Nashua and Lowell Railroad v. Boston and Lowell Railroad

136 U.S. 356, 10 S. Ct. 1004, 34 L. Ed. 363, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2219
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 19, 1890
Docket166
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 136 U.S. 356 (Nashua and Lowell Railroad v. Boston and Lowell Railroad) 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
Nashua and Lowell Railroad v. Boston and Lowell Railroad, 136 U.S. 356, 10 S. Ct. 1004, 34 L. Ed. 363, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2219 (1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Field

delivered, the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity to compel the defendant, the Boston and Lowell Railroad Corporation, to account for various sums of money alleged to have been received by it and- used for its benefit, to which the' complainant was entitled, and also to charge the defendant Iiosford personally with the amount diverted by him to that corporation. The controversy relates to certain transactions growing out of a joint traffic contract between the plaintiff and the defendant corporations.

The plaintiff, the Nashua and Lowell Railroad Corporation, is alleged in the bill to have been duly established as a corporation under the laws of New Hampshire, and to be a citizen of - that State. It will be convenient hereafter in this opinion to designate it as the Nashua Corporation. On the 1st of February, 1857, it owned and operated a railroad extending from Nashua,in New Hampshire, to Lowell, in Massachusetts,' a distance of thirteen miles, of which five miles were in New Hampshire, and eight miles in Massachusetts. The suit was brought not only against the Boston and Lowell Railroad Corporation, alleged in the bill to be a corporation duly established' by the laws of .Massachusetts and a citizen of - that State, but against Hocum Hosford, its treasurer, and Charles E. A. Bartlett, of the city of Lowell, álso citizens of that State, .but as to Bartlett it has been dismissed. On the 1st of February, 1857, this corporation, which for convenience we shall call the Lowell Corporation, owned and operated a railroad extending from Boston to Lowell, Massachusetts, a distance of twenty-six miles, with a branch to the town of Woburn a mile and a half in length.

On the 1st of. February, 1857, the two corporations entered into a contract in writing with each other, for the promotion of their mutual interest through a more efficient and economical joint operation and management of their roads and for the better security of their respective investments as well as for *366 the convenience and interest of the public,” that their roads with their branches should “ be worked and managed as one road,” under certain conditions and stipulations which were stated at length. . The contract recited that a large portion of the business of the two roads was joint business passing over the roads and through the branches of both parties, making desirable a common policy and unanimity of management, and that in the transaction of their business there was a mutual interest, both as to the mode of transaction and as to the tariff upon the same, as well as in all other matters relating thereto, and that the two corporations; by operating under a common management, would thereby be enabled to do business with greater facility, greater regularity, and at a greater saving of expense.

The Nashua Corporation had at this time leases of the Stony Brook Railroad, extending from its line at North- Chelmsford to Groton Junction, about fourteen miles in Massachusetts, and of the Wilton Railroad extending from Nashua to Wilton, about thirteen miles in New Hampshire. The contract was originally for three years, but by a supplemental agreement of October 1, 1858, it was extended to twenty years. Among other things, it provided:

That the roads of the parties should be “operated and managed by one agent, to be chosen by the concurrent vote of a majority of the directors of each party, and who might be removed by a like vote or by the unanimous vote of either board; ” and that the respective boards of directors should, “by such concurrent action, exercise the same control over the management as is usual with boards of railroad directors in “ordinary cases.” '

That the corporations should each surrender to the joint management thus constituted “ the entire control of their respective roads, shops, depots, furniture, machinery, tools, or other property necessary for the proper maintenance and working of the joint roads,” reserving only certain specified property, necessary for the operation of the roads, consisting principally of real estate.

That the contracts of the Nashua Corporation with the *367 Wilton and Stony Brook- roads should be assumed by the joint management and carried out; and that the contract with the Wilton road, which was to expire on the 1st of. April, 1858, might be renewed during the continuance of the joint management.

That the-Nashua Corporation should within the year 1857,1 at its own cost,, erect a freight depot, with the necessary approaches and furniture, in the city of Lowell, upon its site at Western Avenue, which, during the continuance of the agreement, might be used for the accommodation of the joint business.

.That the Lowell Corporation should complete within the year 1857, at its own separate cost, the new passenger depot at Causeway Street in Boston, then under construction, together with the tracks, bridges, and all necessary fixtures connected with thé extension into that city, and at its separate . expense make such alterations in the existing Boston passenger depot as had been designed by the Lowell Corporation for converting it into a freight depot; and also, without charge to the Nashua Corporation, complete at the earliest practicable time the crossing over the Fitchburg Railroad and the- connection with the Grand Junction Railroad.

That the road-bed, bridges, superstructure, depots, buildings and fixtures of each road should be kept as near as might be in like relative repair from their then state and. condition, and that all casualties and damages to the same, except fire risks on buildings, should be at the common risk, and charged in the current joint account, and in case of the destruction by . fire of any buildings or injury to the same, that the owner should rebuild or replace them at his own cost.

That the income and expense accounts of the joint roads should be made up, as nearly as conveniently might be, by .estimate to the close of each month, and the net balance should be divided and paid over, on account, to the respective treasurers of- the two corporations, -thirty-one per cent to the Nashua Corporation and sixty-nine per cent to the Lowell Corporation, subject to a final, adjustment at thé semi-annual closing of accounts; and that on the first' days of April and *368 October in each year the said accounts should be accurately closed and balanced by settlement with each party covering and adjusting all previous payments on account, the Nashua Corporation receiving as its proportion thirty-one per cent of the said joint net income and the Lowell Corporation receiving as its proportion sixty-nine per cent thereof.

That each corporation might separately and on its own account declare such dividends upon its own stock, and payable from its own separate funds, as it might deem expedient, it being distinctly provided that “ the interest upon the debts of either party must also be paid out of such separate share, and not from the common fund.”

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Bluebook (online)
136 U.S. 356, 10 S. Ct. 1004, 34 L. Ed. 363, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashua-and-lowell-railroad-v-boston-and-lowell-railroad-scotus-1890.