In re Columbia Ry., Gas & Electric Co.

24 F.2d 828, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1021
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. South Carolina
DecidedMarch 13, 1928
DocketNo. 3601
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 24 F.2d 828 (In re Columbia Ry., Gas & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Columbia Ry., Gas & Electric Co., 24 F.2d 828, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1021 (southcarolinaed 1928).

Opinion

ERNEST P. COCHRAN, District Judge.

The Columbia Railway, Gas & Electric Company filed its voluntary petition and was adjudicated a bankrupt. The state of South Carolina and the city of Columbia (the latter being a creditor of the bankrupt) filed a petition praying that the adjudication be vacated, on the ground that the bankrupt is “a railroad corporation” and therefore by the express terms of the Bankruptcy Act, as amended in 1910 (11 USCA § -22), excluded from the operation of the act. A rule was issued for the bankrupt to show cause why the adjudication should not be vacated, and the bankrupt has made return thereto. There is practically no dispute on the facts, which are set forth in the petition of the state and the city and the return of the bankrupt, and it is conceded by both sides that the question to be decided is whether or not the bankrupt is “a railroad corporation,” within the meaning of the amending act of 1910.

The bankrupt, formerly named the Columbia Electric Street Railway, Light & Power Company (the name having been changed by the amendment of May 18, 1911), was created by the act of the General Assembly of South Carolina of December [829]*82916, 1891 (20 St. at Large, p. 1453), which authorized the consolidation into one grant of the powers and franchises to furnish the public utilities of gas, electric light, and power and transportation service to the city of Columbia and community. The bankrupt under this act acquired the powers and obligations of various corporations, and among them from the Columbia Electric Street & Suburban Railway & Electric Power Company the power to “construct or acquire single or double railway tracks of such gauge as they may elect, through any street or streets of the city of Columbia, with consent of city council, and to extend the same five miles into the country, in any direction or directions they may wish, from the State Capitol,” and also the power “to operate their cars in the transportation of passengers and freight over the tracks they may construct or acquire in said city, with electric power, in suitable carriages, and at such rates as may be fixed upon in the by-laws of the same.”

Erom the Columbia Street Railway Company, which the act authorized it to purchase, it acquired similar powers, including the right to extend its tracks “five miles beyond the corporate limits of said city.” It also acquired the line of railway which had been constructed into the town of Eau Claire, situated north of the city of Columbia, by the Columbia & Eau Claire Electric Company, under its charter powers “to build, purchase, and operate an electric and suburban railway from Columbia to a point or points in Richland county within eleven miles of said city.” By virtue of the consolidating act, it also acquired from the Congaree Gas & Electric Company the power to carry on and conduct the business of using electricity, manufacturing light, heat, or power by electricity or any other agent for lighting or heating streets, roads, etc., stores, residences, etc., steamboats, railroad cars, locomotives, or for other transportation or industrial purposes.

Under these powers, the bankrupt never did any freight transportation business; but it did a passenger business by means of electric trolley lines constructed by it and other companies, whose rights it acquired, in the city of Columbia and to certain points outside the city. Lines were operated in the city of Columbia and to the incorporated towns of Arden, Eau Claire, Shandon, and to various unincorporated communities near the city. During the World War, it also built and operated a line of passenger service to Camp Jackson, about six miles from the city; but this line was dismantled about the year 1926. On March 11, 1927, the bankrupt discontinued service on all of its railway lines. Prior to this final cessation of all railway passenger service, it had discontinued the operation of certain of its lines, but at that time it was then operating along' a number of streets in the city, and beyond the city of Columbia to the incorporated towns of Eau Claire and Arden, the former town of Shandon (the latter town being now included in the city of Columbia), and other unincorporated communities near to, but outside of, the city. The total length of lines operated by it (not including the Camp Jaekson line, and counting the double tracks as a single line), was 20 miles and a fraction. The petition alleges and the return admits that the total population-of Columbia and the towns and communities referred to is between 50,000 and 60,000. There was no physical connection of the bankrupt’s tracks with the steam railroads running into Columbia, but its cars ran to the steam railroad station and carried passengers thereto, as is usual in the case of street railways.

The bankrupt also did a public business of furnishing gas, electric light, power, etc., until June, 1925, when, under authority of the act of the General Assembly of South Carolina of March 19,1925 (34 St. at Large, p. 842), it sold and transferred all its gas, electric light, power, and other property rights and franchises to the Broad River Power Company, excepting from said sale only its rights and properties and franchise connected with its railway department and service. Erom the time of this sale, the only business of the bankrupt was a railway passenger service on the various lines last mentioned, until March 11, 1927, when all service was discontinued, as above stated.

On July 28, 1927, the South Carolina Railroad Commission by an order directed the bankrupt to resume railway service, and a bill for an injunction against the enforcement of that order was brought in this court and later stayed, because it appeared that a proceeding had been brought before the Supreme Court of the state against the bankrupt and the Broad River Power Company, accompanied by a stay, to compel them to resume service and to comply with the order of the Railroad Commission. The latter case was pending in the Supreme Court when the bankrupt filed its petition for adjudication.

At the hearing it was conceded by both sides that, inasmuch as the bankrupt had en[830]*830tirely discontinued its business of furnishing gas, electricity, etc., there would be no need to consider what effect, if any, such business might have upon the question involved here, and that the sole question to be decided is whether the bankrupt is a railroad corporation within the terms of the Bankruptcy Act. The bankrupt contends that it is merely an ordinary street railway, and that such railways are not excepted from the terms of the act; while the state and the city contend that the bankrupt is more in the nature of a suburban or interurban railway company, and that in any event street railways are inelud-. ed under the term “railroads,” and therefore excluded .from the operation of the Bankruptcy Act.

Before discussing the particular point involved, it is advisable to consider the history of the Bankruptcy Act (11 USCA) in this respect. By section 37 of the Bankruptcy Act of 1867 (14 Stat. 535) the provisions of the act were made applicable to all “moneyed business or commercial corporations and joint-stock companies.” There were no exceptions in this act, and under it railroad and street railway corporations could be adjudicated bankrupt. But the Bankruptcy Act.of 1898 provided (30 Stat. p. 547, § 4) “that any person” owing “debts except a.

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In re Columbia Ry., Gas & Electric Co.
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Bluebook (online)
24 F.2d 828, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-columbia-ry-gas-electric-co-southcarolinaed-1928.