McCulloch v. Southern Railway Co.

62 S.E. 1096, 149 N.C. 305, 1908 N.C. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 2, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 62 S.E. 1096 (McCulloch v. Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCulloch v. Southern Railway Co., 62 S.E. 1096, 149 N.C. 305, 1908 N.C. LEXIS 349 (N.C. 1908).

Opinions

From the judgment of his Honor that the cause was not removable, the Southern Railway Co. appealed. The history of this case is as follows: Action was commenced 1 August, 1903. The pleadings were filed and the cause came on for trial at the July Term, 1907, and a judgment was rendered in favor of defendants, dismissing the action. From this judgment, plaintiffs appealed to the Supreme Court, and the appeal was heard at the Fall *Page 225 Term, 1907, upon an agreed state of facts, McCulloch v. R. R., 146 N.C. 316. A new trial was awarded, and the court suggested to plaintiff an amendment to the pleadings. The plaintiff, on the first day of April Term, 1908, of GUILFORD, acting in accordance with the suggestion of this Court, filed an amendment to the complaint, and instantly the defendant Southern Railway Co. filed a petition for removal. The court overruled the motion to remove, and defendant Southern Railway Co. appealed. (307)

The Southern Railway Co. is the lessee of the North Carolina Railroad Co., and, as such, is operating the line of railway extending from Charlotte, through Greensboro, to Goldsboro. As such lessor the North Carolina Company is liable for the acts of the lessee done in the performance of the duties of the lessor as a common carrier. The effect of the franchise to construct and operate a railroad is to require the licensee to perform certain public duties, and the licensee can not avoid its part of this contract with the sovereign by subletting its franchise. The licensee from the State, nevertheless, remains liable for the manner in which its lessee performs these public duties, which the lessor has agreed with the public to perform. Logan v. R. R., 116 N.C. 940. Upon no other principle of law can the decision in the Logan case be sustained. It has never been held by any court that the lessor of a railroad company is liable for the tortious acts of its lessee, done not while carrying on the business of its lessor, but while carrying on an entirely separate and distinct, though similar business of its own.

The gravamen of the plaintiff's complaint is, that they are the owners and in possession of a tract of land on which the Southern Railway has committed a trespass, and that it is undertaking to justify its tortious act under a certain deed to the North Carolina Company, its lessor, and that the trespass of the Southern on this land can not be justified under that title because the land was not taken to carry on the business of the North Carolina Railroad Company, but for the separate and independent business of he Southern Railway Company. How is the North Carolina Railroad Company interested in an action of trespass against the Southern Railway Company?

It is no more interested than any other grantor under whose deed any alleged trespasser undertakes to justify, and such grantor is admittedly not a necessary or proper party to the action for damages for the supposed trespass.

If this act of taking possession of the locus in quo was an act (308) done in the conduct of the business of the North Carolina Railroad Company, and which the North Carolina Railroad Company was under the law required to do, then, under the former decision in this case, the plaintiffs' action fails entirely and should be dismissed. *Page 226

The plaintiffs recognize this, and seek to avoid it by expressly alleging in section 11 of the complaint, that the act of taking possession of this locus in quo was not done in the conduct of the public business of the North Carolina Company, but for the purpose of conducting a separate and distinct part of the Southern's business.

The former company, according to the complaint, has done nothing. Upon what principle of law then can it be held liable for the acts of the Southern, alleged by the plaintiff to be done outside of and beyond its rights under the lease, it being expressly denied in the complaint that these alleged wrongful acts of the Southern were done in the performance of the public duties which it had undertaken to discharge for the North Carolina Company as its lessee?

A cursory reading of the former opinion in this case will disclose, that the very ground upon which a new trial was awarded is that the Southern Railway Company was doing the acts complained of, not in the performance of the public duties of the North Carolina Railroad Company, but in the performance of the duties of the Southern Railway Company because it owns and operates certain other railroads, and that the acts are done in performance of the public duties of those roads, and plaintiffs' predecessors in title not having granted the land which was taken to be used for that purpose, it was placing an additional servitude on the land, and for this additional servitude the Southern Railway Company should be made to pay.

If this alleged act in entering upon and taking the locus in quo may be justified under the charter of the North Carolina Company, (309) and was done in furtherance of its business, then it is lawful, and there is no cause of action against either company. R. R. v.Sturgeon, 120 N.C. 225; R. R. v. Olive, 142 N.C. 257. If the appropriation of the property may not be so justified, then only the Southern can be held liable, and in any event the North Carolina Company is not liable upon the facts stated in the complaint.

It is plain that the controversy is not only separable, but that, under the pleadings and the former opinion of this Court, there is only one controversy, and that is between the plaintiffs and the Southern Railway Co. That was the ruling of this Court when it held that the judge of the Superior Court should have submitted the issues set out in the former opinion on page 319, for those issues present a controversy with the Southern Railway only.

It is suggested that the amended complaint, in which the damages are laid at four thousand dollars, filed in pursuance of our opinion at the last term, does not state a cause of action against the Southern Railway, and therefore the plaintiff would be remitted to his first complaint for $1,500, a sum not within the Federal jurisdiction. *Page 227

This contention does not appear to find much support in the following clause of that opinion:

"The plaintiffs are entitled in this action to have permanent damages assessed, in the nature of condemnation, for the additional burden placed upon the lot by its use for purposes other than those for which defendant uses the lot purely as lessee of the North Carolina Railroad Co. (Hodges v.Tel. Co., 133 N.C. 225), in which case this proposition is so clearly and fully reasoned out by Connor, J., with full citation of authorities."

But we are prevented from considering this question because, having held that the controversy is separable and that no cause of action is stated against the North Carolina Railroad Company, when the petition and bond for removal were filed by the Southern Railway (310) Company, the jurisdiction of the State court was at once ousted and that court can proceed no further.

When a money judgment is demanded, as in this case, the right of removal is determined by the sum demanded, as appears by the record at the time the petition is filed. When an amendment is made the sum last demanded is "the matter in dispute." Moon on Rem., sec. 88. After the petition and bond for removal are filed the jurisdiction of the State court ceases eo instanti.

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Related

State ex rel. North Carolina Corp. Commission v. Southern Railway Co.
151 N.C. 447 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1909)
Corporation Commission v. . R. R.
66 S.E. 427 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.E. 1096, 149 N.C. 305, 1908 N.C. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcculloch-v-southern-railway-co-nc-1908.