Thomas v. Railroad Co.

101 U.S. 71, 25 L. Ed. 950, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1884
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 29, 1880
Docket169
StatusPublished
Cited by318 cases

This text of 101 U.S. 71 (Thomas v. Railroad Co.) 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
Thomas v. Railroad Co., 101 U.S. 71, 25 L. Ed. 950, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1884 (1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The ground on which the court held the contract to be void and on which the ruling is supported in argument here, is, that the contract amounted to a lease, by which the railroad, rolling-stock, and franchises of the corporation were transferred to plaintiffs, and that such a contract was ultra vires of the 'company.

' It is denied by the plaintiffs that the contract can be fairly called a lease.

But we know of no element of a lease which is wanting in this instrument. “ A lease for years is a contract between lessor and lessee, for possession of lands, &c., on the one side, and *79 a recompense by rent or other consideration on the other.” 4 Bac. Abr. 632.

“ Any thing corporeal or incorporeal lying in livery or in grant may be the subject-matter of a lease, and, therefore, not only lands and houses, but commons, ways, fisheries, franchises, estovers, annuities, rent-charges, and all other incorporeal hereditaments are included in the common-law rule.” Bouv. L. D., “ Lease; ” 1 Wash. Real Prop. 310.

The railroad and all its appurtenances and franchises, including the right to do the business of a' railroad and collect the proper tolls, are for a period of twenty years leased by the company to the plaintiffs, from whom in return it receives as rent one-half of all the gross earnings of the road. The usual provision for a right of re-entry on the failure to perform covenants in addition to the special right to terminate the lease on notice, and the usual covenant for repairs and proper running of the road, equivalent to good husbandry on a farm, are inserted in the instrument.

The provision for the complete possession, control, and use of the property of the company and its franchises by the lessees is perfect. Nothing is left in the lessor but the right to receive rent. No power of control in the management of the road and in the exercise of the franchises of the company is reserved. A solitary exception to this statement, of no value in the actual control of affairs, is found in the sixth clause of the lease, which covenants that the lessees will discharge any one in their service on the request of the corporation, evidenced by a resolution of the board of directors.

But Avhile we are satisfied that the contract is both technically and in its essential character a lease, Ave do not see that the decision of that point either Avay affects the question on which we are to pass. That question is, Avhether the railroad company exceeded its powers in making the contract, by Avhat-ever name it may be called,' so that it is void.

It is, perhaps, as well to consider this question in the order of its presentation by the learned counsel for plaintiffs, upon whom the burden of shoAving the error of the Circuit Court devolved the duty of proving one of the following propositions : —

*80 1. The contract was within the powers granted to the railroad company by the act of the New Jersey legislature under which it was organized;

2. That if this be not established, the lease was afterwards ratified and approved by another act of that legislature.

3. That if .both these propositions are found to be untenable, the contract became an executed agreement under which the rights acquired by plaintiffs should be legally respected.

The authority to make this, lease is placed by counsel primarily in the following language of the thirteenth section of the company’s charter: —

“ That it shall be lawful for the said company, at any time during the continuance of its charter, to make contracts and engagements with any other corporation, or with individuals, for the transporting or conveying any kinds of goods, produce, merchandise, freight, or passengers, and to enforce the fulfilment of such contracts.”

This is no more than saying, “ you may do the business of carrying goods and passengers, and may make contracts for doing that business. Such contracts you may make with any other corporation or with individuals.” No doubt a contract by which the goods received from railroad or other carrying companies should be carried over the road of this company, or by which goods or passengers from this road should be carried by other railroads, whether connecting immediately with them or not, are. within this power, and are probably the main object of the clause. But it is impossible, under any sound rule of construction, to find in the language used a permission to sell, lease, or transfer to others the entire road and the rights and franchises of the corporation. To do so is to deprive the company of the power of making those contracts which this clause confers and of performing the duties which it implies.

In The Ashbury Railway Carriage & Iron Co. v. Riche, decided in the House of Lords in 1875 (Law Rep. 7 H. L. 653), the memorandum of association, which, as Lord Cairns said, stands under the act of 1862 in place of a legislative charter, thus described the business which the company was authorized to conduct: “ The objects for which this company is established are to make, sell, or lend on hire, railway-carriages and *81 engines, and all kinds of railway plant, fittings, machinery, and rolling-stock; and to carry on the business of mechanical engineers and general contractors ; to purchase and sell' as merchants, timber, coal, metals, or other materials; and to buy and sell any such materials on commission or as agents.” This company purchased a concession for a railroad in Belgium, and entered into a contract for its construction, on which it paid large sums of money. The company was sued afterwards on its agreement with Riche, the contractor, and the contract was held valid in the Exchequer Chamber by a majority of the judges, on the ground that while it was in excess of the power conferred on the directors by the memorandum, it had been made valid by ratification of the shareholders, to whom it had been submitted.

The House of Lords reversed this judgment, holding unanimously that the contract was beyond the powers conferred by the memorandum above recited, and being beyond the powers of the association, no vote of the shareholders whatever could make it valid. The case is otherwise important in. its relation to the one before us, but it is cited here' for its parallelism in the construction of the clause defining the powers of the company.

If a memorandum which describes the parties as engaging in furnishing nearly all the materials, machinery, and rolling-stock which enter into the construction of a railroad and its equipments, and then empowers them to carry on the business of mechanical engineers and general contractors, cannot authorize a contract to build a railroad, surely the authority to build a railroad and to contract for carrying passengers and goods over it and other roads is no authority to lease it and with the lease to part with all its powers to another company or to individuals. We do not think there is any thing in the language of the charter which authorized the making of this agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
101 U.S. 71, 25 L. Ed. 950, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-railroad-co-scotus-1880.