22 Mo. App. 286 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs filed their petition in the trial court, by which they sought to reform the contract hereinafter set out, and to obtain a mandatory injunction compelling the defendants to perform the contract thus reformed, -and also restraining them from discriminating as common carriers against the plaintiffs.
A temporary injunction was applied for by the plaintiffs, which the court refused to grant. The parties thereupon went to trial upon the petition, answers, and replies hereinafter referred to, and the court, after a protracted hearing, made its decree, reforming the contract as prayed for in the plaintiffs’ petition, but declined to grant any further relief. Prom this decree the plaintiffs appeal.
In order to convey a correct understanding of the issues tried and determined, it is essential to set out the plaintiffs’ petition in full, as well as the substance of the various answers filed by the defendants.
The petition avers that all the defendant companies
That, on the date last aforesaid, the plaintiffs N. Sylvester Chouteau and J. Gilman Chouteau were the owners of a portion of block four hundred and thirty-seven in said city, which is situated between Eleventh and Twelfth streets, and near to Poplar street, in said city ; that they were, also, the owners of a warehouse, located on said block, near the Union depot grounds, and near the freight depot of the defendants ; that the chief value of the plaintiffs’ property consisted in its convenience for the construction of warehouses for the receipt and handling of freight to be transported over the defendant’s lines of railroad ; that, at the last named date, the terminal point of the defendant’s line was distant from said block belonging to said Chouteaus, just the space across Eleventh street; that, on said date, the other plaintiffs were engaged in business in St. Louis as warehousemen and commission merchants, under the name of Evans Brothers, and their place of business was at the warehouse aforesaid, on block four hundred and thirty-seven, which was then occupied by them as lessees of the Chouteaus, their co-plaintiffs.
That all the plaintiffs, except James W. Evans, were at said date and up to the suspension of the cotton business in the petition afterwards mentioned, also engaged in business at said city as warehousemen and commission merchants, under the name of Evans Brothers Cotton Compress Company, in storing, handling, buying, and selling cotton, and using in connection with such business a cotton compress of the value of $25,000, said compress being located on said block four hundred and
“Articles of agreement entered into this twenty-fifth day of July, A. D. 1874, by and between The Union Railway & Transit Company of St. Louis, a corporation, ■and J. Gilman Chouteau and N, Sylvester Chouteau, of the same place. Whereas the said J. Gilman Chouteau and N. Sylvester Chouteau have, by a certain agreement of even date herewith, granted to the said The Union Railway & Transit Company of St. Louis certain rights and privileges, among others, the right to lay and use railway tracks on and across Eleventh street in said city, in front of their property; now, therefore, in consideration thereof, the said The Union Railway & Transit Company of St. Louis, does hereby agree to and with said J. Gilman Chouteau and said N. Sylvester Chouteau that they shall have the right to connect with the tracks of the said The Union Railway & Transit Company of St. Louis, the tracks of The Evans Tobacco, & Cotton Compress Company, of which J. Gilman Chouteau and N. Sylvester Chouteau are members, and which purposes to locate its warehouse in city block four hundred and thirty-eight, of said city of St. Louis, by laying and maintaining not more than two (2) tracks and ■connecting the same with said tracks of The Union Railway & 'Transit Company of St. Louis, on said Eleventh street, not more than two hundred (200) feet north of the north line of Poplar street, and the said The Union Railway & Transit Company of St. Louis*291 «does hereby agree to and with said J. Gilman Chouteau .and said N. Sylvester Chouteau that it will carry freight and cars on and over said tracks, and generally do the freighting'on the same of the said The Evans Tobacco and Cotton Compress Company on the same terms and at the same rates on and at which similar service is performed for other parties by it.
“In testimony whereof, the said The Union Nail-way & Transit Company of St. Louis has caused these presents to be executed in due form by its president and .attested by its secrerary, the day and year first above mentioned.
“The Union Nailway & Transit
“Company op St. Louis,
“By W. H. Clements,-
“ President
Copy of Seal?
'[The Union Nail way & Transit Company.]
Which said contract was by the defendant company «duly acknowledged and recorded in the city of St. Louis ; that it was then agreed and understood, for the ■consideration expressed in said contract and for other good considerations, that such contract should continue for the term of fifty years ; that all of the plaintiffs, except James W. Evans, who afterwards became a member ■of the firm of Evans Brothers, were intended and meant ■and were included in the name “Evans Tobacco <& Cotton Compress Company,” mentioned in said contract, and that the tobacco and the cotton, and other commission and warehouse business, in which the plaintiffs were differently interested, as thereinbefore set out, were intended to be expressed by, and included in, the name “E/ans Tobacco & Cotton Compress .Company.”
