Lackawanna Chapter v. St. Louis Cty.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 14, 2007
Docket06-3662
StatusPublished

This text of Lackawanna Chapter v. St. Louis Cty. (Lackawanna Chapter v. St. Louis Cty.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lackawanna Chapter v. St. Louis Cty., (8th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 06-3662 ___________

Lackawanna Chapter of the Railway & * Locomotive Historical Society, Inc.; * Friends of the New Jersey Railroad and * Transportation Museum Commission, * Inc., * * Appeal from the United States Plaintiffs – Appellants, * District Court for the * Eastern District of Missouri. v. * * St. Louis County, Missouri, doing * business as Museum of Transportation, * * Defendant – Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: April 10, 2007 Filed: August 14, 2007 ___________

Before MURPHY, BRIGHT, and BENTON, Circuit Judges. ___________

BRIGHT, Circuit Judge.

This case involves a dispute over the possession of an artifact from the Golden Age of passenger rail travel in the United States. The artifact is not a simple souvenir; the Lackawanna Chapter of the Railway & Locomotive Historical Society, Inc. (“Lackawanna”), seeks the return of a historic steam locomotive, currently displayed by St. Louis County, Missouri (“St. Louis”), at its Museum of Transportation. Lackawanna filed suit in federal district court, but the court granted summary judgment for St. Louis. That court rejected Lackawanna’s claims for replevin and specific performance on the gounds that the record did not demonstrate the existence of an enforceable loan agreement governing the locomotive. This appeal by Lackawanna followed.

I.

The parties to this suit, Lackawanna and St. Louis, are each successors to the entities that have owned and possessed Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad’s (“the Railroad”) engine No. 952 over the past century. The Railway & Locomotive Historical Society (“Historical Society”) is the national organization, incorporated in Massachusetts, which received No. 952 from the Railroad in 1939. The Historical Society transferred ownership of No. 952 to its Lackawanna Chapter in 1999, and that local society is thus the plaintiff-appellant here.

The National Museum of Transportation (“Transportation Museum”) in St. Louis was a private non-profit corporation at the time it first displayed No. 952. St. Louis, the defendant-appellee here, exercised an option to acquire the Transportation Museum in 1984 after first acquiring through lease the museum’s assets in 1979.

We recount separately the ownership of No. 952, possession of No. 952, and acquisition of the Transportation Museum by St. Louis.

A. Ownership of No. 952

In 1905 the Railroad’s engine No. 952 entered service. No. 952, a now-rare “camelback” locomotive utilizing a wide firebox to burn anthracite coal, was retired in 1938 and thereafter began its second life as a stationary museum piece. On April 17, 1939, the Railroad transferred ownership of No. 952 to the Historical Society, for

-2- exhibition as a museum piece. The 1939 transfer of No. 952 from the Railroad to the Historical Society is documented by a written agreement, signed by representatives of both parties.

In 1999 the Historical Society gave No. 952 to its Lackawanna Chapter (the plaintiff-appellant here) and the Friends of the New Jersey Railroad & Transportation Museum (which transferred its interest in No. 952 to Lackawanna during this litigation). The transfer is recorded in a gift deed.

B. Possession of No. 952

Despite the Railroad’s transfer of No. 952 to the Historical Society in 1939, the engine remained in the Railroad’s possession. Then, in 1952, the general manager of the Railroad, W.G. White, notified the Historical Society that the Railroad’s plans to sell or lease its back stop at Scranton, Pennsylvania, would require the Historical Society to relocate No. 952. According to correspondence in the record, the impending loss of the back stop lead the Historical Society to “‘sound out’ the proper authorities in St. Louis and see if they would be interested in adding this locomotive to their collection” if “that group would want it in the nature of a permanent loan.” The Historical Society offered the locomotive to the Transportation Museum in 1953 for “permanent exhibition.”

The documents relating to the 1953 placement of No. 952 at the Transportation Museum include only correspondence. After the Historical Society learned in October 1952 that the Railroad would soon be unable to store the locomotive on its rails, Charles Fisher, president of the Historical Society, offered No. 952 to the Transportation Museum. John Smith, on behalf of the Transportation Museum, responded in a November 1952 letter:

-3- [T]he members of the Board of Directors of the Museum of Transport have considered the matter of taking the Lackawanna Mother Hubbard No. 952, as temporary or permanent loan, if it is desired to send the locomotive here. Our group is unanimously in favor of accepting the engine for care and exhibition on a basis that will seem satisfactory in the judgment of the donor, for it is the purpose of this organization to preserve such items.

In subsequent correspondence, the Historical Society described the transfer as “permanent loan,” and the Historical Society’s 1954 President’s Report stated that No. 952 would be “in the care” of the Transportation Museum in the “hope that ‘her’ wanderings will end.” After receiving No. 952, the Transportation Museum undertook several immediate improvements, including restoring the paint and stenciling to No. 952’s original design.

C. St. Louis’s Acquisition of the Transportation Museum

The 1984 documents transferring the Transportation Museum’s property to St. Louis include a warranty deed (for the real property) and a “Transfer Agreement and Bill of Sale” (for other property owned by the museum and property held by the museum subject to the rights of others). Regrettably, the record documents regarding the 1984 transfer do not mention No. 952.1

1 The 1984 Transfer Agreement and Bill of Sale originally contained an “Exhibit ‘B’”, which listed “restricted property” that St. Louis agreed to accept subject to the “ownership rights of the persons listed on Exhibit ‘B’.” Though the parties generally refer to the Transportation Museum’s “restricted property,” we have not located the exhibit listing the property in the record, nor have the parties relied on it, to confirm whether No. 952 was listed. We express no opinion on the impact of the Transportation Museums’s listing of, or failure to list, No. 952 when it delivered its assets to St. Louis.

-4- D. The Dispute Regarding Possession of No. 952

At some point in or before October 1990 the Historical Society began its efforts to regain possession of No. 952. The correspondence, which included, at times, the Department of the Interior, the National Parks Service, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, the Office of the County Executive of St. Louis, the Transportation Museum, and the Historical Society, is extensive. Evidently, the Historical Society hoped to return No. 952 to its original home in Pennsylvania, for display at the Steamtown National Historic Site at Scranton, and also feared that the Transportation Museum’s alleged neglect was endangering the locomotive. After reportedly leaving it to rust on an uncovered and overgrown sidetrack, the Transportation Museum began an effort to better maintain and preserve No. 952 in 1995, but that did not deter the Historical Society.

II.

Lackawanna, as the successor to the Historical Society’s interest in No. 952, first brought suit in the Middle District of Pennsylvania, though that court transferred the case to the Eastern District of Missouri. See Lackawanna Chapter of Ry. & Locomotive Historical Soc., Inc. v. St. Louis County, 2004 WL 503447 (M.D. Pa. Mar. 12, 2004). St.

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