L. & N. Railroad v. M. & T. Railroad

92 Tenn. 681
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 Tenn. 681 (L. & N. Railroad v. M. & T. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. & N. Railroad v. M. & T. Railroad, 92 Tenn. 681 (Tenn. 1893).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

On the twenty-first day of June, 1880, the Mississippi and Tennessee Railroad Company mad« a contract with the Taxing District of Shelby County to construct what is called, in the written agreement, a “Dnion Passenger and Freight Railroad” through the city of Memphis, from a point in the southern to a point in the northern part of the city.

By the sixteenth section of the contract it is provided that the Mississippi and Tennessee Railroad Company shall permit any other railroads terminating in the Taxing District of Memphis to use and enjoy said track and the rights' and privileges granted, upon payment by such other rail[684]*684road company to the Mississippi and Tennessee Railroad Company of a pro rata share, not exceeding the cost of .constructing said track, bridges, depot, houses, and other expenses thereto appertaining, the franchise to extend for forty years. The road was to be a single track, and was to be so operated that trains of cars should not be run at intervals of less than thirty minutes, nor so close together as to impede travel oh the streets crossed by the railroad nor on the levee.

Under the authority conferred "by this contract, and in accordance with its provisions, the Mississippi and Tennessee Railroad Company constructed the road, and, after it was finished, the Chesapeake, Ohio and South-western Railroad Company and the Louisville, New Orleans and Texas Railroad Company each purchased a one-third interest therein, paying to the Mississippi and Tennessee Company one-third of the cost of construction. These several railroads were afterward leased or ¿mortgaged, the details of which are not now material.

In July, 1889, the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company was granted permission by the Taxing District of Shelby County to buy an interest in the line under said contract, and to use the name of the taxing district in any litigation nec7 essary to secure the interest.

Thereupon, the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company applied to the defendant companies, asking to be allowed to pay its pro rata, and have the joint use of said track, which was refused, and [685]*685this bill was thereupon filed to attain such interest and enforce said contract.

Eoth the Louisville and Nashville Eailroad Company and the Taxing District of Shelby County are parties complainant to the bill, and the prayer is that the Louisville' and Nashville Eailroad Company be allowed to purchase an interest of one-fourth in said line upon the payment of its pro rata share, according to the terms of the contract, the amount to be fixed by the Court, upon proof, and that it have such' rights and be subject to such conditions as are imposed by the contract upon the Mississippi and Tennessee Eailroad Company.

The defendants demurred to the bill, on the .ground that the Louisville and Nashville Eailroad Company had not made sufficient tender and offer to be bound by the terms of the contract originally made with the city, whereupon complainants tendered an amended bill, meeting those objections, and asked to be allowed to file the same, but the Chancellor declined to allow it to be filed, and overruled the demurrer, on the ground that the original bill was sufficient to meet all the objections raised.

It appears that a small part, perhaps one-seventh, of the right of way for the railroad line is over private property, bought or condemned by the Mississippi and Tennessee Eailroad, for track purposes, and the remainder is over the streets and other public property of the taxing district.

[686]*686Various defenses were made by demurrer and answers, and mueb proof was taken, and, on final hearing, ■ the Chancellor granted the relief prayed for, and ordered a reference to ascertain the amount that should he paid by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company, pending which the defendants prayed an appeal to this Court, and have assigned sepai’ate errors, raising many objections, which will be noticed so far as necessary to a disposition of the case.

It is insisted that for thirty years the Louisville . and Nashville Railroad Company has operated a line of road running into the city of Memphis before this belt or connecting line was built, and that it has waited nine years after the line was completed before claiming any rights; that in the meantime two other roads have come into the joint ownership of the line under the contract,, and that the reservation in the contract in favor of other lines has thus been exhausted, and the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company cut "off by its own laches and prior occupation; and that the line is already burdened with as much traffic as .it can accommodate, and that the admission of another road would be burdensome, and impair the efficiency and use of the line for purposes of travel and traffic.

It will be noted that the contract between the taxing district and the Mississippi and Tennessee Railroad Company places no limit on the time when other • roads may come in under the contract, [687]*687nor the number of roads that may come in, and we can see no ground for excluding the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company, unless, as a flatter of fact, its admission will overburden the--line, if, indeed, that would furnish a sufficient reason. This is a question of fact, and on it much'proof has been taken, and the "Chancellor was of opinion from this proof that defendant’s contention on this point was not sustained, and we aré of opinion that he is clearly sustained by the weight of the reliable proof introduced.

Nor or we able to see how the defendant companies are in any way injured or prejudiced by the delay of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company to come in under the contract, as they have been in possession and occupancy of the line and enjoying its benefits in the meantime.

It further appears that the cars of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company are now passing over the' line, and paying toll therefor to the defendant companies. It is also made to appear that the capacity of the line could be -largely increased, if the operation of the same- was under one management, controlled by the several parties interested, instead of being operated by each company independently of the others.

It was evidently the object of the contract, so far as the taxing district is concerned, to furnish a convenient means of passage through the city over a line connecting the main lines of railroad north and south, thus making a matter of benefit [688]*688and convenience to both, the city and ttie railroad companies, and the city has the right to enforce the ¿contract in such manner as to make the greatest convenience, and reap the greatest results to the public, there being no valid objection in the way. Joy v. St. Louis, 138 U. S., 1 to 50.

It is insisted, however, that the Courts cannot properly enforce the contract, because it would involve a continuing oversight, and the enforcement of personal services and continuing duties, which the Courts will not undertake.

We can see no valid reason yvhy several owners may not operate and own the same line of road, each having an undivided interest therein, in the same way that any other easement or property might be owned and operated by several persons. This, in fact, is now being done over this line by the three roads that have already acquired an interest therein.

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Related

New River Lumber Co. v. Tennessee Ry. Co.
136 Tenn. 661 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1916)
Markwood v. Southern Ry. Co.
65 F. 817 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Tennessee, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
92 Tenn. 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-n-railroad-v-m-t-railroad-tenn-1893.