The petition further recites that, by the mutual mistake of the parties to the contract, block four hundred and thirty-seven was called four hundred and thirty-«eight. The petition prays that this mistake be corrected
That on or about October 1, 1874-, said warehouse was completed and leased to the plaintiffs, the Evans Brothers, who then went into occupation of the same and that they are still in occupation thereof ; that the Chouteaus were induced to erect and construct said warehouse, only by reason of the railroad facilities to be afforded their lessee, and in leasing the same to the Evans Brothers, the Chouteaus exacted a rent from them far greater than would have been required without the railway service contracted for ; and that said tenants, in making their contract with the Chouteaus for the tenancy of the warehouse, were only induced to do so because of the railroad facilities to be afforded them under said contract.
The petition further recites that on the' first day of January, 1879, The Union Railway & Transit Company of
The amended petition recites that since the institution of this suit, the St. Louis Bridge Company and the Tunnel Railroad Company of St. Louis have leased all o£ their property, including the track running into plaintiffs’ warehouse, to the Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railway Company and the Missouri Pacific Railway 'Company for the unexpired term of their lease; and that the latter companies did assume all the obligations imposed upon their lessors and, also, the obligations of this contract.
That in accordance with the requirements of said contract, The Union Railway & Transit Company did, between the first day of October, 1874, and the date of its lease, and that thereafter it lessee did, until the twenty-fifth daijr of July, 1879, successively give the plaintiffs the railway service over said railway tracks required by them and did, over such extension track or switch; carry feights and cars into and from the plaintiffs’ warehouse ; .and that said track did become a part of the defendants’ lines of railway, and that said warehouse became and was and is located on the defendants’ line of railway.
The petition further avers that by reason of the conyenience and capacity of plaintiffs’ warehouse, and by reason of the defendants having faithfully carried out their contract, the plaintiffs built up a large and profitable business as warehousemen and commission merchants, and their warehouse had become a popular and usual place for storing and dealing in cotton, tobacco, and other commodities, out of which plaintiffs were realizing large profits.
That since the last named date, to-wit, July 25, 1879, the defendant companies have violated their
That it has been and is usual and customary for all] the railroads in the city of St. Louis, including the defendants, to permit connection to be made with their-lines by switches or branches to elevators or warehouses and to haul and transport cars over the same, making a. delivery to such elevators and warehouses ; and that this-has always been the usage and custom of the defendants, and still is, except against these particular plaintiffs and their warehouse aforesaid.
That the defendants have unlawfully discriminated' against the plaintiffs and their warehouse and their business as commission merchants, in favor of other ware-housemen and others doing a commission business.
The petition states that, by reason of such. refusal' and breaches of contract, the plaintiffs were greatly and irreparably injured in their business; that their trade-fell off, and owing to their inability to obtain railroad • service business destined to them was diverted, resulting in a daily loss of profits and a constant diminution in their business ; and, as to a portion of their business, the-plaintiffs have, in consequence of said refusal, been compelled to abandon such business; that they have been compelled to haul all the freight they received from the defendants’ warehouse to the plaintiffs’ warehouse by wagons and horses ; that such method of transportation is slow, uncertain, and unsatisfactory to shippers and dealers; and that it is impossible for the plaintiffs to-compete with other warehouses, to which the defendants, have been and are giving railroad facilities.
That the plaintiffs’ injuries and destruction of business could not be adequately or fairly compensated by damages which might be recovered in a suit at law ; that
The prayer of the petition is as follows: “Wherefore, plaintiffs pray the court, by its decree, to order, require, and compel the defendants to-carry out, conform to,, and comply with, the terms of said contract, agreements, and obligations, and to fulfil and execute the duties required of them by law, and to enjoin and restrain the-defendants from delivering freight or cars consigned to-, plaintiffs, or either of them, in their individual names, or under the firm name of Evans Brothers, or Evans Brothers-Cotton Compress Company, at any freight depot or other-point on lines of their railroad, except the warehouse of plaintiffs so erected on the line of defendants’ road, and that they be enjoined and restrained from refusing to receive at plaintiffs’ warehouse, freight and cars destined for transportation on or over defendants’ lines of road, and from refusing to transport the same across said Eleventh street, as required by said contract and by law ; and that a temporary injunction may now be a warded herein, enjoining and restraining the defendants as-herein prayed.”
This petition was sworn to by one of the plaintiffs.
The answer of The Union Eailway & Transit Company, in addition to a general denial, avers that during the time that company performed service for the plaintiffs’ warehouse, it was done in pursuance of its business as a common carrier, and not under or in pursuance of any contract; that since December, 1878, the freight traffic over its line had increased to such an extent that it was wholly impossible to transport cars to and from the plaintiffs’ warehouse over the switch across Eleventh street, and at the same time perform and discharge its duties to the public.
The answer of the Tunnel Railroad of St. Louis is identical with the answer of the St. Louis Bridge Company.
