Morgan v. New Orleans, M. & T. R.

17 F. Cas. 754
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 754 (Morgan v. New Orleans, M. & T. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. New Orleans, M. & T. R., 17 F. Cas. 754 (circtdla 1876).

Opinion

BRADLEY, Circuit Justice.

The contract in this case was made for the purpose'of putting an end to a ruinous competition which was being carried on between the two parties to it, in the freight and passenger business between Mobile and New Orleans, and for uniting their interest in that business and in a projected railroad business between New Orleans and Texas. The complainant Charles Morgan was, and had long been, engaged in [755]*755running a line of steamers between Mobile and New Orleans, the line being supplemented by a short railroad running from Lake Pontchartrain to the latter place, called the Pontchartrain Railroad, of which he owned the majority of the stock. 1-Ie also owned a railroad called the Opelousas road which ran from the Mississippi river opposite New Orleans to the Atcbafala.va river at Brashear City, where it connected with a line of steamers running to Galveston and other places on the Texan coast, being connected with the city of New Orleans by means of a ferry at that place. The complainant also had a charter for a continuation of his railroad from Brashear City westwardjy and northwesterly to the Texas state line. The railroad company, at the time of the contract, had recently completed a railroad between Mobile and New Orleans, on which the opposition before referred to was maintained against the steamboat business of the complainant; and they had procured a charter for a railroad from New Orleans to the state line of Texas, and expected to obtain a charter for a continuation -of the said road to Houston in that state; and had actually constructed a road west of the Mississippi, from opposite New Orleans, as far as Donaldsonville. L'nder these circumstances, it became evidently the interest of the parties in some way to compose their differences, and not to continue an opposition which must result in loss to them both. The transportation route betwen Mobile and New Orleans, being divided between two powerful interests, could not be a very valuable property to either of them unless some amicable arrangement could be made. By the agreement in question, an attempt was made to form such an arrangement. The general nature of it was as follows: Morgan, on his part, agreed to convey to the railroad company and the company agreed to purchase the property which he had in the line between Mobile and New Orleans, for the sum of $797.S00, namely. certain wharves and wharf property at Mobile, two steamers, the Laura and the Frances, and his Pontchartrain Railroad stock, amounting to 5,07S shares, out of 7,500 shares, which constituted the whole capital. He further agreed to convey to the company, for the sum •of $250.000 and interest thereon from April 15, 1S70, his railroad rights and partly constructed road between Brashear City and Ver-millionville, about sixty miles, and from thence west and north to the Texas line and to Red river; the company agreeing to complete said road by the time it should complete its main line from Vermillionville to the city of Houston. Morgan further agreed to subscribe to the stock and securities of the railroad company, the sum of $1,258.000, on the same terms as the other subscribers thereto had done, and the price of the property above named was to be taken as payment of his subscription as far as it would go; the balance to be paid by him in cash. The securities to be received by him for his said subscription

i i ] i i i were to be $899,000 first mortgage bonds of the company on its road west of the Mississippi, and $359,000 of second mortgage bonds guarantied by the state of Louisiana. He was also to receive (like the other subscribers) income bonds and stock of the company of each, to the amount of his subscription. It was also stipulated in the agreement that Morgan should have for the sum of $250,000 cash, that portion of the Pontchartrain Railroad running along the levee in New Orleans, and the new depot thereto attached. The purpose of the agreement was declared to be to put an end to the opposition in the passenger and freight business between Mobile and New Orleans, and to concede the whole business to the company; and Morgan agreed to take off his boats within fifteen days, and not to run or be concerned in steamboats on that line for fifteen years thereafter. It was further agreed that the gross receipts of th e through business byrailroad between New Orleans and Houston should, on the conrpletion of the railroad through to the latter city, for seven years thereafter, be stocked and divided between the parties according to the length of railroad owned by each, namely, Morgan's road from New Orleans to Brashear City, and the company’s road from New Orleans to Houston, including the branch from Brashear to Vermillionville. The agreement was made and executed in the city of New York, where Morgan and the officers and most of the directors of the company resided; and immediately after it was made, measures were taken to execute it and carry it into effect; and in the course of the following January,; February and March almost every article was executed. Morgan subscribed the requisite amount to the securities of the company, in . New York, namely, the sum of $1.25S.OOO, and received the bonds and certificate of stock which the agreement called for, and conveyed and transferred to the company the several pieces of property which he was to convey and transfer, namely, the wharves and wharf property in Mobile, the steamers Laura and Frances, the Pontchartrain Railroad stock, and the railroad property and rights northwest of. Brashear City; and paid the cash balance re-. quired to make up his subscription; and he.also received a conveyance of the Pontchartrain ’ Railroad track along the levee in New Orleans, ] and paid for it the sum of $250,000 in cash. In fact, within three months from the time of making the agreement, everything was done to effect a complete execution of it, except the construction by the company of the rail-i road to Houston, including the branch road from Brashear to Vermillionville. In addi-" tion to this, the firm of C. A. "Whitney & Co.. of New Orleans, who were the general agents of the complainant in that city, and had managed for him the business between Mobile and New Orleans, and were still managing his line between New Orleans and Texas, were appointed as the agents of .the railroad company, and acted, as such for several months, [756]*756namely, from the date of the agreement in December, 1S71, until the latter part of the following April, and Morgan and three or four persons named by him were elected directors of the company in place of others who resigned. In the summer of 1S72, the complainant changed the gauge of his road from New Orleans to Brashear City, so as to correspond with that of the defendants, and to be thus prepared for the through business to Houston, and in July he received one installment of interest on the bonds received by him. The defendants on their part, during the spring and summer of 1S72, did some work on the line of road between Brashear City and Ver-millionville, but never laid any rails there, and entirely suspended operations before the first of September; and nothing further has ever been done on that branch, nor has the road been completed from Donaldsonville to Vermillionville, nor has any part of it been constructed between Vermillionville and Houston. The time when, by the act granting state aid to the company (on which great reliance was placed), and when by express agreement with the state of Louisiana, the railroad company was to complete its road to the state line, was the 7th of May, 1873; and it was to complete the line to Houston within six months thereafter if the requisite legislation could be obtained from the legislature of Texas.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-new-orleans-m-t-r-circtdla-1876.