United States v. Lehigh Valley Railroad

254 U.S. 255, 41 S. Ct. 104, 65 L. Ed. 253, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1191
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 13, 1916
Docket1
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 254 U.S. 255 (United States v. Lehigh Valley 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
United States v. Lehigh Valley Railroad, 254 U.S. 255, 41 S. Ct. 104, 65 L. Ed. 253, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1191 (1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clabke

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree entered in a suit to dissolve the intercorporate relations existing at the time it was commenced in March, 1914, between the defendant corporations, other than Girard Trust Company, for the reason, it is averred, that they were so, united that they Constituted a combination in restraint of interstate trade and commerce in anthracite coal and aq attempt to monopolize and an actual monopolization of a part of such commerce, in violation of the Anti-Trust Aut of Congress of July 2,1890, c. 647, 26 Stat. 209; and also, for the alleged reason that the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company was transporting over its lines of railway anthracite coal in which it had an interest, in violation of the Commodities Clause of the Act of June 29, 1906, c. 3591, 34 Stat. 585.

*258 It will be necessary to consider only the relations and activities of the Lehigh Valley Railroad Company, hereinafter designated the Railroad Company, the Lehigh Valley Coal Company, designated the Coal Company, and the Lehigh Valley Coal Sales Company, designated the Sales 'Company.

A condensed history, chiefly admitted, of the organization, stock ownership and conduct of these three companies, and the application to the facts thus developed of fully established principles of law, will be decisive of the case.

The limited area of anthracite-producing territory, its relation to the interstate transportation system and markets of our country and the various attempts to monopolize and control the great railway tonnage originating therein have all been so often described in reported cases, that they need not be repeated here in detail. 1

It will suffice for our present purpose to say that the anthracite-producing territory, is very restricted in area, it ail being within seven counties of eastern Pennsylvania with the known deposits underlying only 309,760 acres of land. For trade purposes it is divided into three fields, the northerly is called the Wyoming field, the next southerly the Lehigh or Middle field and the southerly the Schuylkill field. The lines of the Railroad Company extend into the Wyoming and Lehigh fields but to only one colliery in the Schuylkill field. Much the greater part of its tonnage is derived from the Wyoming field, and four-fifths of it moves in interstate commerce.

The Railroad Company in 1913 owned 1438 miles of main line and a total trackage of 3354 miles, its capital *259 stock was $60,600,000, its funded debt was $85,800,000, its total assets had a book value of $182,700,000, but a much greater actual value, and it carried a larger tonnage of anthracite coal than any other railroad in the country— over 13,000,000 tons in 1913, this being 18.84% of the total 69,000,000 tons shipped over all railroads in that year.

In 1864 the Railroad Company by merger with a coal company acquired a small acreage of anthracite-containing land and thereupon added the mining, shipping and selling of coal to its duties as a carrier.

The annual reports of the Railroad Company show that, as early as 1868, it entered upon the policy of acquiring by purchase and lease the control of as much as possible of the anthracite coal-containing lands tributary to its lines of railroad for the purpose of preventing, or, when it had become established of suppressing, competition in the carrying of coal over its interstate lines to interstate markets.

Thus the annual report of the Company for 1868 shows that, it having been determined that it was of “the utmost importance” to the future welfare of the company to secure “ control of tonnage for our roads from regions having other outlets to market,” the Company, by merger of two coal companies, obtained coal lands which secured to it the whole trade of the Hazelton Coal field and “the withdrawal from competition” of a business so large as to greatly strengthen the “future prospects of our road.”

In 1869 the policy of securing a proportion of the coal trade from each region by the purchase of interests in companies owning lands on or near the several branches of the company was approved and “continued.”

In 1871 it is reported, “We have continued to acquire interests in coal lands situated in our various regions.”

In 1872, after detailing the purchase for $2,000,000 of 5800 acres of land having upon it ten collieries, the report of the Company declares that, “Should there be a corre-. *260 sponding increase for a year or two more the total consumption will so nearly equal the full capacity of the min® for production as to render unnecessary all attempts to regulate or control the trade ”

After reciting that a contract had been entered into granting to the Delaware, Susquehanna & Schuylkill Railroad Company trackage rights to tidewater,- the report of the Railroad Company for 1894 continues, saying that there is thereby assured to the Company “an important traffic ... for which several outlets existed and which had been in contention for some time previously. It also reinoved an incentive to the construction of. further new lines into the territory tributary to the Lehigh Valley System.”

Although in 1875 it caused the Coal Company (hereinafter discussed) to be organized for the purpose of taking title to coal lands then owned or which might thereafter be purchased, and although the Anti-Trust Law was enacted in 1890, nevertheless, the Railroad Company continued its policy of purchasing for control and from time to time it hcquired and took in its own name the title to extensive tracts of coal lands and to stocks in coal companies. Thus 'in 1885 it acquired the entire capital stock of the Wyoming Valléy Coal Company, the owner of 1657 acres of anthracite land, in 1900 it acquired the entire capital stock of the W®twood Coal Company, a considerable owner of anthracite land, in 1901 it acquired the entire capital stock of the Connell Coal Company, and in the same year the entire capital stock of the Seneca Coal; .Company, the owner of 1308 acres of anthracite land.

In the years prior to 1905 the Railroad Company made a number of other purchases of coal land, but in that year it made its largest single and most significant purchase, when it acquired, for the sum of $17,440,000, all of the capital stock of Coxe Brothers & Company, Inc. This company was the largest independent coal operator then *261 on the line of the Railroad Company, and its production for 1905 exceeded 1,100,000 tons. It not only owned extensive areas of coal land, on which were located eight collieries, but it was also owner of all of the capital stock of the Delaware, Susquehanna & Schuylkill Railroad Company, which owned fifty miles of railway which served other large independent mines in addition to those of Coxe Brothers & Company, Inc. This railroad had connections with the Reading, Pennsylvania and New Jersey Central lines, which were taken up or fell into disuse when the control of it passed to the defendant Lehigh Valley Railroad Company. The Railroad Company continued to own all.

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Bluebook (online)
254 U.S. 255, 41 S. Ct. 104, 65 L. Ed. 253, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lehigh-valley-railroad-scotus-1916.