Manchester & Lawrence Railroad v. Concord Railroad

20 A. 383, 66 N.H. 100
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 20 A. 383 (Manchester & Lawrence Railroad v. Concord Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manchester & Lawrence Railroad v. Concord Railroad, 20 A. 383, 66 N.H. 100 (N.H. 1889).

Opinion

Blodgett,

J. This proceeding is a bill in equity for a discovery and an accounting of the defendants’ dealings with the plaintiffs’ railroad properties from December 1, 1856, to July 1, 1887, under various contracts and leases; for the delivery of certain books, records, and papers alleged to belong to the plaintiffs; for the return to them of rolling stock and equipments of the appraised value of $147,592, which went into the defendants’ possession at the time they took the plaintiffs’ road, and which they still retain; and for the determination and adjustment of the respective rights of the parties in and to certain lands, depots, and tracks, situate in Manchester.

In bar of the plaintiffs’ right to a recovery the defendants file three special pleas, and as to the matters in the bill not covered by the pleas, they demur. The plaintiffs demur to the pleas.

The first plea avers that the contracts between the parties, under which the defendants went into and retained the possession and management of the plaintiffs’ road for more than thirty years, “were wholly beyond the corporate power” of either party to make or to ratify, and that therefore the defendants should be hence dismissed with their costs and charges. In other words, not denying that they have received the full benefit of the performance of the contract by the plaintiffs, the defendants say that they should be permitted to retain the benefit and property so acquired, and be dismissed with costs, because they were not empowered by *127 their charter to perform what they promised the plaintiffs in return.

The demurrer to this plea is sustained. The defence set up is so repugnant to the natural sense of justice, so contrary to good faith and fair dealing, and so opposed to the weight of modern authority, that it need only be said that in equity, at least, neither party to a transaction ultra vires simply is heard to allege its invalidity while retaining its fruits. However the contractual power of the defendants may be limited under their charter, there is no limitation of their power to make restitution to the other party whose money or property they have obtained through an unauthorized contract; nor, as a corporation, are they exempted from the common obligation to do justice which binds individuals, for this dutj^ rests upon all persons alike, whether natural or artificial.

The second plea avers, and the demurrer admits, that at the time of the making of the contracts between the parties, and of the dealings thereunder, their respective roads “were rival and competing railroads, by the competition of which the prices of transportation thereon were, and but for said supposed contracts, dealings, transactions, operations, and business would have continued to be, materially reduced, and said alleged contracts, dealings, transactions, and business were made and had for the purpose of destroying and preventing such competition, and did destroy and prevent it.”

It will be noticed that there is no averment in the plea that the purpose of the contracts was to raise the prices of transportation above a reasonable standard, or that they did have this effect, or that the public were prejudiced by their operation in any manner; and the naked question presented then is, whether all contracts between rival railway corporations which prevent competition are necessarily contrary to public policy, and therefore mala prohibita and illegal in themselves.

To state this question is to answer it in the negative, because it is obvious that the answer depends upon circumstances. While, without doubt, contracts which have a direct tendency to prevent a healthy competition are detrimental to the public and consequently against public policy, it is equally free from doubt that when such contracts prevent an unhealthy competition and yet furnish the public with adequate facilities at fixed and reasonable rates, they are beneficial and in accord with sound principles of public policy. For the lessons of experience, as well as the deductions of reason, amply demonstrate that the public interest is not subserved by competition which reduces the rate of transportation below the standard of fair compensation ; and the theory which formerly obtained, that the public is benefited by unrestricted competition between railroads, has been so emphatically disproved by the results which have generally followed its adoption in practice, that the hope of any permanent relief from excessive rates through *128 the competition of a parallel or rival road may, as a rule, be justly characterized as illusory and fallacious.

Upon authority, also, arrangements and contracts between competing railroads, by which unrestrained competition is prevented, do not contravene public policy. Hare v. Railway Co., 2 Johns. & H. 80, is directly in point. In that case a bill in chancery had been brought by a stockholder in the defendant company to annul an agreement between two railway companies to divide the profits of the traffic in fixed proportions; and it was admitted there, as it is here, that the purpose of the agreement was to prevent competition. In dismissing the bill, Vice-Chancellor Wood said,y>. 103,— “ With regard to the argument against the validity of the agreement, I may clear the ground of one objection by saying that I see nothing in the alleged injury to the public arising from the prevention of competition. . . . It is a mistaken notion that the public is benefited by pitting two railway companies against each other till one is ruined, the result being at last to raise the fares to the highest possible standard.” So, also, in 1 Red. R. R., s. 116, 2, it is said, — “ There is no principle of public policy which renders void a trafile arrangement between two lines of railway for the purpose of avoiding competition.” And Mr. Morawetz says, in his admirable treatise on corporations, — “ Public policy clearly does not demand that railroad companies operating competing lines shall engage in strife causing their financial ruin ; and, so'far as agreements among companies are designed to effect this result, their purpose is not injurious to the public, or illegal. Moreover, such agreements are positively beneficial to the public, so far as they prevent the fluctuation of rates and unjust discriminations among shippers, which invariably attend the unrestricted competition of rival companies. It is therefore impossible to support the proposition that all agreements among railroad companies which restrict competition are condemned by law. Some such agreements may be contrary to public policy, and unlawful; but if an agreement of this character is a reasonable business arrangement to protect the shareholders and creditors of the companies from loss, and does not cause unreasonably high charges or violate any duty which the companies owe to the public, it should be sustained and enforced by the courts.” Mor. Corp. (2d ed.) s. 1131. In the same section, in speaking of contracts in restraint of trade (to which many of the authorities and much of the argument for the defendants relate), he says, — “ Even if there were such a rule as has bem claimed applicable to competition in trade, the principle and policy of the rule would not be applicable to traffic arrangements designed merely to prevent ruinous competition and ‘ wars * among "railroad companies.

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Bluebook (online)
20 A. 383, 66 N.H. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manchester-lawrence-railroad-v-concord-railroad-nh-1889.