110 F. 473 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Dakota | 1901
This cause was before the court on pleadings and proofs at a previous term of this court. The disposition then made of the cause was disapproved by the supreme court in Railway Co. v. Tompkins, 176 U. S. 167, 20 Sup. Ct. 336, 44 L. Ed. 417. The mandate in that case required this court to refer the case to some competent master to report fully the facts, and to proceed upon such report as equity should require. As no exceptions have been filed to the master’s report, the same stands confirmed, under rule 83. It only remains for this court to proceed upon the report as equity shall require.
In view of certain matters urged by counsel for defendants in argument, it is proper to state that this court can have no opinion upon the facts. Its duty is performed when a conclusion is drawn from the facts found which shall be consonant with equity. The master finds:
“The business of complainant bas at all times been conducted efficiently, economically, and honestly, and the operating expenses have in no case been greater than such efficient, economic, and honest management required.”
Such a finding must always be an important one in cases of this character. The master has taken the fiscal year ending June 30, 1897, being the year immediately preceding the filing of the bill, as a test year for showing the business of the complainant coriipany. He finds that during said year the net local freight earnings were $70,-888.43! the net passenger earnings, $19,332.59; the net mail, express, etc., $35,709.08, — total net earnings, $125,930.10. He also finds that if the rates prescribed by the schedule adopted by defendants had been in force during the year aforesaid, the net local earnings of complainant would have been: Net freight earnings, $53,049.18; net passenger earnings, $26.34; net mail and express earnings, $35,-709.08, — total net local earnings,' $88,784.60. These figures show a reduction in net earnings for the year 1897 of $37,145.50. ít is also found that the lines of complainant in South Dakota are mortgaged to secure bonds amounting to the sum of $19,365,247.10, which bear
The argument of counsel for defendants, so far as it is confined to the facts found, is to this effect: The master finds that if the proposed rates had been in force in 1897, the local gross freight earnings would have been $84,449.98; that it would have cost the complainant, to earn this sum, $31,400.80, leaving a net revenue of $53,049.18 on local freight; that a profit of $53,049.18 at an expense of $31,400.80 is a'large profit, and if there is any profit at all this court' will not enjoin the defendants. This argument is plausible upon its face, but the view taken by counsel of these figures is too narrow. It leaves out of view the fact that the company has $15,000,000 invested in its South Dakota lines, and has an annual interest charge of $1,101,749.93 accruing on bonds secured by mortgage on these same lines. Experience has taught this court that there is nothing so deceiving in this class of cases as to take two or three items, and, by a system of percentages, seek to arrive at a just conclusion.
It is insisted by counsel for defendants that, as the findings of the master show a surplus over operating expenses of $53,049.18 during the year 1897; that this court will not interfere by injunction. This would be true, if this amount could be called “dividends”; but the difficulty in this case, so far as I am able to interpret the decisions of the supreme court of the United States, is that, so long as the net revenues of the company do not pay one-half the interest on the bonded debt, its net local earnings cannot, in the true sense of the word, be considered as dividends. I find by an examination of the case of Reagan v. Trust Co., supra, that the earnings of the railroad whose affairs were under investigation in that case left a surplus over operating expenses for the year '1889 of $858,732.24; for the year 1890, $498,177.24; for the year 1891, $555,091.59. The supreme court, in the face of these surplus earnings, granted an injunction, and assigned as one of the reasons that the earnings of the company were not sufficient to pay one-half of the interest on the bonded debt, so that the conclusion necessarily follows that in the opinion of the supreme court, if the earnings of a railroad company do not pay but a small proportion of the fixed charges, then these surplus earnings cannot, in a true sense, be considered as dividends.
I have carefully considered the remaining points urged by counsel for defendants in so far as they bear on the facts found in this case, and cannot see how they change the result which must inevitably follow the findings of the master. It is not necessary to decide in this case just how much a railroad may be permitted to earn before