Metropolitan Trust Co. v. Columbus, S. & H. Ry. Co.

95 F. 18, 13 Ohio F. Dec. 58, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3127

This text of 95 F. 18 (Metropolitan Trust Co. v. Columbus, S. & H. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Trust Co. v. Columbus, S. & H. Ry. Co., 95 F. 18, 13 Ohio F. Dec. 58, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3127 (circtsdoh 1899).

Opinion

TAFT, Circuit Judge.

Item 16 of the lease purports to bind the lessee, as a condition of enjoying the estate conveyed to it by the lease, that it .shall never extend its line into territory lying just beyond its then terminus. Item 16 does not forfeit the estate. That continues, but the effect of the clause is that, if the lessee shall extend its lines into the forbidden territory, then forever after it shall pay $12,000 a year, without the right to enjoy the estate with which it is vested by the lease. Railroad companies, by the statutes of Ohio (sections 3300 and 3306), are given the power to extend their lines, either by their own construction, qr by the purchase or lease of other lines. These provisions are for the benefit of the public, and it may admit of serious doubt whether a railway company may, consistently with public policy, disable itself from exercising such powers forever. Hartford & N. H. R. Co. v. New York & N. H. R., 3 Rob. (N. Y.) 411; Railroad Co. v. Ryan, 11 Kan. 602; Marsh v. Railway Co., 64 Ill. 414; Railroad Co. v. Mathers, 71 Ill. 592; Rail[21]*21way Co. v. Marshall, 136 U. S. 393, 401, 402, 10 Sup. Ct. 846; Woodstock Iron Co. v. Richmond & D. Extension Co., 129 U. S. 643, 656, 9 Sup. Ct. 402. However this may be, the subsequent agreement of lease between the Columbus, Shawnee & Hocking Railroad Company and the Toledo & Ohio Central Railway certainly abrogated clause 16, in so far as that forbade an extension of the line of the Columbus & Eastern Railroad. The second lease was an express recognition of the right of the successor in title of the Columbus & Eastern Company to operate an extension into the forbidden territory; and the Toledo & Ohio Central Railway Company has enjoyed occupancy under this second lease, and rent under the first lease, for nine years, and is still enjoying them, without ever having objected to the extension. It is too late for it now to insist upon the condition as it: appears in the first lease. Rut it is contended that, even if it may have waived the right to object to the extension, it has never waived the right, hut it has continually.asserted it by written communication, to object to the use of the Columbus Branch for the transportation of coal from the forbidden territory; and this, it is said, was the purpose of the whole condition. Nor, it is said, has it ever waived its right to object to the lessee’s or its successor’s receiving coal from any other lines. It is asserted that its waiver of some of the condi lions of item 16 dees not prevent its enforcement of the remainder. In item 16 there is no inhibition of the right of the lessee company to haul coal from the inhibited territory over the demised line. Its inability to do so under the lease was merely the resultant effect-of the condition that it should not extend Its line into the territory, and should not receive coal from other lines. The permission to extend the line into the territory theretofore forbidden simply made this effect no longer a necessary one. The lessor company could not waive the light to extend the line, and still hope to insist that no coal should be carried thereon from the forbidden territory over the Columbus Branch, when there wras no such prohibition in the contract of lease distinct from the stipulation against the extension of the line. The waiver destroyed, not only the obligation in reference to extension, but also all the consequences upon which the lessor had-relied as flowing therefrom. It is well settled that, if the condition in a lease is single, it is wholly discharged by waiver. Taylor, Landl. & Ten. § 501. Nor is the restriction upon the right of the lessee company to receive coal limited to that mined in the forbidden territory for transportation over the Columbus Branch. It applies to the receiving of all coal, wherever mined, from connecting lines, to be transported over any part of the lessee’s line. It, in effect,, limits its transportation of coal to that mined on its own unextended line. Clearly, such a disabling of the lessee to perform its duties as a common carrier is iu violation of public policy and is void.

But, even if the condition can be pared down to the form in which the lessor would now enforce it, what would the case be? The lessor would have biased to a railroad company having a line extending into the southern portion of Perry county 24 miles of railroad, to be used as part of the main trac-k of the lessee company for 99 years, the term to be renewable forever, and would have imposed upon the [22]*22lessee’s enjoyment of the estate a condition subsequent that it should not receive from shippers or connecting lines coal mined in the forbidden territory, to be-transported over the demised 24 miles of railroad. Now, it would clearly be the duty of the lessee company to receive, in the territory into- which its line extended, all coal tendered to it for transportation, either by shippers or connecting lines, wherever mined, and to transport it over its own line to the place of' destination. The leased 24 miles would be a part of its line, and it would have no more power to decline to discharge its public duties-with respect to that portion of its line than it would have with respect to that which it owned in fee. Any stipulation by which it should bind itself not to discharge its public duties as a common carrier would be void. Peoria & R. I. Ry. Co. v. Coal Valley Min. Co., 68 Ill. 489; Gibbs v. Gas Co., 130 U. S. 396, 410, 9 Sup. Ct. 553; and cases cited. Nor, as contended by counsel, would the fact that the lessee company might turn such coal over to the lessor company before the Columbus Branch was reached, and prorate the freight, under the seventeenth item of the lease, prevent this stipulation from being illegal and void. A shipper may demand from a common carrier that it carry the merchandise from the receiving point to the terminus of its line over its own road, because it is under an obligation to-render the same duties as to all parts of its road to the public. It may be again remarked, as relevant to this contention, that the condition as to receiving coal is not limited, to a restriction upon carrying-coal over the demised premises, but inhibits the carrying of coal thus received on any part of the line.

But, it is asked, cannot the lessor limit the use of its own property as it chooses? It is under no obligation to lease its railroad to another railroad company at all; but, if it does so, then it can only impose upon its use by the lessee such restrictions as are consistent with the discharge by the lessee of those duties which, as a common carrier, the lessee owes to the public. Eestrictions in the nature of conditions subsequent, which, in respect to the demised premises, forbid the lessee to do its public duties as a common carrier, would, if enforced, prevent the lessee from enjoying the demised premises- at all in a lawful manner, and are therefore repugnant to- the grant and void. When one takes an estate upon condition subsequent, which is void as against public policy, or for any other reason, the estate continues in the grantee or lessee, freed from the condition. Co. Litt. 206a; Railroad Co. v. Mathers, 71 Ill. 592; 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 288; 2 Washb. Eeal Prop. (5th Ed.) 8.

A similar question was presented in the cases of Missouri v. Bell Tel. Co., 23 Fed. 539 (a decision by Mr. Justice Brewer while Circuit Judge); State v. Delaware & A.

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Related

Gibbs v. Consolidated Gas Co. of Baltimore
130 U.S. 396 (Supreme Court, 1889)
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Marshall
136 U.S. 393 (Supreme Court, 1890)
Marsh v. Fairbury, Pontiac & Northwestern Railway Co.
64 Ill. 414 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1872)
Peoria & Rock Island Railway Co. v. Coal Valley Mining Co.
68 Ill. 489 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1873)
St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chicago Railroad v. Mathers
71 Ill. 592 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1874)
St. Joseph & Denver City Rld. v. Ryan
11 Kan. 602 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1873)
State of Missouri ex rel. Baltimore & O. Telegraph Co. v. Bell Telephone Co.
23 F. 539 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 F. 18, 13 Ohio F. Dec. 58, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-trust-co-v-columbus-s-h-ry-co-circtsdoh-1899.