Evansville Suburban & Newburgh Railway Co. v. Evansville & Eastern Electric Railway

98 N.E. 649, 50 Ind. App. 502, 1912 Ind. App. LEXIS 60
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1912
DocketNo. 7,682
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 98 N.E. 649 (Evansville Suburban & Newburgh Railway Co. v. Evansville & Eastern Electric Railway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evansville Suburban & Newburgh Railway Co. v. Evansville & Eastern Electric Railway, 98 N.E. 649, 50 Ind. App. 502, 1912 Ind. App. LEXIS 60 (Ind. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Myees, J.

— Appellant, hereafter called the Newburgh Company, commenced this suit against appellees, the Evansville and Eastern Electric Eailway, hereafter referred to as the Eockport Company, and certain named persons as its directors; also the Evansville Terminal Eailway, and the Evansville Eailways Company, for a mandatory injunction requiring the Eockport Company, its officers, agents and [504]*504employes, specifically to perform the provisions of a certain alleged contract, and to deliver its cars, both freight and passenger, at Newburgh, to appellant for transportation over its line, according to the terms of that contract, and that the Rockport Company, its officers, agents and employes, be enjoined from further refusing to perform said contract, and from having any dealings with the Evansville Terminal Railway in violation thereof.

The complaint was in two paragi*aphs. Separate and several demurrers to each of these paragraphs, for want of facts, by appellees, other than the persons named as directors, who joined in a demurrer, were sustained, and appellant refusing to plead further, judgment was rendered against it. The rulings of the court in sustaining the several demurrers are assigned as errors. The cause was appealed to the Supreme Court, and on the order of that court it was transferred to this court.

The questions controlling the decision of this case rest on a proposition and its acceptance, both made a part of each paragraph of the complaint, and relied on by appellant as forming the contract made the basis of its cause of action. That part of the proposition and acceptance at all material here is as follows:

“(1) The arrangement hereby proposed if entered into shall continue for the period of thirty-five, years from the date the same becomes effective by the execution of a contract between us.
(2) In consideration of the rights hereby granted to you by it, it is understood that all of the business of your company so far as transportation between Evansville and Newburgh is concerned shall be done under this contract, and all of your cars, both freight and passenger, shall, make use of the track of our company between Evansville and Newburgh under the terms of this agreement.
(3) The Evansville Suburban and Newburgh Railway Company will upon the completion of your line from the end of its electrified tracks in Newburgh at the corner of State and Water streets to Rockport, Indiana, [505]*505transport your cars, passenger, freight and express to and from Evansville over its line and allow you the use of its terminals, both freight and passenger, in Evansville for said term of thirty-five years.
The terms on which such service shall be conducted and the rental to be paid by your company to this company for the use of its terminals to be the subject of mutual agreement between the two companies, or in case an agreement can not be reached, then this question is to be submitted to arbitration as hereafter provided. It is expressly understood that nothing in this agreement contemplates the doing by your company of any business between Newburgh and Eyansville proper, and intermediate stations and all the revenues derived therefrom shall belong to this company.
In case of such disagreement each of the parties shall select an impartial arbitrator, and the two arbitrators so chosen shall select a third arbitrator and the award of the three arbitrators so chosen shall be binding upon the parties.
* * *
(4) You are to furnish first-class, modern, properly equipped cars acceptable to our company. We will furnish conductors and motormen for your cars while in use on our line and they shall collect all fares between Newburgh and Evansville. All of your cars while on our road shall be subject to the control and direction of our company.
(6) The right is reserved by this company to operate its freight trains and haul all freight on your tracks between State street in Newburgh, Indiana, and ‘Arch-bold Coal Mines’, so as not to interfere with the operations of your passenger ears over the same.
It is understood that the usual per diem charged for freight cars shall be made by the party entitled thereto in addition to its pro rata share of said freight and express tariff.
*= =::=
(10) On default by you in the payment of the amounts due monthly to this company, or on default by you in the performance of any of the other conditions herein required of you, this company shall have the right to give you notice in writing, specifying wherein you are in default and requiring you within ten (10) days [506]*506to correct the same. On your failure so to do within said time this company shall have the right upon giving an additional notice of ten (10) days in writing to terminate this contract, or it may at its option terminate the same by suitable legal proceedings.
(11) All of your cars shall be of the standard gauge of the track of this company and shall be of approved construction and weight to operate over said track without damaging the same in any manner, and all of your cars shall be operated under such schedules as may hereafter be agreed upon by the two companies and not interfere with the cars of this company.
(14) The expense incurred in the sale of tickets and in providing and maintaining suitable passenger terminals and freight terminals in Newburgh shall be borne by each company pro rata according to the business done.
(15) It is expressly understood that the rights granted to you over our road between Evansville and Newburgh are not exclusive, and we reserve the right to operate our own cars, both freight and passenger, between said points as heretofore done by us and upon such reasonable schedules as shall accommodate the convenience of both of us.
# # #
(19) It is understood that such details of the arrangement hereby proposed as are not herein covered shall be determined by the mutual agreement of the parties as occasion requires, and in case of disagreement by arbitration in the manner above provided. ’ ’

At the time of the acceptance, the parties agreed to the following interpretation of the proposition:

“It is the understanding that your company shall take charge of our cars at Newburgh and that your own conductor and motorman shall bring them into Evansville. That the amount which shall come to us and to you out of the fares for passengers to and from points east of Newburgh shall be adjusted between the two roads, and that all freight or express matter brought over the road to and from points east of Newburgh shall also be adjusted. That these matters, together with the amount that shall be paid your road for use of its tracks and terminals and the amounts which shall be [507]*507allowed to our road for the use of the cars, are all matters to he settled by arbitration. It is also our understanding that the arbitration which is made shall not be conclusive for the whole time of the contract, but that successive arbitrations may be had at the request of either person at periods of say five years.

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Bluebook (online)
98 N.E. 649, 50 Ind. App. 502, 1912 Ind. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evansville-suburban-newburgh-railway-co-v-evansville-eastern-electric-indctapp-1912.