The answer of the Wabash, and of the Missouri Pacific, in addition to a general denial, sets up that neither of said companies had any notice of a contract set out in the petition, nor have they ever recognized the same as valid in any way; that said contract never was valid, because it was made without any valuable consideration, and because it does not purport to continue for any definite length of time; and that whatever service had been performed by the said defendants had not been under said contract, but in pursuance of their business as a common carrier ; that owing to the situation of the plaintiffs’ warehouse, it has been, and is, impossible to give the plaintiffs the service claimed, by reason of its being hazardous and endangering the safety of trains, and of the traveling public.
To each of the answers aforesaid the plaintiffs, by way of reply, filed a general denial.
The defendants maintained in the trial court, and do maintain here: (1) That the contract of The Union Rail! way & Transit Company was one with J. Gilman Chouteau and N. Sylvester Chouteau, and that all the Evans plaintiffs are improper parties plaintiff. It is needless to determine whether there is any merit in that objection, as it was not made in the court below, as required by Re
It is next maintained by the defendants that tha contract so ught to be enforced is lacking in that certainty and definiteness which will justify a court of equity in decreeing its specific performance. That this uncertainty is very marked in the following particulars : It contains no provision relative to the duration of the contemplated service, and there is nothing to show on its face, whether it is to continue during the corporate life of the contracting defendant, or whether it is to be determinable at the will of either party, or whether it is to continue as long as the condition of things remains unchanged and the plaintiffs may require the service, nor is there anything to show what the words “similar service for other parties” by the contracting carrier mean — whether such words mean switch service in general, or service in moving cars and freight of similar intrinsic difficulty.
The plaintiffs, in order to supply these omissions and this want of definiteness, appearing on the face of the contract, introduced testimony tending to show that there ■was no limit to the contract. One of the plaintiffs testified that the president of the contracting defendant stated to him that he would give them this railroad service as long as they acquired a corporate existence. In order to supply the omission in regard to the rates at which similar service is performed for other parties, the plaintiffs introduced testimony tending to show that there was a uniform schedule of switch charges. to all of the warehouses in the city of St. Louis, and that their uniformity was irrespective of the location or difficulty of access, or length of switch to the different warehouses. At the same time, however, the plaintiffs did further show that, by contract between some of the defendants and the Union Depot Storage & Shipping Company, the latter
On the other hand, the defendants gave testimony tending to show that there is great difference in the cost of switching, and that the rule as to charges varies with each particular case; that the service demanded by the plaintiffs is very expensive, and the service demanded by the Union Depot Storage & Shipping Company is attended with very little difficulty.
Conceding, for the sake of argument, that the first difficulty in the way of specifically enforcing the contract, namely, its duration, is removed by the testimony, yet it is evident that sufficient other elements of uncertainty remain to justify the court in declining its specific enforcement. The right to specific performance is never absolute, but depends on the proper exercise of a sound judicial discretion as applied to the particular facts, and one of the well established principles in such cases is that the subject of the contract should be clearly ascertained to the satisfaction of the court which is called upon to decree its performance. Paris v. Raley, 61 Mo. 461; Taylor v. Williams, 45 Mo. 80, 84.
The weight of authority inclines to the rule that specific performance will not be decreed where the duties sought to be enforced are of a continuous character, even though the duties be clear and well defined. Where such duties are not only continuous, but at the same time uncertain and undefined, it can not be granted on any rational hypothesis. Pomeroy on Contracts, sects. 157, 159, 160, 308, 312; Pry on Specific Performance, 154; Blanchard v. Railroad, 31 Mich. 43; Railroad v. Speer, 32 Ga. 550 ; Wilson v. Railroad, 9 Ch. App. 279 ; Richmond v. Railroad, 33 Ia. 422; Powell Coal Co. v. Railroad, 9 Ch.. App. 331; Danforth v. Railroad, 30 N. J. Eq. 12; 2 Tenn. Ch. 773. The plaintiffs’ counsel contends that this is not a bill for specific performance, but one for a mandatory injunction, and that the latter will
That the violation of a contract requiring continuous-duties maybe enjoined, although a court of equity would not decree its specific performance, is a proposition which-is sustained by authority. LumLey v. Wagner, 1 DeG. M. & G. 616; Railroad v. Railroad, 5 DeG. & Sm. 138 Western Union Telegraph Go. v. Railroad, 1 McCrary, 558; Singer Co. v. Union Co., 1 Holmes, 256. But neither' reason nor authority goes to the extent that a court of equity will enjoin the violation of a contract, or compel its performance by mandatory injunction, when its terms are so uncertain and indefinite as to be incapable of accurate formulation. It is difficult to see how, under' such circumstances, an intelligent decree could be framed,, or how the court could ever determine whether its injunction has been violated by the party enjoined. All that-can properly be done in such a case, is to remit the parties to their legal remedy for damages caused to them by the violation of the contract.
