Wiggins Ferry Co. v. Ohio & Mississippi Railway Co.

142 U.S. 396, 12 S. Ct. 188, 35 L. Ed. 1055, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 1981
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 4, 1892
Docket27
StatusPublished
Cited by174 cases

This text of 142 U.S. 396 (Wiggins Ferry Co. v. Ohio & Mississippi Railway Co.) 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
Wiggins Ferry Co. v. Ohio & Mississippi Railway Co., 142 U.S. 396, 12 S. Ct. 188, 35 L. Ed. 1055, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 1981 (1892).

Opinion

Mr.- Justice Brqwn,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

When the railway company became the purchaser at judicial sale of the property, assets and franchises of the railroad company, it found the latter in possession of a tract of land upon Bloody Island in the Mississippi Elver, making use of the same for its tracks, depots, warehouses and other terminal facilities, and also sending to and receiving from St. Louis at this point its passengers and freight by steamers not its own. It knew, or was bound to know, that this property did not .belong to the railroad company. As the record shows that it remained *407 in possession of these premises for the next fourteen years, using the same for some nine years of this time as they had before been used, sending its passengers and freight to and from St. Louis in the boats of the ferry company, and, in the language of the answer, treated the contract as in full force and binding upon them,” it must be assumed that it was fully informed of the ownership of such property, and the terms of the contract under which it was held and employed by the railroad company.

(1) Under these circumstances what was the legal relation of the railway company to this contract ? In a case between these same parties, (94 Illinois, 83,) the Supreme Court of Illinois held that the covenants contained in the contract of April, 1858, were not such as ran with the land, and that the relationship of landlord and tenant was not created by such contract between the ferry company and the railroad company. Indeed, the fact that the railway company and its receiver continued in the occupation of this property for over seventeen years, with the tacit consent of the ferry company, and without any suggestion of a tenancy or a demand for rent, is sufficient of itself to show that the relations between them were not those of landlord and tenant. Such relationship will never be implied when the acts and conduct of the parties are inconsistent with its existence. In Carpenter v. United States, 17 Wall. 489, 493, it was held by this court that no reason for the implication of a tenancy existed, “ when an express contract or an arrangement between the parties shows that it was not intended by them to constitute the relation of landlord and tenant, but that the occupation was taken and held for another purpose.” In that case, it was shown that the entry had been made in pursuance oí an agreement to purchase, and it was held that the tenant was not liable for use and occupation if the purchase were actually concluded.

The railway company was not the formal assignee of the interest of the railroad company in such a contract, nor could it become so under the eighth clause of the contract, without the consent of the ferry company. It is a well-established principle that the mere purchase of a railway under a fore *408 closure sale by a new corporation does not of itself make such new corporation liable for the obligations of the old one. Stewart's Appeal, 72 Penn. St. 291; Vilas v. Milwaukee &c. Railway, 17 Wisconsin, 497; Smith v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway, 18 Wisconsin, 17. The railway company, then, upon taking possession of the property of the railroad company, was at liberty to renounce the benefit of such contract, if it chose to do so, or to make such further arrangement with the ferry company as they might be able to agree upon. ' It did neither, but still maintained possession of the land. In view of the fact that the railway company used this property precisely as it had been used; improved it at great expense, by filling up low places and securing it from the overflow of the river; graded and paved the river front, erected buildings, paid the annual taxes, and, until 1871, employed the ferry company to transport its passengers and freight to and from the-city — in short, in the language of the answer, doing and performing “ all that the terms of the said contract required the said Ohio and Mississippi Railroad Company to do and perform,” we think it must be held in a court of equity to have adopted such contract, and made it its own. This construction certainly consorts with the acts and conduct of both parties, ■ between whom different modifications of the contract were proposed and discussed at different times from 1872 to 1875. Under the circumstances of this case, we agree with the conclusion of the special master, that the railway ■ company acquired an equitable estate in the premises, of like character as the legal estate previously held by the railroad company, which estate was in equity unimpeachable, and that the railway company and the ferry company ■ sustained the same-relation as .had previously existed under the deed between the railroad company and the ferry company; or, at least, that both parties are equitably estopped from denying that such was the case. It is not necessary that a party should deliberately agree, to be bound by the terms of a contract to which. he is a stranger, if, having knowledge of such contract,, he deliberately enters into relations with one of the parties, which are only consistent with the adoption of such contract. If a *409 person conduct himself in such manner as to lead the other party to believe that he has made a contract his own,, and his acts are only explicable upon that theory, he will not be permitted afterwards to repudiate any of its obligations. 2 Pom. Eq. Juris, sec. 965; Chicago & Alton Railroad v. Chicago &c. Coal Co., 79 Illinois, 121. This principle is applicable here, and it results from this that, if the railway company or its receiver has been guilty of a breach of this contract, the petitioner is entitled to recover its damages, by reason of such breach, in this proceeding, unless it has in some way become estopped by the judgments of the state courts of Illihois, or by its own conduct and disclaimers in this suit.

The first action between these parties was brought in 1874, in the St. Clair Circuit Court, and was determined upon a demurrer to the declaration, which alleged a breach of the third covenant of the contract in this, that in November and December, 1873, the defendant wrongfully and without plaintiff’s assent, brought to its railroad in East St. Louis and its said depot across the Mississippi River, from the city of St. Louis, in its cars, certain loads of grain to be transported eastwardly on its railroad, and caused said grain in said cars to be transferred across said river, from St. Louis to its depot at East St. Louis, by way of Venice, a village two miles above East St. Louis, on a rival ferry, and also caused certain carloads of coal to be taken in its cars, from East St. Louis, by way of Venióe, and thence across the Mississippi River to the city of St. Louis, on said' rival ferry. As the contract, which was set out in Kmc verla in the declaration, provided that the railroad company should employ the ferry company to transport across the river all persons arid property which might be taken either way by the railroad company “to or from Bloody Island,” there was an. apparent variance between the contract and the breach alleged in the declaration, in bringing- to its depot in East St. Louis the property in question.

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Bluebook (online)
142 U.S. 396, 12 S. Ct. 188, 35 L. Ed. 1055, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 1981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiggins-ferry-co-v-ohio-mississippi-railway-co-scotus-1892.