State v. Concord Railroad

62 N.H. 375
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 5, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 62 N.H. 375 (State v. Concord Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Concord Railroad, 62 N.H. 375 (N.H. 1882).

Opinion

Doe, C. J.

By a decree made in pursuance of the decision in Burke v. Concord Railroad, 61 N. H. 160, the directors of the Concord Railroad Corporation were enjoined not to operate the road or manage the business of the Concord company under the general partnership contract of August 19, 1881, and to operate the road and transact the business of the company themselves, in accordance with its charter and the law as held in the decision, and not in partnership with the Lowell, or any other corporation or person. A reasonable time having been given for changing the general partnership into such a business connection as the court held it to be the duty of the companies of the line to make, the contract of August 19, 1881, was rescinded, and such a business connection, commencing May 1, 1882, was formed, as the defendants, under advice of counsel, understood was held in the decision to be authorized by their charter and other laws of the state. The complainants contend that this connection was a violation of the injunction. In a supplemental answer, the defendants say this connection was rescinded and abandoned on the - 28th day of February, 1883. But the question still remains' whether it was a violation of the injunction.

On the complainants’ motion, an order was made limiting the testimony to the proof of facts bearing on the question, How has the Concord been operated since the injunction took effect? Under this restriction, the parties necessarily had leave to furnish with their evidence statements of other facts, which, being regarded by them as material, they might offer to prove. The defendants are entitled to an opportunity to prove other facts, if they have offered to prove any that are material; and the complainants have the burden of proving the alleged violation of the injunction.

It is not proved that in the, business connection of May 1, 1882, tbe two companies jointly worked the whole line, or that either of them jointly or severally worked the road of the other. It is proved that in this respect the defendants have fully complied with the injunction by' retaining and exercising exclusive control of the road and business of the Concord company. The person whom they employed as manager in working the Concord road was also employed by the Lowell as manager in working the Lowell road. He was appointed manager of each, in pursuance of a mutual understanding of the companies that each would appoint him. Such an arrangement is consistent with, and apparently tends to promote, the interests of the stockholders and the public. Its legality was considered in’the decision to which the injunction refers, and is not a matter of doubt. Each of these companies has *377 corporate power to employ tbe same person as manager of tbe work of each, and to employ the same persons in other capacities, as the agents and servants of each, so far as they can properly do the work of their respective employers. Each of two corporations has the same right to do this that each of two natural persons— mechanics, merchants, or farmers — has to do the same thing. The distinction to be observed is between an unauthorized joint employment of an agent, by two companies as joint principals, in work which they are not authorized as joint principals to do, and an authorized several employment of the same person, by each, in those parts of the same work which each is authorized severally to do. The legal distinction, in some contingencies, would be practically important; and these complaining stockholders are entitled to have it enforced with the rigor of the law that maintains the beneficiary rights of trust property.

The running of some through trains, or through cars, for passengers and freight, on some highway between Boston, Concord, and places further north, is required by public convenience; and it is not legally necessary that the engines, engineers, or all or any of the train men should be changed at Nashua, Lawrence, Manchester, or Concord. The men who run a train on the Concord road, being exclusively the servants of the Concord while engaged in that work, do not go beyond the corporate power of the Concord when they run the same train on the Lowell road as the servants of the Lowell. In the distance of Concord from Boston by way of Nashua; the time of passage by rail between those places; the nature and extent of the public accommodation required on that highway; the public right of using it with economy, speed, and safety; and the private right of the stockholders that it be so used, — there is nothing that raises a presumption of law or fact against its being rightfully and properly operated by one manager, doing work of the Concord company as manager of the Concord, and doing work of the Lowell company as manager of the Lowell. There must be much unity of action in the service due from these companies to the public on this line of highway, and the evidence shows no reason why the ordinary work of such a servant, as a manager, a general ticket agent, an auditor, a cashier, or a paymaster, that is done in the cheapest and most efficient manner, on the Boston & Maine and other lines in several states, by one man, must be done, on this line, by more than one.

In the business connection of May 1,1882, the Concord company was not “ liable for any risk of empíoyés, passengers, or freight, on the local business of ” the Lowell company. By an express stipulation of the contract, the Concord confined itself, to that extent, within the bounds of its corporate power. A literal construction of the stipulation would not exclude all the risks of the local business of the Lowell from the Concord’s liability. But the evidence is that the manager understood, and acted upon the understanding, *378 that they were all excluded: and such apparently was the understanding of all parties. The union of risks of accident was an important feature of the partnership contract of Augúst 19, 1881; and the dissolution of the union of accidental losses in local business was an important practical change in management.

But the union of accidental losses in non-local business was not dissolved. In bearing those losses as joint principals, the companies continued an unnecessary community of interest in the business of both. The Concord continued unnecessarily to bear a share of those losses on the Lowell road in exchange'for a share of similar losses on the Concord road, unnecessarily borne by the Lowell. A loss happening by accident in the transport of through passengers or through freight on either road, and caused by the sole fault of the company on whose road it happened, was borne by both companies. To this extent, the complainants were unnecessarily made stockholders of both companies. The continuance of this community of interest was a violation of the injunction.

When a loss happens by accident in any business on either road, and there is a doubt to which company the loss belongs, the question can be summarily and properly decided by a competent and duly chosen manager, or other standing adjuster or referee. Irvin v. Nashville &c. R. Co., 92 Ill. 103, 108. The law does not require the question to' be settled by expensive litigation. No effort or offer has been made to show that there would be an error of law or fact, or any unfairness or unreasonableness, in a general presumption of fact that accidental losses belong to the company on whose road they happen, unless the evidence shows they belong to the other.

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Related

Insurance Co. v. Railroad Co.
104 U.S. 146 (Supreme Court, 1881)
Hartan v. Eastern Railroad
114 Mass. 44 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1873)
Irvin v. Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway Co.
92 Ill. 103 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1879)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 N.H. 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-concord-railroad-nh-1882.