Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad v. Central Stock-Yard & Transit Co.

45 N.J. Eq. 50
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 N.J. Eq. 50 (Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad v. Central Stock-Yard & Transit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad v. Central Stock-Yard & Transit Co., 45 N.J. Eq. 50 (N.J. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

The complainants allege that the defendants have refused to perform a legal duty which the defendants owe to them, and they bring this suit to procure a decree compelling the performance of such duty.

The complainants have control of a continuous line of railway from Hoboken to Buffalo, with connections at Buffalo extending to Chicago and other points in the West. They do a very large business in the transportation of live-stock, their income for carrying this kind of freight exceeding a half a million of dollars a year. The defendants are a stock-yard corporation, having yards and other facilities at the foot of Sixth street, in Jersey City, for the safe-keeping, feeding, sale and slaughter of livestock. Their yards front on the Hudson river, where wharves have been built for the reception of live-stock carried to the yards by vessel. The eastern terminus of the complainants’ road is at Hoboken, distant about sixteen hundred feet from the defendants’ yards. There is no connection between the complainants’ road and the defendants’ yards by railroad track or other physical means. There are three different ways or means by which live-stock may be taken to the defendants’ yards: First, it may be driven there over the public highway; second, both the Erie Railway Company and the Pennsylvania Railroad Company have laid tracks from the line of their roads to the defendants’ yards, over which cars containing live-stock are run to the yards; and, third, live-stock may be carried to the defendants’ yards by vessel and delivered on their wharf. For more than two years prior to the 15th of July, 1887, nearly all the cattle, calves and sheep, carried by the complainants to the [52]*52eastern terminus of their road, were transferred to the defendants’ yards, in the complainants’ cars, over the track of the Erie-Railway Company, the cars being switched from the complainants’ road to the Erie track at the junction of the two tracks.. On the date last named, the Erie company increased their charge for this service from $2.50 and $3 a car to $5 a car. The complainants, being unwilling to pay the increased rate of charge, made an arrangement for the same service with the Susquehannah Railroad Company, who were at that time using the-track of the Pennsylvania railroad running to the defendants’' yards. After the lapse of about a month, the Pennsylvania, company refused to allow the complainants to have the use of their track. The complainants then applied to the defendants-to either send their boats to Hoboken for such stock as the complainants might desire to have yarded at the defendants’ yard, or-to allow the complainants to send, in their own boats, to the-defendants’ yards such stock as the complainants might desire-to have yarded there. The defendants refused to do either. They refused to send their boats for complainants’ stock, or to-receive stock brought- to their wharf by the complainants’ boats. The reason the defendants refused to comply with the complainants’ request was because the complainants had, prior to the time the request was made, refused to conduct their livestock business in such manner that all cattle, calves and sheep,, which they carried to Hoboken, should be yarded at the defendants’ yards. Prior to the 14th of June, 1887, nearly all the cattle, calves and sheep, carried by the complainants to Hoboken, had either been yarded at the defendants’ yards, or the-same yard charges paid to the defendants on them that would have been payable if they had, in fact, been yarded there. About the date last -named, the complainants made an arrangement by which the live-stock carried over their road for delivery at a stock-yard at Forty-fifth street, on the East river, should be transferred by their own boats directly from Hoboken to the-point of delivery. This arrangement diverted from the defendants’ yards all the stock so transferred, and deprived them of the profit which they would have otherwise received from it. [53]*53The diversion of this business was regarded by the defendants -as a hostile act, and they at once assumed an unfriendly attitude towards the complainants. They at once gave notice, by their acts, that they intended to stand upon their strict legal rights, and to yield nothing to the complainants which the law did not give. This was, unquestionably, the origin of the present controversy. Immediately after the complainants had been notified that the defendants would neither send for such stock as the complainants desired to have yarded in the defendants’ yards, mor allow it to be brought to their wharf in the complainants’ own boats, the complainants filed the bill in this case, asking for an injunction compelling the defendants to receive live-stock from them. A preliminary injunction was refused (Delaware, Lackawanna & Western R. R. Co. v. Central Stock-Yard Co., 16 Stew. Eq. 71), and this ruling was affirmed, on appeal, by a divided court. Id. 605.

The case has been heard on final hearing, and is now to be decided on its merits. The claim of the complainants is, that the defendants are under a legal obligation to take from them just such live-stock as they may desire to have yarded at the defendants’ yards, whether the same be sent to the defendants on foot, by rail or by boat; and also that it is the duty of this court to enforce this obligation by injunction. The proofs show that the defendants have never refused to receive stock from the complainants when the same was sent on foot or delivered by rail. At present, however, the complainants cannot have stock carried to the defendants’ yards by rail. They have no track of their own, and they have been denied the use of the Pennsylvania track, and have ceased to use that of the Erie, because they are not willing to pay the rate which they have been notified will be charged for its use. But the particular way or method of delivery is rendered wholly immaterial by the defendants’ answer. , They deny that they are under any duty or obligation to the complainants, let the method of delivery be what it may, to take livestock from them. The following are the pertinent averments of their answer:

[54]*54These defendants have and do refuse to receive, except under the command of an injunction, any live-stock transported over the road of the complainants,, and consigned to shippers doing business at the defendants’ yards, so long as-the complainants persist in diverting from the defendants’ yards at least nine-tenths of the complainants’ cattle business; and they are advised and insist that they have a right so to do.”

Again :

These defendants admit that it is their intention to prevent the transportation to their yards of any live-stock coming over the complainants’ railroad, unless the complainants are willing to give to the defendants all their business, the same as other railroads do ; and they are advised and insist that they, have a right so to do.”

Further:

These defendants also say that they never have made, and do not intend' to make, any objection to yarding live-stock which has been delivered to consignees on the line of complainants’ road and driven to their yards.”

From these averments, it -will be seen that the material matter in dispute is not what right a natural person may have to have-live-stock yarded at the defendants’ yards, nor what may be the right of the general public in that regard, but whether the complainants have such right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 N.J. Eq. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaware-lackawanna-western-railroad-v-central-stock-yard-transit-co-njch-1889.