Dow v. Beidelman

49 Ark. 325
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 49 Ark. 325 (Dow v. Beidelman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dow v. Beidelman, 49 Ark. 325 (Ark. 1887).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The complaint alleged that the defendants were the legal owners and in possession of the Memphis & Little Rock Railroad, which is more than one hundred miles long; that on the 5th of May, 1887, the plaintiff had applied to the the ticket agent of defendants for a passenger ticket from Little Rock to Lonoke, and had tendered seventy cents in payment, the distance between the two stations being twenty-three miles; but the defendants had refused to carry for that sum, and had demanded and received from him one dollar and thirty cents for the service aforesaid. Wherefore the plaintiff claimed the statutory penalty.

The defendants filed the following answer:

1. “The defendants are operating the said Memphis & Little Rock Railroad under and by virtue of the charter granted to the Memphis & Little Rock Railroad Company by the State of Arkansas, in the act of the General Assembly of said State, approved January 11, 1853, under the provisions of which the defendants are authorized to charge for transportation of passengers at the rate of five cents per mile.

2. “ Said railroad was completed, and a great part of it constructed, upon the faith of the act of the General Assembly of the State of Arkansas, approved July 23, 1868, which provides that the rates of toll shall not be decreased, without the railroad company’s consent, to such an extent that the profits of the railroad company shall be less than 15 per cent per annum; and under the provisions of the act relied upon by plaintiff, the profits of said road would be greatly less than that rate, and no such reduction of rates has been consented to by these defendants, or any person or corporation who has ever been in possession of said road.

3. “ The expense of the construction of the railroad now operated by the defendants was about the sum of four millions of dollars, and it is now mortgaged for two millions eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars, bearing interest at the rate of S per centum per «annum, and these defendants are in possession of said railroad as the trustees and representatives of the said mortgage bondholders. Under the provisions of the act relied upon by plaintiff the profits of the road will not exceed the sum of fifty-eight thousand dollars per annum, which will be less than one and one-half per cent upon the cost of constructing the railroad; and only a little over 2 per cent upon the amount of its bonded indebtedness. That its income before the passage of said act amounted to one hundred and sixty-two thousand dollars, net, and the act, if enforced, will operate as an almost complete confiscation of the defendants’ property.”

The cause was submitted to the court sitting as a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for seventy-five dollars and costs.

Defendants filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, upon which they excepted and appealed.

A jury having been waived, the cause was tried before the court, and the facfs were agreed as follows :

The Memphis & Little Rock Railroad Company was incorporated under the act of the General Assembly of the State of Arkansas, approved January 11, 1853, which act is taken as part hereof. See Acts of 1852, p. 130.

On May 1, 1860, it mortgaged its charter and property to Sam Tate, Robert C. Brinkley and Geo. C. Watkins, trustees.

On March 1, 1871, it executed a second mortgage on its property and charter to Henry F. Vail, as trustee.

- On the 17th of March, 1873, this second mortgage was foreclosed by sale under the power, and the purchasers on November 17, 1873, organized a new company under the charter, which they called the Memphis & Little Rock Railway Company.

On December I, 18/3, the Memphis & Little Rock Railway Company mortgaged its charter and property to certain trustees. This mortgage not being paid at maturity, the trustees thereunder brought suit in the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, for its foreclosure, and the trustees in the mortgage of May 1, i860, were, on their own application, made parties complainant; andón November 21, 1876, a final decree was entered in the cause, directing the foreclosure of both mortgages and a sale for their satisfaction.

On April 27, 1877, the mortgaged property was sold under the decree, including the charter; and the purchasers at the sale reorganized under the charter and called the new company the Memphis & Little Rock Railroad Company as reorganized.

On May 1 and 2, 1877, the said last-named company issued bonds and executed to the defendants its mortgages upon its property and charter, and default having been made in their payment, the defendants are in possession as trustées for the mortgage bondholders.

The legal right of the successive companies to reorganize under the old charter is not admitted.

The railroad was built prior to 1868 from Memphis to Madison and from Little Rock to Devalls Bluff. It was built through the intervening distance in 1869.

The expense of constructing the Memphis & Little Rock railroad was four millions of dollars, and the railroad company has a bonded indebtedness of two millions eight hundred and fifty thousand dollars, bearing interest at 8 per cent per annum, and the defendants are in possession as the representatives of the mortgage bondholders, default having been made in the payment of the interest on the bonds. The net income of the road for the year 1886 was one hundred and sixty-two thousand dollars, earned principally from passenger traffic, the charge for transportation having been five cents per mile; and this has been about the average for recent past years. With the same traffic that the road has now, and charging for transportation at the rate of three cents per mile, the net income will only be fifty-eight thousand dollars per annum, which will pay less than one and one-half per cent on the cost of the road, and only a little over 2 per cent on its bonded indebtedness'. The defendants do not anticipate any increase of traffic on account of the reduction, for the reason that the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway, from which the Memphis & Little Rock Railroad derives nearly all of its through business, is building a parallel branch from Bald Knob in the State of Arkansas to the city of Memphis, and this being a hostile and rival line to that of these defendants, will carry over that branch the through passengers who would otherwise go over the road of defendants. _ The most profitable traffic has been the through traffic, and the defendants anticipate a great diminution in their present traffic when said branch is completed, and it will, to all appearances, be completed during the summer of 1887.

The length of the defendants’ road is one hundred and thirty-five miles. Forty miles of that distance, from Madison to Memphis, is through a swamp, in which there are virtually no inhabitants, and which is subject to overflow.

Either party may refer to the statements in reference to the railroads in Arkansas contained in Poor’s Railroad Manual for 1886, and the same shall be taken as evidence of the facts therein stated.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Ark. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dow-v-beidelman-ark-1887.