Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Texas & Pacific R.

11 F. 625
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedApril 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 11 F. 625 (Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Texas & Pacific R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pullman Palace Car Co. v. Texas & Pacific R., 11 F. 625 (E.D. Tex. 1882).

Opinion

Pardee, C. J.

The complainant sets forth in its bill an agreement alleged to have been made on the twenty-eighth day of February, 1874, with the defendant company, whereby the Pullman Company was to furnish sleeping cars to be used by the railway company, sufficient to moot the demands of travel on its line of road, to provide the necessary attendants therefor, and also keep said cars j ti good running order and repairs, except repairs and renewals made necessary by accident and casualty; it being understood that the railway company should repair all damages to said cars, of every kind, occasioned by accident and casualty. The railway company was to pay the Pullman Company for the use of said cars four cents per car per mile for each mile run, and the railway company was to repair the cars in its own shops at cost prieo for the Pullman Company. Settlements to be made monthly. The railway company to furnish and apply lubricating materials, and provide fuel and lights for, and wash and cleanse, said cars.

The railway company was to permit the Pullman Company to place its tickets on sale at the ticket offices of the railway company, and to permit the Pullman Company to collect from passengers using said [626]*626cars “such sums as mayhe usual on competing lines furnishing equal accommodations.” The Pullman Company was to furnish free passes on its cars for the general officers of the railway company, and the railway company to furnish free passes to the general officers, conductors, and porters of the Pullman Company when on duty. This agreement was to continue for two years, say till February 28, 1876, “unless another agreement shall have been entered into, as provided in the seventh article; but in case either of said companies should at any time fail to observe the covenants so entered into, it might be terminated by notice. ” By this seventh article it is alleged the Pullman Company was given “the option, if exercised within two years from the date hereof, to determine whether it will make with the Texas & Pacific Railway Company a contract of the form and kind hereunto attached and marked ‘H,’ and that if the Pullman Company shall within the said two years determine to make such contract, then and in that case the Texas & Pacific Railway Company shall enter into such contract with the Pullman Company.”

The “Contract H,” so annexed, is a blank form of agreement “between --, hereinafter called the railway company, and Pullman’s Palace Gar Company,” and contains a considerable preamble and 15 articles, which may be briefly summarized:

(1) The Pullman Company is to furnish its cars sufficient to meet the requirements of travel over the lines of the railway company now controlled or hereafter to be controlled by ownership, lease, or otherwise; said cars to be satisfactory to the general manager or superintendent of the railway company.
(2) The Pullman Company agrees to keep carpets, upholstery, and bedding in good order, and to make certain repairs.
(3) The Pullman Company agrees to furnish and pay certain employes on said cars.
(4) The railway company is to furnish certain free passes.
(5) The Pullman Company is to furnish certain free passes.
(6) The servants of the Pullman Company are to be governed by the rules of the railway company, and sundry provisions are made for liability- in case of their injury, and indemnity by the Pullman Company.
(7) The railway company is to have said cars on the passenger trains of its lines, now or hereafter to be controlled, in such way as will best accomodate passengers desiring to use them, and furnish fuel, lighting material, and make certain repairs and renovations.
(8) The railway company is to furnish without charge, at convenient points, room and conveniences for airing and storing bedding.
(9) The Pullman Company is to collect certain fares.
(10) The railway company is to permit the Pullman Company to place its tickets on sale at the railway ticket-offices, and their sale to be made by the railway’s agents free of charge.
[627]*627(11) The Pullman Company is to have the exclusive right for 15 years to furuish such drawing-room, parlor, sleeping, and reclining chair cars on all passenger trains of the railway company, on its entire linos, present, prospective, now controlled or hereafter to bo controlled by ownership, lease, or otherwise, and also on all passenger trains on which it may, by virtue of contracts witli other roads, have the right to run such cars, and the railway company is to agree that it will not contract with any other parties to run said class of cars over said lines of road for 15 years.
(12) The Pullman Company is to guaranty the railway company against damages for infringements of patents and expenses of litigation, etc.
(13) Elaborate provisions are made in regard to cleansing and repairing oars in case of default by party charged with this duty.
(14) Provisions are made for each party having the right to terminate the contract in case the other does not comply with its obligations.
(15) Provisions are made whereby the railway company might, on certain terms, acquire a half interest in all the equipment so furnished.

The bill alleges that on or about the fourteenth of February, 1876, the complainant notified the defendant that it would exercise the option aforesaid, and sent to defendant a letter advising it that “your orator had thus decided, and that on and after the twenty-eighth day of February, 1876, it would operate its ears upon the lines of the railway company, under the terms of the said contract marked Ti,’ as aforesaid, and your orator causes duplicate copies of said contract to be prepared, which were duly executed on the part of your orator, and sent by your orator to the said Texas & Pacific Railway Company for execution ly said company.” The bill then alleges that complainant has continued to operate its cars on defendant’s roads under the authority and provisions of said contract, and then alleges that the defendant has notified it that its cars will not be handled any longer. It charges “that the officers and agents of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company do publicly declare that the said railway company has, by contract with others than your orator, engaged for use on its said road, on and after the fifteenth day of December, 1881, other and different drawing-room and sleeping cars than those of your orator, namely, the cars of the company known as the Wagner Sleeping-Car Company, and your orator has reason to believe, and does believe, that on and after the fifteenth day of December, 1881, the cars of your orator will be put off the lino of the said Texas & Pacific Railway Company, and their use discontinued, and the cars of persons other than your orator substituted therefor in the operation of the business of said road, in violation of the express terms and provisions of the contract, ” etc.

[628]*628The Wagner Company is not made party.

After sundry allegations of apprehended injury the complainant proceeds to ask for an injunction, which is the only relief requested.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 F. 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pullman-palace-car-co-v-texas-pacific-r-txed-1882.