Wilmington City Ry. Co. v. People's Ry. Co.

47 A.2d 245, 47 A. 245, 38 Del. Ch. 1
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedSeptember 27, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 47 A.2d 245 (Wilmington City Ry. Co. v. People's Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilmington City Ry. Co. v. People's Ry. Co., 47 A.2d 245, 47 A. 245, 38 Del. Ch. 1 (Del. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Nicholson, Chancellor:

The complainant filed its bill in this cause on the 15th day of May, praying as follows: “That the said respondent, its successors, officers, employés, workmen, contractors, agents, deputies, and attorneys, may be restrained by the injunction of this honorable court from locating, constructing, operating, or maintaining a city railway within the city limits of the city of Wilmington, from cutting, tearing up, or removing the tracks of your orator, or any portion thereof, from hindering or delaying the operation of the cars over the lines of your orator, from interference with, cutting, or removing the trolley wires of your orator, or any portion thereof, and that a preliminary injunction be issued restraining said respondent and its successors, officers, employés, contractors, workmen, agents, deputies, and attorneys in like manner, until the further order of the chancellor.” Upon presentation of the bill a rule was *3 issued returnable on the 23d day of May, requiring the respondent to show cause why the preliminary injunction prayed for should not be granted, with a restraining order until the determination of the rule. The respondent filed its answer on the 29th day of May, the hearing of the rule having been continued at request of counsel on both sides, and in June the motion for the preliminary injunction was argued upon bill, answer, and affidavits. Counsel for respondent then obtained leave to file supplementary briefs, and complainant’s counsel to reply. These briefs were subsequently filed without oral argument, the last regular brief being submitted by the senior counsel for respondent on the Sth day of July.

The complainant alleges in its bill that under the provisions of its act of incorporation, passed February 4, 1864, entitled “An act to incorporate the Wilmington City Railway Company,” being chapter 406, vol. 12, Del. Laws, it was granted the exclusive right and privilege of building and operating a city railway within the city limits of the city of Wilmington, and that it has constructed, and is now operating and maintaining, lines of city railway through and along the streets of the city of Wilmington, which, as set forth in,its bill, aggregate many miles of railway. It further alleges (section 5) : “That under color of the provisions of the act of the general assembly entitled ‘An act providing a general incorporation law,’ approved March 10, 1899, a company known as ‘People’s Railway Co.’ has attempted to acquire rights and franchises to build certain city railways in the city of Wilmington through and along the streets named in the resolution hereafter referred to, and has procured the passage by the street and sewer department of the city of Wilmington of a resolution of which a copy is hereto annexed, and marked ‘Exhibit B.’ That the alleged charter of the said People’s Railway is illegal and void, as is also the pretended consent obtained from the street and sewer department of the city of Wilmington, and does not authorize or empower the said respondent to locate, construct, operate, or maintain a street railway or railways within the city limits of the city of Wilmington, and moreover impairs the obligation of the contract aforesaid between your orator and the state of Delaware.” The respondent denies the exclusive right as alleged in complainant’s bill, *4 and further alleges “that it is in all respects a legal and valid corporation existing under a legal and valid charter, and that the consent obtained from the said department is valid, and does authorize and empower it to locate, construct, operate, and maintain the street railways therein provided,” and that none of the matters aforesaid in any way impair the obligation of any contract between the said complainant and the state of Delaware.

There are practically no' issues of fact in this cause, but its decision involves the construction of the constitution of 1897 in a most important particular, and the interpretation of the general incorporation law above cited. The bill and answer raise some questions which were fully discussed and determined by this court upon motion for the preliminary injunction in the case of Wilmington City Ry. Co. v. Wilmington & B.S. Ry. Co., argued by the same counsel who appear in this cause, and reported in 46 Atl. 12. The new issues to be determined are sufficiently raised, however, by the bill and answer, and have been discussed by counsel on both sides at great length, and with great earnestness. In the case to which I have referred, the Wilmington City Railway Company, which is also the complainant in this cause, prayed the court to restrain the Wilmington & Brandywine Springs Railway Company from entering the city of Wilmington or crossing the complainant’s tracks. It was contended on the part of complainant that its charter gave it the exclusive right to locate, construct, and maintain a city railway in the city of Wilmington, and that the special act of the legislature incorporating the Wilmington & Brandywine Springs Railway Company, and authorizing it to locate, construct, and operate its railway in the city of Wilmington, was in violation of the constitution of the United States, and a mere nullity, being an interference with the vested rights of the complainant, an attempt to impair the obligation of the contract between it and the state of Delaware contained in its charter giving it the exclusive right. It also' claimed that the Brandywine Springs Railway Company has forfeited whatever rights it might have possessed originally to enter the city. The first contention was considered at great length, and the authorities bearing upon the question were elaborately reviewed and analyzed, the conclusions arrived at being:

*5 First. That, although the charter of the Wilmington City Railway Company did grant it the exclusive right claimed, yet the reserved power of revocation by the legislature contained in the constitution of 1831 “became a part of all charters subsequently granted, as if expressed in the instrument itself,” and therefore became an essential element of the contract entered into between the state of Delaware and the Wilmington City Railway Company.

Second. That the “reserved power of revocation by the legislature means ‘the power to revoke at the pleasure of the legislature any or all of the franchises granted to a corporation, the power to recall all the rights, privileges, or franchises granted to a corporation, or any number less than all, or any single right, privilege, or franchise’; that it cannot mean less than this, and that it cannot mean more, and that it differs from the reserved power ‘to alter, amend or repeal the charter in not including the power to regulate or control corporations in the manner illustrated in the cases cited’; that the revocation may be either direct, or, as in the Georgia case cited (West End & A. St. R. Co. v. Atlantic St. R. Co., 49 Ga. 158), ‘by necessary implication by the passage of an act necessarily inconsistent with some right or privilege possessed by some existing corporation.’ ”

Third.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A.2d 245, 47 A. 245, 38 Del. Ch. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmington-city-ry-co-v-peoples-ry-co-delch-1900.