Illinois Cent. R. R. v. City of New Orleans

93 F. Supp. 229, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2301
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 25, 1950
DocketCiv. A. No. 2676
StatusPublished

This text of 93 F. Supp. 229 (Illinois Cent. R. R. v. City of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Cent. R. R. v. City of New Orleans, 93 F. Supp. 229, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2301 (E.D. La. 1950).

Opinion

WRIGHT, District Judge.

In this action the Illinois Central Railroad Company seeks permanently to enjoin the City of New Orleans from enforcing an ordinance which the railroad alleges is unconstitutional and under which all properly licensed taxicabs may use the area outside of and adjacent to the plaintiff’s passenger terminal, hereinafter referred to as the Illinois Central station, for picking up and discharging passengers. The railroad also seeks a permanent injunction against all taxicab owners and operators, except the taxicabs operated by the Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Company, restraining them from soliciting and picking up passengers on the premises abové described which premises are leased by the railroad from the City of New Orleans.

The Illinois Central Railroad Company after owning and operating a terminal station in the 'City of New Orleans for many years, pursuant to an agreement (hereinafter referred to as the Terminal Agreement) entered into by the City of New Orleans and all railroads servicing the city with passenger traffic, sold to the city the site of its terminal station, together with all the improvements thereon and pursuant to the same agreement on September 8, 1949, leased the site with the improvements back from the city pending the completion of the new passenger terminal to be built under the Terminal Agreement.

Included in the demise to the City of New Orleans and the lease back to the railroad is a covered concourse, serving as the front of the Illinois Central station, together with a certain plot of land approximately 40 feet in width and 100 feet in length immediately adjacent to this concourse. This plot of land, though formerly owned by the railroad and now leased from the city by the railroad, has always been used by vehicles for discharging and picking up passengers going to and from the terminal. In addition the City of New Orleans has policed this area in order to avoid traffic congestion and has placed the customary traffic signs in appropriate locations for this purpose.

For years and continuing to date, the railroad has had in effect a contract between it and the Toye Brothers Yellow Cab Company by which the cabs of that company have the exclusive right to solicit and pick up passengers at the Illinois Central station. For this right the railroad receives $1800 per year.

On January 6, 1950, the ¡Commission Council of the City of New Orleans adopted the following ordinance whereby it undertook to amend paragraph (3) of Section 1 of Ordinance No. 16,605 C.C.S., which governs the operation of taxicabs and other [231]*231for-hire vehicles, by redefining the term “street” as found in said ordinance. The said redefinition of the term “street” is as follows: “(e) The term ‘Street’ means any public street, avenue, road, boulevard, alley, lane, highway, sidewalk, public park, airport, railroad station or depot, steamship landing, ferry landing, viaduct or other public place under control of the City of New Orleans and established by it for the use of vehicles and not otherwise controlled by law or ordinance. It shall also mean all vehicular roads, driveways or areas outside of and adjacent to or in all railroad stations, steamship, steamboat or ferry landings and bus stations, owned by the City of New Orleans, which are used regularly or may be so used by taxicabs or other for-hire vehicles to pick up and discharge passengers, which places shall hereafter be and remain open to, and used by all such duly licensed vehicles, without charge and without distinction as to the ownership of such vehicles or the licensed operators thereof, and subject to the other provisions of this ordinance.” Since the effective date of this ordinance all properly licensed cabs have solicited passengers in the concourse in front of the Illinois Central station and picked them up in the area immediately adj acent to it.

The railroad alleges that under its contract of lease with the 'City of New Orleans it has “the right to sublease or grant concessions on any portions of the demised premises for any purpose normally incident to its passenger operations thereon.”1 It alleges that the passage of the ordinance of January 6, 1950 is unconstitutional because it impairs the obligation of the city’s contract with it, and that the activities of the taxicab companies, other than the Yellow Cab Company, on the concourse and in the area immediately adjacent thereto constitutes a trespass on its property and that the parties in question should be enjoined from continuing the trespass.

The defendants concede that under the contract of lease with the city the Illinois Central Railroad does have the right to sublease or grant concessions on any portions of the demised premises for any purpose normally incident to its passenger operations thereon. They contend, however, that the granting to one taxicab company of the exclusive right to solicit and pick up passengers at the station is not a concession “normally incident to its passenger operations.”' Defendants contend further that the area immediately adjacent to the covered concourse in front of the station is a public street and that plaintiff has no authority under its lease to control taxicab activities on such street.

Defendants further allege want of equity in plaintiff’s application for a permanent injunction. They state that this want of equity consists in the unlawful monopoly granted the Yellow Cab Company by the railroad and the fact that Yellow Cabs are not available to the Negro patrons of the railroad (Ordinance No. 16,605 C.'C.S., Sec. 7(g) ) and consequently such patrons are without means of egress from the station by taxicab.

The railroad predicates its demand for injunction on innumerable cases both from the Supreme Court of the United States, the Supreme Court of Louisiana and appellate courts of many other states, which seem to hold that a railroad has a right to grant an exclusive contract to one taxicab company to use the area owned by the railroad in front of its station for taxicab purposes. The defendants cite cases from appellate courts of at least twelve states which hold such exclusive contracts illegal as against public policy. Defendants further contend that in the one Louisiana case cited by the plaintiff in support of its position, Kansas City S. & G. Terminal Company v. Interurban Motor Transfer Co., 152 La. 1093, 95 So. 258, the issue of the legality of the exclusive contract was not raised.

The legality of contracts giving one taxicab company the exclusive right to pick up passengers at a railroad station is a question which has plagued courts both in this country and in England for many years. Fortunately that issue need not be reached in a disposition of this case. Here the railroad’s right to sublease or grant concessions [232]*232is limited by the lease between it and the City of New Orleans, and as stated above the lease provides that the railroad has “the right to sublease or grant concessions on any portions of the demised premises for any purpose normally incident to its passenger operations thereon”. Is the granting by a railroad to one taxicab company the exclusive right to serve incoming passengers at the station a sublease or concession normally incident to its passenger operations? Unless this question is answered in the affirmative, this action must fail, for the railroad may exercise only those rights in the premises which were conveyed to it in the lease.

No question is raised concerning the right of the railroad to transfer through passengers from one station to another by contract carriers.

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Related

Tooke Reynolds v. Bastrop Ice Storage Co.
135 So. 239 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1931)
Kansas City, S. & G. Terminal Co. v. Interurban Motor Transp. Co.
95 So. 258 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
93 F. Supp. 229, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-cent-r-r-v-city-of-new-orleans-laed-1950.