Pennsylvania R. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.

16 F. Supp. 902, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1906
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 13, 1936
DocketNo. 17540
StatusPublished

This text of 16 F. Supp. 902 (Pennsylvania R. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania R. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 16 F. Supp. 902, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1906 (E.D. Pa. 1936).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

The legal merits of this cause cannot be appraised without a fact statement. In making this we shall adopt the kindergarten method. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff. This was on the basis that there was no defense and that the case was in consequence one of damages only. The plaintiff asked for damages aggregating in round figures $5,200,000. The verdict of the jury was for $747,663.-02. The trial judge excluded items aggregating about $4,500,000. The verdict was for all the other items as claimed. It is a fair inference that, had the rejected items not been excluded, the verdict would have included them. The defendant has not asked for a new trial. If there was error in excluding the rejected items, the plaintiff should have a new trial so that these items might be included. If they were properly excluded, then a new trial could be of no advantage to the plaintiff, but the practical effect of it would be to give the defendant whatever hope of a verdict for the defendant a new trial might offer. For this the defendant has not asked. This reduces the questions now presented to the single one of the correctness of the trial rulings made.

The Fact Situation.

The action is on a contract which included the construction of what we will call warehouse buildings on the land of the plaintiff. An understanding of the general scope of that contract is necessary to that of the legal questions raised. The railroad owned lands which were available for warehouse purposes but which were in use for railroad trackage. The locus in quo was what we will call the New York freight terminal of the railroad. The benefit to the railroad of having warehousing facilities are obvious. Directly they gave promise of a profitable return from the investment. Indirectly they would stimulate the patronage of the railroad. Warehouses might have been built by the owners of the land outside of, but adjoining, the railroad lines. In such case the benefits to the railroad would have been those which we have called indirect. The railroad (the law permitting) might have itself, or through a construction contract, have erected on its lands the warehouses. In such case the warehouses would have been built at its expense and all the benefits would have accrued to it. Neither of these plans was followed, but a third plan was devised. This was in outline to have the railroad lease the required land for a term of years to a Warehouse Company which should build the -warehouses and recoup itself for the cost out of the earnings of the warehouses during the term of the lease. Obviously the success of this plan, in the sense of its being carried out to the profit of all concerned, rested upon the expectation that the returns from the warehousing business would be sufficient to meet the entire outlay made. The promised benefits to the railroad were: (1) It would be relieved of the payment of taxes on its land and on the erected buildings as provided in the lease; (2) it would receive rental for its land during the running of the lease; and (3) it would fall heir at the end of the term to the constructions made without further cost to it. These benefits were of course dependent upon the Warehouse Company complying with its contract. To assure such compliance the Warehouse Company gave the bond in suit upon which the defendant became surety.

[903]*903The Legal Situation.

The theory of the action brought is that the Warehouse Company defaulted in its contract to the damage of the plaintiff and demand is made upon the surety to make good the loss. This calls for the statement of further facts. The obligations assumed by the Warehouse Company were in substance (1) to pay the taxes assessed upon the land and constructions; (2) to pay the rent reserved; and (3) to construct the warehouses within the time called for and surrender them to the railroad at the end of the term clear of liens. To enable it to do this it must be supplied with the needed funds. The plan for financing the Warehouse Company was an issue of stock and issues of first and junior bonds secured by a mortgage of its leasehold interest in the lands with the anticipated warehouses erected thereon. It rested upon the expectation that these issues of stock and bonds would supply the needed money to enable the Warehouse Company to comply with its contract and that the rentals or other returns from the warehouses would further enable it to pay its bonds and retire its stock on terms satisfactory to its managers and stockholders. For some reason not fully nor very clearly disclosed by the evidence, the Warehouse Company was disappointed in its expectations, and, after the contract had in part progressed toward completion, a crisis arose. The Warehouse Company foresaw a failure in the carrying out of the plan unless it could be supplied with fresh funds.

It may be well to pause here to follow the example of mariners by taking a sight to determine our latitude. The lands upon which the warehouses were to be erected were occupied by the tracks of the railroad. It need not be said that these tracks must be removed before the agreed constructions could be built. Recognizing this, the railroad had agreed to remove its tracks so as to permit the construction to proceed.

The plan above outlined contemplated in its entirety two things. One was.that the Warehouse Company should complete the contemplated constructions. For this the surety was responsible. The other was that the Warehouse Company raise through an issue of its stock and bonds enough money to finance its operations. Any one was at liberty to invest in these securities. Any one included the Railroad Company, and it felt such interest in the project that it agreed to take, and took, $1,500,000 of the junior bonds referred to. It is perfectly clear that the surety was not answerable for the value of these securities. If, for illustration, the planned construction had been completed but, because the expected returns from the warehousing business were not realized so that the bonds were not paid and the stockholders received nothing,- no one would assert that the Surety Company was bound to make good the loss.

With this situation in mind, we revert to what we have called the crisis. The Warehouse Company felt the imminence of a default. It could not pay its workmen nor the subcontractors what was due them. It further felt that, if it had financial assistance, it could complete the construction. It took its financial troubles to the railroad. To command a hearing, it, with justification or without it, assumed an aggressive' attitude. It charged the railroad with a violation of its contract in its refusal to remove its tracks, thereby delaying the construction and very substantially increasing its cost. The Warehouse Company further , announced its intention to declare a default and demand its damages unless the railroad gave it the financial help it needed.

Let us pause again to appraise the rights and obligations of the parties at this juncture. It was clearly the right of the Warehouse Company, if the facts warranted it in so doing, to declare a default and seek to recover its damages, if any, or to waive the default and to continue its contract. The railroad was under no legal obligation to extend financial aid to the Warehouse Company, but it had the right to so do. If it refused, it had the right to demand that the contract be completed and, upon the refusal to proceed with it, to declare a default with all its legal consequences.

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16 F. Supp. 902, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-r-v-fidelity-deposit-co-paed-1936.