A further claim was advanced by the defendants, to-the effect that a compliance on their part with the contract, as claimed by the plaintiffs,- would, in a great measure, prevent the performance of their duties as common carriers to the public.
On that subject the law is well settled. The principiéis, that where a railroad company has granted to it, by its charter, a franchise intended, in a large measure, to-be exercised for the public good, the due performance of those functions being the consideration of the public-grant, any contract which disables the corporation from performing these functions is void and against public-policy. Thomas v. Railroad, 101 U. S. 83 ; Railroad v. Seeley el al., 45 Mo. 212, 219 ; Marsh v. Railroad, 64 Ill. 414; Railroad v. Coal Co., 68 Ill. 489 ; The Slate v. Railroad, 29 Conn. 538; Express Co. v. Railway, 57 Me, 188, 196.
It is true that courts should cautiously scrutinize as
It appears, from the testimony, that all the freight coming from the east passes through a long tunnel on one main track; that the switch connecting with the plaintiffs’ warehouse emanates from this main track at the western opening of the tunnel, and that this switch -can only be operated at the expense of cutting off travel through the tunnel during its operation. There was evidence tending to show that the operation of the switch under these circumstances is attended with delay and .extra expense to the railroad, and with more or less danger to passengers and operatives.
The plaintiffs, in rebuttal of this evidence, offered to ■show that the defendants entered into a stipulation with them by which they agreed to render the service which the plaintiffs claim they are entitled to over the track .across Eleventh street into the plaintiffs’ warehouse, by ■car or by wagon, during the pendency of the controversy. This stipulation the court excluded, but at the same time it permitted one of the plaintiffs to testify that such ■service was rendered, during a great part of the time, per ■car. The exclusion of this stipulation is complained of by the plaintiffs.
As the stipulation expressly provides that the service might be rendered either by car or by wagon, and that it was made without prejudice to the rights or claims of the parties thereto, and as the court, moreover, permitted the plaintiffs to show, not what the defendants agreed to do, but what they actually did do, we can not see how the plaintiffs were prejudiced by the exclusion of the •stipulation.
Nor is there any force in the plaintiffs’ argument that if the arrangement of the defendants’ switch facili
. Conceding that such course would be practicable, which, owing to the situation of the property, is exceedingly doubtful, yet, it must be evident that such condemnation would not be for a public use, but for the sole purpose of enabling the defendants to perform a private contract, and as such, to say the least, a very questionable exercise of the right of eminent domain.
We have referred to the foregoing for the purpose of showing that the court tried the case, in all respects, judiciously and with care. As far as any rights of the ■ plaintiffs, under the contract, are concerned, we prefer to rest our decision on the controlling proposition that the contract is not sufficiently definite and certain in its details to admit justly of a decree specifically enforcing it, or of a decree negatively enforcing it, by preventing its violation by mandatory injunction.
The question still remains, whether, independent of the contract, the court erred in refusing to the plaintiffs a mandatory injunction, preventing the defendants from discriminating against the plaintiffs in charges for freight delivery. Our statute, Revised Statutes, section , provides, among other things, that no railway company shall hereafter make any discrimination in charges or facilities in the transportation of freight or passengers between transportation companies or individuals, nor in the transportation of freight between commission merchants or other persons engaged in the transportation of freight, etc.
It further provides, “that any corporation, etc., violating the provisions of this section shall forfeit and pay to the injured party the whole amount of such transportation charge, to be recovered before any court of competent jurisdiction.”
The court is asked to decree that the defendants be •required to grant to the plaintiffs the same service, and .at the same rate, as the Union Depot Storage & Shipping ■Company enjoys.
That the statute has never contemplated that the aid ..of courts of equity should be invoked for the purpose of -violating its provisions, is self-evident. If the terms granted to the storage company are an unlawful dis«crimination against the plaintiffs and all others, the .court, in enforcing the same terms in favor of the plaintiffs, would discriminate in favor of the plaintiffs against ..all others but the storage company.
N or can the court in this, or any similar proceeding, regulate all freight charges between the carriers and their -customers. Entertaining the greatest respect for the • eminent judge who, on the circuit bench, decided the case • of the Southern Express Co. v. Railroad (10 Fed. Eep. ■215), we are yet free to say that, in our opinion, the Teamed district judge was right when he said, by way of • dissent, that “it is beyond the powers and functions of •the courts to hold, practically, under their control the .administration of railroad affairs as to freight and other -business.”
Whether the remedy pointed out by the statute is '.necessarily exclusive, may be questioned, but that the ,-court, under the facts developed by the testimony in this -case, can not, and ought not, to grant to the plaintiffs the ■relief they seek, is, in our opinion, free from doubt.
It results that the decree of the trial court must be .-affirmed. All the judges concurring, it is so ordered.