Pennsylvania Railroad v. Pennsylvania-Ohio Electric Co.

145 A. 686, 296 Pa. 40, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 472
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 21, 1929
DocketAppeal, 187
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 145 A. 686 (Pennsylvania Railroad v. Pennsylvania-Ohio Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Railroad v. Pennsylvania-Ohio Electric Co., 145 A. 686, 296 Pa. 40, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 472 (Pa. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Walling,

In 1864, when the Erie & Pittsburgh Railroad, now operated by the plaintiff, Pennsylvania Railroad Company, was constructed through what is now the city of New Castle, it constructed an overhead bridge for a township highway known as Covert Mill Road, now West Washington Street. In 1895 the New Castle Electric Street Railway Company, the defendant’s predecessor, constructed and thereafter used a double track street railway upon this bridge. In 1904 plaintiff’s predecessor rebuilt the bridge at its own expense, as it had the former. During the same year, the electric railway company arranged with certain suburban trolley companies for the use of its track on West Washington Street and upon this bridge in gaining entrance to the city, the latter having granted franchises for this purpose. To prevent such additional, and as it contended, unauthorized use of the bridge, plaintiff’s predecessor filed a bill in equity against the trolley companies and secured a preliminary injunction restraining them from making such use of the bridge, contending that the heavier suburban cars would injure and might destroy it.

Pending this bill, and to amicably adjust the controversy, the predecessors of the parties hereto, on December 27, 1904, entered into a written agreement, inter alia, as follows: 2. “The second party [de *43 fendant herein] and the successors, lessees, licensees and assigns thereof may at all times hereafter without let or hindrance of the first part [plaintiff herein], maintain street railway tracks upon and across said bridge and operate thereon and thereover street railway and interurhan cars.

3. “At all times hereafter the two parties hereto will maintain, repair and renew the superstructure of said bridge at their equal joint cost and expense, after first deducting therefrom any sum or sums contributed thereto by the City of New Castle, the County of Lawrence, Pa., or any other party or parties foreign to this agreement whom the parties hereto may by agreement permit or induce to share in said maintenance and renewal. The first party will perform the actual work of maintaining, repairing and renewing said superstructure and the second party upon receiving a statement of the cost of any such maintenance, repairing and renewal, less deductions aforesaid if such there be, will pay to the first party one-half of such cost and expense; it being understood that it is the intent of the word ‘superstructure’ as used in this agreement, to include all parts and appurtenances of said bridge exclusive of abutments; except that it is mutually understood and agreed that the second party will at its own cost and expense, maintain and renew all such rails, fixtures and appliances as are placed in or upon the superstructure of said bridge for the transportation of its cars, or those of its successors, lessees, assigns and licensees, upon and over said bridge......

“It is expressly agreed that if at any time hereafter the second party, its successors, lessees, licensees or assigns, shall operate upon and across said bridge interurban cars so much heavier than the one now operated upon the lines of the Sharon & New Castle Street Railway Company, or the lines of the New Castle & Lowell Railway Company, as to require that the said bridge be rebuilt or strengthened, the first party shall have the *44 right to rebuild or strengthen the same in such way as may be necessary and proper, and so much of the cost of such work as is made necessary solely by the increased weight of such cars, the second party will pay to the first party promptly on bill rendered.” Pursuant to this agreement the bill in equity was withdrawn and the suburban lines entered upon and have since used the bridge.

In 1923, certain citizens and taxpayers of the City of New Castle made complaint to the Public Service Commission that the bridge had become unsafe, was a nuisance and should be replaced with a new one. An investigation satisfied the commission of the truth of the complaint and it decreed accordingly. Plaintiff submitted various plans, one of which was satisfactory to it and the defendant but the commission ordered the bridge rebuilt on a plan somewhat more expensive. The order of the commission directed plaintiff to reconstruct the bridge, ordered the city to enlarge the approaches, the defendant to take up and relay its tracks, etc., and ordered Lawrence Co. to pay plaintiff $5,000 and to pay the City of New Castle $7,000, all of which was done.

The new bridge was of the same length and width as the old, but built, as by order of the commission, at a greater elevation, on a different plan and somewhat more expensive. Extending parallel with and in the center of the cartway of the old bridge was a girder some four feet high, which was omitted from the new bridge, besides other changes.

The construction of the new bridge cost the plaintiff $37,907.58; deducting the $5,000 paid by Lawrence County, left the net cost $32,907.58. To recover one-half of which, namely, $16,453.79, this suit was brought. The jury found for the plaintiff for the face of the claim, with interest, and from judgment entered thereon defendant has appealed.

The record discloses no reversible error. The Public Service Commission statute did not avoid, or empower *45 the commission to avoid such a contract (see Pbg. & Lake Erie R. R. v. McKees R. Boro., 287 Pa. 811, nor did it attempt to do so here. Contracts which the commission can annul are only such as affect the public and fall within the police power of the Commonwealth, like transportation privileges, special rates granted by public service companies, etc. See Leiper v. Balt. & P. R. R. Co. et al., 262 Pa. 328; Swarthmore Borough v. Pub. Ser. Com., 277 Pa. 472; Beetem et al. v. Carlisle Light, H. & P. Co., 273 Pa. 82; Suburban Water Co. v. Oakmont Boro., 268 Pa. 243; Edgewood Boro. v. Pub. Ser. Com., 75 Pa. Superior Ct. 280.

The main controversy here is whether the contract embraced the rebuilding of the bridge in question. As to that, we have no doubt. The language, “At all times hereafter the two parties hereto will maintain, repair and renew the superstructure of said bridge at their equal joint cost and expense,” is sufficiently broad to include a rebuilding of the bridge. Each word is presumed to have some meaning, and “to renew” naturally means to make new again, while to repair is to mend. That the contract was made perpetual supports this construction. It must have been in contemplation of the parties that in time the bridge, exposed to wear, strain and the elements, would give out and require replacement. In other words, that it must be renewed, and for that the contract provides. It is not a controlling difference whether it is done in sections or all at one time. The contract places upon the plaintiff the duty of making the renewal and upon the defendant the duty of paying one-half of the net expense. True, the Public Service Commission was not then in contemplation, but it was in contemplation that the bridge should be kept up in a lawful manner and as that is now a matter for the commission, since its action, as above stated, cannot destroy the contract, neither can it relieve either party from obligations thereunder. The defendant cannot escape its liability because of the lawful act of the com *46

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Bluebook (online)
145 A. 686, 296 Pa. 40, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-railroad-v-pennsylvania-ohio-electric-co-pa-1929.