Union Pacific Railroad v. Mason City & Fort Dodge Railroad

199 U.S. 160, 26 S. Ct. 19, 50 L. Ed. 134, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 1034
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 6, 1905
Docket18
StatusPublished
Cited by117 cases

This text of 199 U.S. 160 (Union Pacific Railroad v. Mason City & Fort Dodge Railroad) 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
Union Pacific Railroad v. Mason City & Fort Dodge Railroad, 199 U.S. 160, 26 S. Ct. 19, 50 L. Ed. 134, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 1034 (1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The Mason City Company .contends that its right to the use of the .bridge and approaches was determined by the decision of this court in Union Pacific Railway Company et al v. Chicago &c., Railway Company, 163 U. S. 564. And further, that if mistaken in this contention it has that right under the statutes of the United States, and by the terms of a contract between the Union Pacific Railroad Company, on the one hand,- and the city of Omaha and County of Douglass, Nebraska, oh the *165 other. The case in 163 U. S. arose on two contracts, one between-the Union Pacific Railway Company and the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Company, and the other between the first named company and the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Company. The opinion of the Circuit Court, 47 Fed. Rep. 15, considered only the contracts, sustained them, and entered a decree for the plaintiffs, awarding the joint use of the bridge and its approaches. That decree was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals, 2 C. C. A. 174, and the case was thereupon brought on appeal to this court. Here the decision was rested not simply on the contracts but also on an obligation held to have been imposed on the defendant by the statutes of the United States, the court saying (p. 586):

“For the provisions of the Pacific Railroad acts relating to the bridge over the Missouri River, its construction and operation, imposed on the Pacific Company the duty of permitting the Rock Island Company to run its engines, cars and trains over the bridge and the tracks between Council Bluffs and Omaha, and we think that South Omaha was included.”'

This was followed by.several paragraphs pointing out the statutes imposing the duty. Counsel for the Union Pacific Company in the cáse- at bar earnestly contend that so much of that opinion, as referred to this statutory obligation, was obiter dictum, that .the statutes were misconstrued, and also that the status of the present Unidn Pacific Company differs so much from that of the then defendant as to make the ruling inapplicable.

We are unable to yield our assent -to these contentions. While the claim of the plaintiffs, in that case was founded directly upon contracts, yet if there.were a statutory duty to let them into the joint use of the bridge and its approaches that was enough to sustain a decree in their favor, and the contracts might be regarded as simply relieving the court of the work of settling minor matters, such as method of use, compensation therefor, and matter of control. Indeed, the alleged invalidity of the contracts was rested largely on the scope of the statutes, *166 and the duties to the Government and the • public imposed thereby on the railroad company. Of course, tvhere there are two grounds, upon either of which the judgment of the trial court can be rested, and the appellate court sustains both, the ruling on neither is obiter, but each is the judgment of the court and. of equal validity with the other. Whenever • a question fairly arises in the course of a-trial, and there is.a distinct decision of that question, the ruling of the court in respect thereto can, in no just sense, be called mere dictum. Railroad Companies v. Schutte, 103 U. S. 118, in which this court said (p. Í43):

“It cannot be said that a case is not authority on one point because, although that point was properly presented and decided in the regular course of the consideration of the cause, something else was'found .in the. end which disposed of the whole matter. Here the .precise question was properly presented, fully argued and elaborately’ considered in the opinion. The decision on this question was as much a part of the judgment of the court as was that on any other of the several matters on which the case as a whole depended.”

Further, we see no reason. to question the .conclusion announced in the former opinion. Chap. 67 of the Laws of Congress, 1871, 16 Stat. 430, granting' power to issue bonds for the construction of the bridge, provided that “for the use and protection of said bridge and property, the Union Pacific Railway Gompany shall be empowered, governed, and limited by the provisions of the act entitled ‘An act to authorize the construction of certain bridges, and to establish them as post roads,’ approved July twenty-five, eighteen hundred and sixty-six, so far as the same is applicable thereto.”

The act referred to in this quotation (14 Stat. 244) authorized the construction of nine bridges, as to the first of which (a bridge across the Mississippi River at Quincy) it was stated that “when constructed-all trains of all roads terminating at said river, at or opposite, said point, shall be allowed to cross said-bridge for reasonable, compensation, to be made to the owners of said bridge.”

*167 To the seven provided for by succeeding sections authority is granted “upon the same terms, in the same manner, under the same restrictions, and with the same privileges as is provided for in' this act in relation to the bridge at Quincy, Illinois.”

The remaining one of the nine bridges (that over the Mississippi. River at St. Louis)'was to be constructed by the St. Louis and Illinois Bridge. Company, “subject to all the conditions contained in said act of incorporation and amendments thereto, and not inconsistent with the following terms and provisions contained in this act.”

It is insisted that the act of 1871 makes applicable to the Omaha bridge only the two or three provisions in the act of 1866 common to all the bridges named therein, and as the section authorizing the bridge- at St. Louis contained no direction for its use by terminating railroads, that requirement, although imposed on- all the other bridges, was not brought into the act of 1871, and is inapplicable to'the Omaha bridge. Counsel for the Union Pacific Company have also called our attention to a few statutes authorizing the construction of bridges which contain no provision in respect to use by other railroad companies. As against this, counsel for the Mason City Company have cited over 350 acts, to be found in the several statutes of Congress, from-the fifteenth to the thirty-second volume, in each of which there is a direction for use by other companies. Obviously, that was the general policy of Congress, and the few exceptions thereto were dictated by the peculiar circumstances of the cases.

Bearing in mind this general -policy of the Government, we think it a fair construction of the-act of 1871-that incorporating, as it did, the provisions of the act of I860-, if-must have intended to incorporate not merely those in terms "applied to all the bridges, but also one in harmony with thn t general policy and applied to substantially all, and this, although in reference to a single bridge, other and special directions were made. Aside, therefore, from any reliance upon the doctrine of stare decisis,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 U.S. 160, 26 S. Ct. 19, 50 L. Ed. 134, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 1034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-pacific-railroad-v-mason-city-fort-dodge-railroad-scotus-1905.