Village of Fort Loramie v. Gress

21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81
CourtShelby County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1918
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81 (Village of Fort Loramie v. Gress) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Shelby County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village of Fort Loramie v. Gress, 21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Barnes, J.

(orally).

This is an action of injunction, the petition being filed by the village of Fort Loramie against the defendants, C. P. Gress and the Western Ohio Railway Company. Gress, however, is a nominal defendant and we are dealing with the First National Bank of New Bremen, Ohio.

[82]*82The village of Fort Loramie, in their petition, complains of the defendant that they were intending to cease operation of the railroad known as the Minster & Loramie Railroad. This company was incorporated several years ago and operated a railroad from Minster to Fort Loramie. The First National Bank of New Bremen were‘bondholders of the railroad, and on two different occasions receivers were appointed for the railroad. The first receivership was adjusted in some way and the road continued its operation, with possibly a refinancing. After a time .a receiver was appointed again and the road was sold to C. P. Gress, who represented the First National Bank of New Bremen, the First National Bank being the holder of the bonds and also some notes for money loaned the railroad company. Shortly after the bank purchased this railroad property they signified their intention, as the petition sets forth, that they intended to cease operation of the railroad. The petition sets forth further that they not only intended to cease operation of the road, but they intended to junk the road. The answer of the bank admits that they intended to cease operation, but denies that they intended to junk the road until they received an order so to do from the proper authority. The answer of the bank, in a cross-petition, asks for authority from the court to junk the road. The Western Ohio was also made a party defendant, but at the time of filing the original petition no injunctive order was sought against the Western Ohio, but subsequently a temporary restraining order was sought and granted, restraining the railroad company from ceasing operation under an operating contract originally entered into between the Minster & Loramie Railroad Company and the Western Ohio Railway Company.

It is the contention of the plaintiff in this case that by reason of the charter that was granted to the Minster & Loramie Railroad Company from the state, and also by reason of the franchise that was secured from the village' of Fort Loramie, that thereby the railroad must continue to be operated and they have not the right to cease operation or to junk it.

The bank makes several defenses. They contend that, since the road does not pay operating expenses and interest on invest[83]*83ment, they should have the right to cease operation without any order of court. They also claim that if they have not a right to cease operation without an order of court, that a court of equity in this proceeding should grant them .the right and give them an order to cease operation. The bank also contends that whatever the rights might be of the village of Fort Lorarnie against the Minster & Lorarnie Railroad Company if they are still operating, that those rights would not hold against the First National Bank of New Bremen. They claim that it would not hold against the bank for the reason that the bank is a national bank and therefore would not have the right to operate a railroad, and that any of the contractual relations that might have existed through a franchise or charter, would be ultra vires as to the bank. It is also contended that the contract between the Minster & Lorarnie Railroad Company and the Western Ohio Railway Company is not assignable and that the bank is not ,a successor or an assignee of the Minster & Lorarnie Railroad Company as to either contract, and for that reason that an order can not be made to continue the road, or the operation of the road; and, further, that for this and other reasons they should he granted the right to junk the road.

Taking the questions up in what seems to the court to be the logical order in investigating the matter, the first query comes as to what obligations rest on the Minster & Lorarnie Railroad Company. They procured a charter from the s.tate under the then existing law of the state; they also procured a franchise from the village of Fort Lorarnie. Now, it is contended on behalf of the plaintiff that, under and by virtue of the charter obligations of the state, the railroad company must continue to operate its road and can not cease to operate unless it is authorized by some competent authority. In support of that proposition, one of the leading eases that is cited is 53 Connecticut, 833 (5 Atlantic Reporter, 695). There were .also cited 92 Ohio State, page 1, and another case at page 9, and Railway v. Hatchett, 192 S. W., 694. These eases, except the Connecticut case, have to deal more particularly with regulations of railroads. There is no question that it is the law of this state that a railroad [84]*84company, when it receives charter rights from the state and builds a railroad under and by reason of those charter rights, is subject to the regulations and any existing law of the state that regulates a public service corporation, and this rule is true as to any public service corporation; if it operates it must subject itself to these rules and regulations so long as they are reasonable. If the state by the Legislature or any other body that power is delegated to, imposes unreasonable regulations on a public utility, such regulations as would in a measure confiscate the property of the public utility, a court may relieve the public utility from observing those regulations. In other words, a regulation can not confiscate property. These decisions that were cited by plaintiff attempting to show the obligation of the Loramie Company to operate this road hardly touch this question, except the Connecticut case, because they deal with regulations and this is not a question of regulation. The Connecticut case is based on the peculiar language of the law of that state. That is, they hold that by reason of the charter obligations existing under the law of that state, that a railroad company in that state can not cease operations even though they may be compelled to operate at a loss, and they cite decisions of other states and say that is the weight of authority in other jurisdictions than Connecticut. The contrary rule has been adhered to only in the states where the charter obligations are not such as to make it obligatory on a public service corporation to operate under any and all circumstances.

Now making investigation in Ohio as to what the rule would be here, -1 find that the Ohio courts have not followed the Connecticut rule, although in some decisions in Ohio they have referred to this Connecticut case. But when the question has been really before them they have not adhered to that rule. So that in Ohio there is probably no charter obligation that would compel the operation of a public utility regardless of whether it can be operated at a profit or not, and unquestionably none where a public utility can not operate except at a loss. The evidence in the case at bar shows that while the road could possibly pay operating expenses, it could pay no more than operating expenses; [85]*85it could pay nothing to speak of as interest on the investment; it could not’ create any contingent fund to keep up repairs that are bound to be required in the future, and it could not be said it would not be a losing.venture from an investment standpoint. So that, dealing with this question as to the charter obligations alone, I do not think that the plaintiff would be entitled to an order of injunction.

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Related

Southern Railway Co. v. Hatchett
192 S.W. 694 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-fort-loramie-v-gress-ohctcomplshelby-1918.