Union Pacific Railway v. United States

16 Ct. Cl. 353
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 Ct. Cl. 353 (Union Pacific Railway v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Pacific Railway v. United States, 16 Ct. Cl. 353 (cc 1880).

Opinion

Drake, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

By the AetJuly 1,1802, ‘ ‘ to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line from the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean f &c. (13 Stat. L., 489), the Union Pacific Eailroad Company was incorporated, with power “to lay out, locate, construct, furnish, maintain, and enjoy a continuous railroad and telegraph from a point on the 100th meridian of longitude west from Greenwich * * * to the western boundary of Nevada Territory.”

By said act several grants were made by the United States to said company, viz: 1. Eight of way through the public lands; 2. Alternate sections of the public lands over or near which the road should pass; and 3. Bonds of the United States, in aid of the construction of the road, to the amount of $16,000 per mile of road constructed by the company.

These grants were declared by the act to be made on condition that the company, among other things, first, should pay at maturity the bonds issued to it by the United States as aforesaid; and second, that all compensation for services rendered by the company for the government should be applied to the payment of the bonds so issued, and the interest- thereon, until the whole amount of principal and interest should be fully paid.

This second condition was afterwards changed by section 5 of the Act July 2, 1864 (13 Stat. L., 356), declaring that only one-half of the compensation there referred to should be required to be applied to the payment of the bonds issued to the company.

[355]*355By the 9th section of the act of July 1,1862, the Leavenworth, Pawnee and Western Eailroad Company of Kansas was authorized to construct a railroad and telegraph line from the Missouri Eiver, at the mouth of the Kansas Eiver, to the initial point of the Union Pacific Eailroad on the said 100th meridian of longitude, upon the same terms and conditions, in all respects, ' as were provided in that act for the said Union Pacific Railroad., and to connect at that point with that road. The name of the Leavenworth, Pawnee and Western Eailroad Company was afterwards changed to the “ Union Pacific Railroad Company, Eastern Division” (13 Stat. L., 361); and thereafter was again changed to “Kansas Pacific Eailway Company.” (15 Stat. L., 348.)

By the ninth section of the act of July 2,1864, it was provided that any company authorized by the act of 1862 to construct a railroad from the Missouri Eiver to the initial point aforesaid of the Union Pacific .Eailroad, might construct its road so as to connect with the Union Pacific road at any point westwardly of that initial point; and that “in aid of the construction of so much of its road as should be a departure from the route here-inbefore provided for its road, such company shall be entitled to all the ben efits, and be sidbject to all the conditions and restrictions of this actj” but “that the bonds of the United States shall not be issued to such company for a greater amount than is hereinbe-fore provided, if the same had united with the Union Pacific Eailroad on the 100th degree of longitude.”

Under this authority the Kansas Pacific Eailway Company, instead of constructing its road in a nearly direct line from the mouth of Kansas Eiver to the initial point aforesaid, constructed it through Denver, Colorado, to Cheyenne, Wyoming.

The whole length of its road from the mouth of Kansas Eiver to Denver, is 638 miles. For 394 miles of that distance (which was the distance the road would have traversed if it had connected with the Union Pacific Eailroad at its initial point aforesaid), the Kansas Pacific Eailway Company received the bonds of the United States, as provided by the act of 1862; and for the whole distance of 638 miles it received also the land grant provided by that act.

Under the authority of section 16 of the act of July 2,1864, the Union Pacific Eailroad Company, the Kansas Pacific Eail-way Company, and the Denver Pacific Eailway Company, en[356]*356tered into articles of union and consolidation on tbe 24th of January, 1880, and thereby became a corporation under the name of the Union Pacific Bail way Company; which company, under and by virtue of said articles of consolidation, it is averred in the petition, succeeded to, possessed, and is entitled to receive from the government of the United States all and singular the grants, benefits, immunities, and guarantees, and to Jo any and all acts and things to be done and performed, and became entitled to, and thereafter held in its own right, all the property, real, personal, and mixed, and all dioses in action, and debts, on whatever account, of, owing, or belonging to either of the companies so consolidated.

This question now presented is connected with the transportation of the United States mail over that part of the line of the Kansas Pacific Eailroad extending from Kansas City, Missouri, to Denver, which, prior to Julyl, 1879, was, by the Post-Office Department, made a mail route, known as “route No. 33,001”; and that department fixed the compensation- for the carrying of the mails over that route at $159.03 per mile from that date; and since then the mails have been carried over said route.

This suit is brought to recover compensation, at that rate, for carrying the mails during the first and second quarters of the year 1880; the aggregate compensation for which, over the whole 638 miles, amounted to $50,065.91.

Of this the sum of $30,885.66 was earned on the 394 miles of the road on account of which the Kansas Pacific Bail way Company received bonds of the United States; and the claimant demands judgment for one-half of that sum.

As to the remainder, $19,180.25, earned on the 244 miles of the road, for which no bonds of the United States were received by the Kansas Pacific Eailway Company, the claimant prays judgment for the whole amount.

To this petition the defendants demur, and the demurrer raises the question whether, upon the facts set forth in the petition, the claimant has any right to recover.

This question arises, first, as to the 394 miles for which subsidy bonds were issued; and it is contended, on behalf of the •defendants, that, notwithstanding the above-cited provision of the act of 1864, declaring that only one-half of the compensation for services rendered to the go vernm ent by the road should be required to be applied to the payment of those bonds, there is yet a right in the government to withhold payment of the other half.

[357]*357In our opinion there is no just ground for this position. The right of the government to withhold any of the money earned by the company for services rendered to the government, for the purpose of ultimately applying it to the payment of the bonds, rests, not upon any general principle of law,' but upon statute; and when the statute, after requiring all of that money to be so applied, is changed so as to require “only one-half,,” it is a clear authority for the payment of the other half to the company. So far, then, as boncerns the claim for the one'-half of the compensation for carrying the mails over the 394 miles, the claimant appears entitled to recover.

As to the $19,180.25, earned for carrying the mails over the 244 miles, it is claimed on behalf of* the defendants that the.

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Related

Maxwell v. United States
49 Ct. Cl. 262 (Court of Claims, 1914)
Central Pacific Railroad v. United States
21 Ct. Cl. 180 (Court of Claims, 1886)

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ct. Cl. 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-pacific-railway-v-united-states-cc-1880.