 solidated railway free from the liens of' the four mortgages. The decree of foreclosure in each case, contained a provision giving the purchaser under the foreclosure sale, and his successors or assigns, the right for a period of thirty days after the delivery of the master’s deed, to elect “whether or not to assume or adopt any lease or contract made by the defendant consolidated company, or its predecessors in title, and such purchaser, his successors or assigns, shall be held not to have adopted or assumed any such lease or contract in respect of which he or they shall have filed a written election not to assume or adopt the same with the Clerk of this Court within the said period of thirty days.”

Within the thirty days, the purchasing company filed in the two foreclosure cases what it called an election “not to assume or adopt the contract dated September 20, 1883, and the amendment of August 20, 1906, under which the tracks of the Union Railway Company are occupied in Indianapolis, in so far as such rights are conferred by the signature of the Indianapolis, Decatur & Springfield Railway Company to said contract. This assignee hereby expressly accepts such contract as made with the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Indianapolis Railroad Company, and desires to accept the benefits of the contract with said company, and the right to occupy the tracks of the Union Railway Company and the Indianapolis Belt Railway Company therein conferred.”

The Indianapolis Union Railway Company is a company engaged in operating a union railway depot and union'railway tracks for the use of several railroads entering that city, its properties having been owned by five so-called proprietary companies and conveyed by them to it. It had acquired a perpetual lease of a belt line. September- 20, 1883, an agreement was made between the Union Railway Company and five proprietary companies, by which each of the companies in the use of the terminals *113 became liable for a fixed rental which was to be paid by each company, whether the terminal was used or not. Then there were admitted seven non-proprietary companies to the joint use of the Belt Railway and Union Railway Company property under the same agreement as to a fixed rental, in addition to which there was to be a payment in proportion to the use on the basis of wheelage. At this time the Indianapolis, Decatur & Springfield Railway Company owned the part of the railroad here in question west of Indianapolis, and it bound itself for one-thirteenth of the rental, and the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Indianapolis Railroad Company owning the other part of the railroad here in question east of Indianapolis became bound for another one-thirteenth of the rental. In 1902, the two companies were united under the name of the Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Western Railway Company, and, from that time until the foreclosure in 1915, the united company paid two-thirteenths of the rentals. When, however, the decrees were made in the foreclosure of the two parts of the railway, the purchasing company, the appellant here, sought to reduce its rental from two-thirteenths to one-thirteenth by electing to take the contract for rental of its predecessor in title of the eastern part of the united railway; and to refuse to elect to take the contract of rental of its predecessor in title for the western part of the railway, and, having filed such an election, it declined to pay more than one-thirteenth of the rental.

There then intervened in the original foreclosure suits the Indianapolis Union Railway Company and the then proprietary parties to the terminal agreement, by petitions asking that the purchasing company show cause why it should not be ordered to make payment to the Indianapolis Union Company of the' full amount that would have been payable to that company by the Cincin *114 nati, Indianapolis & Western Railway Company, the defendant in the foreclosure in both suits. Jurisdiction was taken of this petition, and the District Court held that the so-called election was unauthorized and improper, and that the purchasing company, for failure to elect to reject the contracts entirely, was responsible for two-thirteenths of the total rentals. This controversy was carried to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, which affirmed the District Court. Cincinnati, I. & W. R. Co. v. Indianapolis Union Railroad Company, 279 Fed. 356.

The order of the Circuit Court of Appeals was made in 1922.

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Bluebook (online)
270 U.S. 107, 46 S. Ct. 221, 70 L. Ed. 490, 1926 U.S. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-indianapolis-western-railroad-v-indianapolis-union-railway-scotus-1926.