Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Marshall

136 U.S. 393, 10 S. Ct. 846, 34 L. Ed. 385, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2221
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 19, 1890
Docket293, 1105
StatusPublished
Cited by174 cases

This text of 136 U.S. 393 (Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Marshall) 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
Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Marshall, 136 U.S. 393, 10 S. Ct. 846, 34 L. Ed. 385, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2221 (1890).

Opinion

*401 Mr. Justice Miller,

after stating the ease, delivered the ■ opinion of the court.

As regards the appeal of the railway company, two principal questions are presented. The first of these is, was there a valid contract that the corporation should not only establish its eastern terminus at Marshall City and put up there,the depot buildings and machine shops, car works, etc., included in the contract, but should keep them there perpetually? Second, if this were so, is it a contract which a court of chancery' should enforce ?

If it were not for the word “ permanent,” as found in the communication of the committee of the city of Marshall to Mr. Scott, we should not think it easy to justify the inference that the obligation was to maintain forever at that place what the company engaged to establish there. The clause of the letter of this committee to Colonel Scott, which first mentions the conditions is, that the bonds of the county of Harrison were voted upon the condition, “that said company shall establish its eastern terminus and Texas office at the city of Marshall, and shall locate and construct at said city its main machine shops and car works, thereby securing at said city connections with said terminus provided for by the act incorporating said Texas and Pacific Eailway Company and an act supplemental thereto.” The same proposition is afterwards stated in the same letter in this form: “ In consideration of the donation of the said sum of three hundred thousand dollars and said sixty-six acres of land, the said Texas and Pacific Eailway Company will permanently • establish its eastern terminus and Texas office at the city of Marshall, and will also establish and con- • struct at said city the main machine shops and car works of said railway company.”

The two conveyances by the city of the land which constituted the sixty-six acres in reciting the consideration for which the conveyance was made, speak of it, as. we have already said, as an agreement to establish the eastern terminus at the city of Marshall, and also to construct at the city the main machine shops and car works of .said railway company. This shows *402 that while the obligation, of the company to establish its eastern terminus at the city of Marshall and construct its depot and machine shops and c.ar works is spoken of at one - time as an agreement to permanently establish these appurtenances to the railroad, yet at other times, when the same subject is mentioned as the consideration for what was done by the city and the same matters recited, the word permanent” is omitted. The object of the city might very well ■be supposed to have been attained by the selection of the city, as a terminus of the railroad, the construction and establishment there of its offices, its- depot, its car manufactory and other machinery, since there was hardly any ground to suppose that the railroad company would ever have inducements enough to justify it in removing all these things to another place. And in point of fact it appears that for a period of about eight years they were permanently located at the city of Marshall. If, however, the city desired something more than this, if it desired to make sure -that these establish- • ments should forever remain within the limits of the city of Marshall, and that the railroad company should be bound to keep them there forever, such an extraordinary obligation should have been acknowledged in words which admitted of no controversy. It would have' been very easy to have inserted ■ into this contract language which forbade the company from ever removing the terminus of the road to some other point, or from ever removing or ceasing to use the depot, or the car and machine shops, and thus have made the obligation, perpetual. But it seems to us that the real essence of the contract was that the "railroad company- should, in its process of construction, make this city its eastern terminus, and. should ■establish there its depot, its machine shops and its car’works; and that-this should be done in the ordinary course of its business, with the purpose that it should be permanent. . But it did not amount to a covenant that the company would never cease to make its eastern terminus at Marshall; that it would forever keep up the depot at that place; that it would Jor all. time continue to have its machine shops and ckr shops there and that whatever might be the' changes of time *403 and circumstances, of railroad rivalry and assistance, these things alone should remain forever unchangeable. Such a contract, while we do not say that it would be void on the ground of public policy, is undoubtedly so far objectionable as obstructing improvements and changes which might be for the public interest, and is so far a hindrance in the way of what might be necessary for the advantage of the railroad itself and of the community which enjoyed its benefits, that we must look the whole contract over critically before we decide that it bears such an imperative and such a remarkable .meaning.

It appears to us, so far from this, that the contract on the part of the railroad company is satisfied and performed when it establishes and keeps a depot, and sets in operation car works and machine shops, and keeps them going for eight years, and until the interests of the railroad company and the public demand the removal of some or all of these subjects of the contract to some other place. This was the establishment at that point of the things contracted for in the agreement. It was the fair meaning of the words “ permanent establishment,” as there was no intention at the time of removing or abandoning them. The word “ permanent ” does not mean forever, or lasting forever, or existing forever. The language used is to be considered according to its nature and its relation to the subject matter of the contract, and we think that these things were permanently established by the railway company at Marshall.

A case almost precisely like the one under consideration came before this court and is reported in 7 Wall. 290, Mead v. Ballard. In that case the' ancestor of Mead, on the 7th day of September, 1847, conveyed to Amos Lawrence, of Boston, a certain tract of land in Wisconsin, in which conveyance was the following language: “ Said land being conveyed upon the express understanding and condition that the Lawrence Institute of Wisconsin, chartered'by the legislature of said Territory, shall be permanently located upon said lands, and on failure of .such location being made on or before the 7th day of September, 1848, and on repayment of the purchase money *404 without interest, the said land shall revert to and beconae the property of said grantors.” The board of trustees of the institute, on the 9th of August, 1848, passed a resolution locating the institution on the land described in the deed. The necessary buildings were made, and the institution was in full operation by November, 1849. The buildings cost about $8000, but were burned down in the year 1857 and were never rebuilt. But in 1853 a larger building, called the universityj was erected on an adjoining tract of land. Under these circumstances, Mead, the heir of the grantor, tendered the purchase money, demanded a reconveyance of the land, and on its refusal brought suit. In that case, the condition was for the permanent location of the university.

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Bluebook (online)
136 U.S. 393, 10 S. Ct. 846, 34 L. Ed. 385, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 2221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-railway-co-v-marshall-scotus-1890.