Venner v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

177 A.D. 296, 164 N.Y.S. 626, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5778
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 5, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 177 A.D. 296 (Venner v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Venner v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad, 177 A.D. 296, 164 N.Y.S. 626, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5778 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Thomas, J.:

Under the name of the New York Central Railroad Company (incorporated April 16, 1913), there has been a consolidation of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company, the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Company and nine other companies. Thus the city of New York is directly connected by railway with Chicago. But there are other terminals. Northerly and southerly of the line noted, in itself nearly 1,000 miles in length, stretches a vast territory of incalculable agricultural and mineral wealth, and containing industrial and commercial centers, Pittsburg, Columbus, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis and others towards the south; while northerly are Ogdensburg, Ottawa, Montreal, Detroit, Grand Rapids and other notable places. To bring such regions and intermediate localities into mutual communication, and to afford facilities for transportation to [302]*302distant destinations, many interpenetrating railways had been built and the control of some of them acquired by certain of the constituent companies entering into the consolidation. So railways, themselves, perchance, products of earlier unification, have finally become one system, whose principal arteries feed and are fed by many lines distributed in diverse directions. The due development of railways has resulted from such mergers. Nor does the prevailing thought concerning transportation question the benefit. Indeed, one cannot but know the evils to all concerned from the several ownerships of physically connecting lines, isolated in operation and segregated in control. I feel at liberty to state that the result of the experience of all classes of people using railways is that the possible scope in distance of a bill of lading or passenger ticket should be unlimited and in inverse ratio to the proximity and accessibility of a known and an accountable carrier. But it is to disrupt the consolidation (perfected December 23, 1914, pursuant to an agreement made in March, 1913) and to resolve it into its elements and even to reach further dissevering results that this action was brought on December 14, 1914. Considering only the elements actually united, such a disposition seems at variance with usual conceptions of public benefit. and tends to reactionary conditions that would be regarded as detrimental to the necessities of transportation, and as well subversive of essential rights of property. But the plaintiff would look beyond the immediate contract of consolidation to matters that do not appear in it. The law places some constraint upon railway increment by combination of independent lines. The reasons for it, and the historic basis, are presented in Standard Oil Co. v. United States (221 U. S. 1), and by Mr. Justice Holmes in Northern Securities Co. v. United States (193 id. 197). Without stopping here to note the learning on that subject, I go straight to the salient applications of it by the appellant.

Lines Alleged to Be Combined in Violation of the Sherman Act.

The lines which plaintiff alleges are combined in violation of the Sherman Act are: (1) The Michigan Central (ninety per [303]*303cent of the stock owned-by the former New York Central since 1898 and not directly consolidated); (2) The Lake Shore and Michigan Southern (organized under the laws of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and Illinois, ninety per cent of the stock owned by the former New York Central since 1898, directly consolidated); (3) New York, Chicago and St. Louis (known as the Nickel Plate; majority of stock held by the Lake Shore since 1882, not directly consolidated). They are deemed by the plaintiff as potentially parallel and competing because (a) each company has or had a line from Buffalo to Chicago, with several intervening common points; (b) the Lake Shore entering the consolidation controlled by stock ownership or by lease, or by both, (1) the Big Four system; (2) the Lake Erie and Western lines; (3) the Toledo and Ohio Central lines; (4) the Chicago, Indiana and Southern Company (in the consolidation), among themselves also alleged to be potentially parallel and competing: in some respects. The appellant also urges that the railways in several instances are parallel and competing within some of the States, where they are and where the new company is organized. There is other criticism of the consolidation which will be noticed conveniently. Whatever may be said at present has no reference to the Nickel Plate, unless specially mentioned. Plaintiff has owned 170 shares of the stock of the Michigan Central since 1904, 300 shares of the former New York Central since March, 1907, and 75 other shares since January, 1910, and 5 shares of the Lake Shore since December 2,1914. The New York Central Company will be called the New Company; the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company, the former New York Central, and the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern, the Lake Shore.

The Consolidation Is Merely a Change in the Form of Control and Does Not in Itself Offend the Federal Anti-Trust Laws.

The New Company succeeds to the property rights of the constituent companies, including the capital stock which they owned. Through stock ownership it chooses the directors of the Michigan Central and thereby fashions its policy, and through such agency, operates its railway, to the extent that [304]*304practical solidarity of ownership may make the will of stockholders authoritative. I understand that the appellant’s argument is, that the New Company succeeds to a railway (Lake Shore) that is parallel to, and competitive with, the Michigan Central, and has an interest and ability not existing before to restrain competition, and to lessen to those who would use either line the benefit that would come if one stockholder did not control both lines, whereby plaintiff as a stockholder is damaged. Of course, if the same person own company A and company B, he may, if he keep within the law, exalt one and depress the other. So the New Company could starve or rob itself in either direction, and to do so would deprive the communities on the depressed line, as well as the public, of legal opportunities, although it is a rational reflection that one does not make a pigmy of what for his needs should be a giant, and that it is not a reasonable inference that the New Company would weaken the efficiency and earning quality of a great tributary to its system, even if a supervising government, Federal or State, were not ready to thwart or to penalize such an attempt. Such ability to exalt' or to depress portions of properties pertains to every owner of them. But I understand, and later propose to show, that the anti-trust laws are not offended by mere naked capacity for perversion and self-injury, without any evidence of illegal purpose or interest, and where the several arms of transportation are congruous and serviceable growths, and where amputation of a limb would merely deform the body of the general system, with consequent injury to stockholders, creditors and the public. The former New York Central could, before the consolidation, do what the present New Company can do now. The latter can do no more. The grasp was as firm and the exercise of the power as facile in one case as the other. The majority of the directors of the New York Central, it is urged, were also a majority of the directors of the Lake Shore, the Michigan Central, the Nickel Plate; the Big Four, Lake Erie and Western, the Toledo and Ohio Central, New York and Harlem, and other companies, and the officers were practically identical.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 A.D. 296, 164 N.Y.S. 626, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/venner-v-new-york-central-hudson-river-railroad-nyappdiv-1917.