Interstate Tel. Co. v. Baltimore & O. Tel. Co.

51 F. 49, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1846
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJune 8, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 51 F. 49 (Interstate Tel. Co. v. Baltimore & O. Tel. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interstate Tel. Co. v. Baltimore & O. Tel. Co., 51 F. 49, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1846 (D. Md. 1892).

Opinion

Morris, District Judge.

This is a creditors’ bill filed by the Interstate Telegraph Company seeking, in equity, to obtain payment of a judgment against the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County for $25,133.75, which it recovered on the law side of this court, April 19, 1890, and execution upon which lias been returned nulla bona.

The judgment was recovered for damages sustained by the complainant company for the breach of a contract which it had made with xhe Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County, dated December 15, 1885, and a supplemental agreement, dated November 30, 1886, by which contracts the Interstate Telegraph Company agreed to build, equip, operate, and maintain certain lines of telegraph in Michigan and Ohio, in consideration of an agreement for an exclusive interchange of telegraph business with the general telegraph system connecting the various leading cities of the United States, which the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County was at the dates of said agreements stated therein to be engaged in operating and extending. It appears from the testimony and from the admissions of the pleadings that about 1877 the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, having a system of telegraph poles and wires located along its railroads and maintained for use in its railroad business, began extending its telegraph system for general commercial telegraphing, and that in 1882, by • act of the Maryland legislature, (Act 1882, c. 231,) it obtained au~ [50]*50thority to do a general telegraph business; that the railroad company, on September 30, 1884, owned 6,886 miles of poles, and 47,417 miles of wire; that the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County was.incorporated with a capital of $100,000, November 2, 1885, by seven corporators, but that, all the capital stock w'as subscribed by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, and always belonged exclusively to it until November 2, 1887, and the corporators and officers of said telegraph company were employes of the railroad company, and appointed by it. • It appears, in fact, that the said telegraph company was but a department or bureau of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, and an agent in the name of which it made the contracts for extending its system and operating its telegraph lines. It appears that there was an expectation that the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County would acquire defined rights of property in the system thus built up by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, and would pay for it by the delivery to the railroad company of bonds to the amount of $6,000,000, secured by mortgage- of the property to be acquired by the telegraph company, but this expectation was never carried into .effect.

It appears that in October, 1887, the telegraph system thus owned and controlled was of the value of $8,000,000, as stated in the answer of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company; that on October 15,1887, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company entered into an agreement with the Western Union Telegraph Company to transfer to it all said telegraph property, rights, and franchises for $5,000,000 of the stock of the Western Union Telegraph Company, and the payment by it to the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company of the sum of $60,000 a year for 50 years; the Western Union Telegraph Company also agreeing to indemnify and save the railroad company from all liabilities, obligations, loss, or damage, on account of any act, default, or omission of the Western Union Telegraph Company or the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County, or any state or subteiegraph company theretofore owned by it or by the railroad company, or controlled by ownership of stock, lease, or otherwise. It appears that thus acquiring the Avhole Baltimore & Ohio telegraph system from the railroad company, the Western Union Telegraph Compan}'- AA'as put into possession of it, and thereupon consolidated and coinbined it with its OAAn system, and the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore Count}'- was left without any property or assets of any value, and became at once insolvent and unable to perform its contracts or pay its debts. The complainant prays that the B.altimore & Ohio Railroad Company may be decreed to be made liable for the debts and contracts of the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County, entered into by it as the agent of the railroad company between November 2,1885, and October 15, 1887, or that the said railroad company be decreed to hold the funds arising from the sale by it of property of the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County in trust for all the creditors of said telegraph company who became such by virtue of contracts [51]*51made prior to said sale, and that, a receiver of said telegraph company be appointed.

The two grounds of defense most strongly urged on behalf of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company are (1) that the chattel property sold and transferred to the Western Union Telegraph Company -was its own property, and never was the property of the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County; (2) that, if it be conceded that the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County was its agent in making the contract upon which the complainant recovered its judgment, the complainant, having elected to sue, and having obtained judgment at law against the agent, cannot now in this suit sue the principal. In answer to the first defense, it is quite evident from the contract of December 15, 1885, which was the cause of actidn upon which the judgment was recovered, that the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County was held out as having the fullest control and power to contract with regard to all the telegraph lines of the Baltimore & Ohio telegraph system. By the contract itself, it was expressly stipulated that these lines should be considered to include a.ll the territory of the United States (except that portion to bo covered by the lines agreed to be built by the Interstate Telegraph Company itself) during the live years for which the business connection ivas to continue; and it was expressly agreed that, if during that time the ownership or control of the lines of the Baltimore & Ohio system should be transferred to any other company, provision for the protection of the interests of the Interstate Company should be made.

The contract, was signed by D. H. Bales, as president and general manager of the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County, but Mr. .Bates states that he was. employed and paid by the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company to manage its general telegraph business, and that, although nominally its president, he has no knowledge of there ever having been any meeting of any persons claiming to be directors or officers of the Baltimore & Ohio Telegraph Company of Baltimore County. Upon this state of facts it is evident that, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company having, in the name of its agent, made the contract in December, 1885, to continue for five years, it did, in October, 1887, put it out of Us own power, and out of the power of its agent, to perform the contract by selling out the whole telegraph system controlled by it to another corporation, which absorbed it; no provision having been made for the protection of complainant’s interests, as had been stipulated for.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Blish v. Thompson Automatic Arms Corp.
64 A.2d 581 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1948)
State Ex Rel. Monarch Fire Insurance v. Holmes
124 P.2d 994 (Montana Supreme Court, 1942)
Certain-Teed Products Corporation v. Wallinger
89 F.2d 427 (Fourth Circuit, 1937)
Edward Sec. Corp. v. Commissioner
30 B.T.A. 918 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1934)
Central Vermont Ry. Co. v. Southern New England R. Corp.
1 F. Supp. 1004 (D. Massachusetts, 1932)
In Re Kentucky Wagon Mfg. Co.
3 F. Supp. 958 (W.D. Kentucky, 1932)
Caldwell v. Roach
12 P.2d 376 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1932)
Central Republic Bank & Trust Co. v. Caldwell
58 F.2d 721 (Eighth Circuit, 1932)
People Ex Rel. Attorney General v. Michigan Bell Telephone Co.
224 N.W. 438 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1928)
Gallatin Natural Gas Co. v. Public Service Commission
256 P. 373 (Montana Supreme Court, 1927)
Farmers State Bank v. Haun
222 P. 45 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1924)
Birmingham Realty Co. v. Crossett
98 So. 895 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1923)
New York Trust Co. v. Carpenter
250 F. 668 (Sixth Circuit, 1918)
Joseph R. Foard Co. v. Maryland ex rel. Goralski
219 F. 827 (Fourth Circuit, 1914)
Barrie v. United Railways Co.
119 S.W. 1020 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1909)
In re Watertown Paper Co.
169 F. 252 (Second Circuit, 1909)
In re Rieger, Kapner & Altmark
157 F. 609 (S.D. Ohio, 1907)
Bridgens v. Dollar Sav. Bank of Kansas City
66 F. 9 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 F. 49, 1892 U.S. App. LEXIS 1846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-tel-co-v-baltimore-o-tel-co-mdd-1892.