Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad v. Mississippi

210 U.S. 187, 28 S. Ct. 650, 52 L. Ed. 1016, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1503
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1908
Docket218
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 210 U.S. 187 (Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad v. Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City Railroad v. Mississippi, 210 U.S. 187, 28 S. Ct. 650, 52 L. Ed. 1016, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1503 (1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant railroad companies in their motion to dissolve the temporary injunction urged as grounds thereof, among others, that the injunction imposed a direct and unnecessary burden upon and was an interference with interstate commerce and an interference with the carrying of United States mail. To those grounds the court did not apparently respond, and the Supreme Court did not refer to them in either of its opinions.

Counter contentions are urged. Plaintiffs in error contend that the Federal questions set up by them were evaded. Defendants in error contend that such questions were not involved and are not now presented for consideration.

The opinion of the Supreme Court on the first appeal was very elaborate, and we can only give a brief summary of the propositions decided. The court gives a summary of the facts of the bill, the averments of the petition to the Commission and the terms of its order, and says that “waiving minor considerations not sufficiently developed by the proof,” and “passing at once to the very heart of the matter,” the case divided into two main branches:

“1. What is the true interpretation to be given §187 of our constitution and has it any application to the facts of this litigation? 2. What are the legal rights of the citizens of the town of Pontotoc and the duties of the appellees as to the nar,.row gauge road which was in use and active operation before ' and at the consolidation hereinbefore referred to and at the date of the leasing of its property by one appellee to the other?”

*198 Under the first branch the court decided that appellants (defendants in error here) could, under the facts of the record, be “afforded no relief by the language or intendment of § 187 of the constitution.” This branch of the case, therefore, needs no further consideration.

As elements in the discussion and decision of the second branch of the case, the court said that there had been no consolidation between the Gulf and Chicago Railroad Company and the Gulf and Chicago Railway Company , and if the latter company had constructed its road over the route in the direction specified in its application for incorporation, it would inevitably have been a parallel and a competing line with the narrow gauge line then in existence, and the consolidation of the roads would not have been permitted. “More than this,” it was said, “an express grant of power by the legislature for the two companies to consolidate . . . would have been void, as being in contravention of the general statutory inhibition against consolidation or purchase of competing lines of railroads, which cannot, without violating § 87 of the constitution of the State, be suspended ‘for the benefit of any individual or private corporation or association.’” And to sustain this proposition Y. & M. V. Ry. Co. v. So. Ry. Co., 83 Mississippi, 746, was cited. It was deduced from § 3587 of the code of thé State of 1892, that the statement in the petition that the roads were “in no way parallel or competing lines,” were statements of jurisdictional facts, “upon the existence of which depended the power of the corporations to consolidate.” And following Lusby v. Railroad, 73 Mississippi, 364, the court held that the Gulf and Chicago Railroad Company was without power .to abandon or relocate any portion of its line, “except on the score of ‘imperious necessity.’” An exception, it was said, not suggested by the facts of this record. These restraints and duties, it was further said, came to the consolidated corporation.

On the return of the case to the Chancery Court, and after a hearing on the merits, that court entered a decree making the *199 injunction perpetual. The decree recited that the court found “as a fact” that a valid contract existed between the Gulf and Chicago Railroad Company and the citizens of Pontotoc, which provided that the line of the railway of the company should be established and maintained where the same was established and maintained before' the consolidation of that company with the other companies, and that the town had not given its assent to the abandonment of that line. The court further found “that no natural obstacles or imperious necessity prevented the said defendant companies from broadening and standardizing” the narrow gauge road “and making it a part of the main line of the proposed railroad, and no such obstacles or necessity existed to prevent the said companies from extending their said lines from the southern terminus of the said original ' line .. . . and that the allegations of the bill have been sustained by the proof, and that the complainants are entitled to the relief prayed for.” The Supreme Court affirmed the decree of the Chancery Court, repeating, with some modifications, the principles which it expressed on the first appeal of the case. It said that in a former opinion the court expressly held that “the consolidation was conditioned upon the broadening and standardizing the then existing narrow gauge railroad, and making it a part of the main line of railroad operated by the consolidated corporation.” And it was alone, it was further said, upon the compliance of those conditions that the Railroad Commission consented to the consolidation, and without whieh the Commission would have had no power to authorize the consolidation, and without which the consolidation would not have been effected. So insistent was the condition, the court held, in view of the fact, that the roads would otherwise be parallel and competing roads, that the legislature could not relieve from it without violating § 87 of the’ constitution of the State.

The court expressed the law of the State to be that parallel and competing roads could not consolidate, and that other roads could only consolidate with the consent of the Railroad Commission. And it was also said that the roads recognizing *200 the law stated in their petition to the Commission “that their railroads were ‘in no way parallel or competing lines,’ and expressly pledged themselves to broaden and standardize the then existing narrow gauge railroad, and to make it a part of the main line and operated by the consolidated corporation. . . . And it is upon this ground, and this ground alone, that we now hold that the decree of the Chancellor should be affirmed.” The court took pains to repeat this limitation. And, excluding other questions, the court said that it had nothing to do with the location of the depot, and that it dealt alone with the “obligation entered into” by the companies with the Commission, “that only,” to quote the words of the court, “is the core of this contention and that, and that precisely, is what we deal with and decide in this case, to wit, that these appellants [plaintiffs in error here] are bound by their solemn obligations, deliberately entered into, as stated above, to broaden and standardize the narrow guage railroad and make it a part of the main line.”

We have made these full quotations from the opinions and decrees of the state courts to clearly show w’hat facts were found and what principles of law laid down that we might estimate the Federal questions which it is contended are involved in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
210 U.S. 187, 28 S. Ct. 650, 52 L. Ed. 1016, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-jackson-kansas-city-railroad-v-mississippi-scotus-1908.