89 Ky. 375 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
The steamboats Blue Wiug and Hornet were, prior to the fifteenth day of September, 1885, rivals in the freight and passenger trade on the Kentucky river; rather they were rivals as public carriers on said river. On the fifteenth day of September, 1885, the appellant, George W. Anderson, as the sole owner of the Blue Wing, and Silas P. Douthit, on behalf of the appellees and himself, as the controlling and managing owner of the Hornet, entered into a written agreement, by which it was agreed that, in order to prevent the rivalry that then existed between said boats in said carrying business, and the consequent reduction, of freights and passenger charges below a fair compensation, the said boats should thereafter share in the net profits earned by each in the proportion of sixty-two and a half per cent, to the steamboat Hornet and thirty-seven and a half per cent, to the steam
It is to be observed that the respective owners of these boats entered into no partnership in business;, the property rights and responsibilities of the owner or owners of each boat remained as before the agreement was entered into; neither, assumed any duty or obligation in reference to the other that he was not under before the agreement was entered into, except
The coal merchant whose only means of transportation is by the Kentucky river may not be able, if compelled to pay exorbitant freight charges, to compete with his- rivals in business who have other
The judgment is affirmed.