3 F. 775 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1880
The defendant corporation owns the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, and, in virtue of its purchase of the south-eastern lease of the Nashville & Decatur, and ownership of a majority of the capital stock of the Nashville, Chattanoga & St. Louis Railway Company, controls every railroad centering at Nashville. It has, for many years past, been engaged in carrying such freights as "are usually transported by rail, including live stock. Twelve or more years since, when it needed facilities for loading and delivering live stock, the complainants bought a lot contiguous to defendant’s depot, in Nashville, at $14,000, and fitted it up as a stock yard, at a cost of $16,000 more. There was no express contract between complainants and defendant in relation to the matter. But it is clear that it was a convenience to defendant’s business. By the permission or acquiescence of defendant, complainants’ yard was connected with defendant’s road by appropriate stock gaps and pens, which have been in use by both parties for more than twelve years; but on the twenty-fifth of March, 1880, the defendant and the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway Company entered into a contract with the Union Stock Yard Company, whereby the said stockyard company stipulated “to erect, maintain, and keep in good order,” etc., “a stock yard in the city of Nashville, on the line of the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway,” outside the city limits, and more than a mile from complainants’ yard. And the parties of the first part — the railroad companies — among other things, agreed that “they would establish no other stock yard in Nashville,” and that they
In furtherance of this contract Edward B. Stahlman, defendant’s traffic manager, and owner of $5,000 of the capital stock of the stock-yard company, issued the following order, addressed to defendant’s agent, dated July 10, 1880: “On the fifteenth inst. there will bo opened and ready for business the stock yards erected by the Union Stock Yard Company, at Nashville, Tenn. These yards have every facility for the proper handling and care of live stock, and will be constituted our stock delivery and forwarding depots. Live stock from and after that date consigned to Nashville proper, or destined to any points over our line via Nashville, should be way-billed care of the Union Stock Yards; ” and on the twenty-fourth of the same month James Geddes, defendant’s superintendent, supplemented the foregoing order with a notice to complainants in the following words: “I am directed by Mr. De Fnniak, general manager, to notify you that after the last day of July, 1880, no delivery of stock will be made to you at our platform here, Nashville depot,” to-wit, the platform, gaps and pens communicating with complainants’ yard, where the defendant had heretofore delivered to them.
Complainants remonstrated against this threatened discrimination against them and their business; but, being unable to induce any change in defendant’s avowed policy, filed their bill in which they pray for an injunction to restrain “defendant’s agents and officers and servants from interfering with or in any manner disturbing the enjoyment and facilities now accorded to complainants by the said defendant upon its lines of railway, for the transaction of business now carried on by the complainants, and especially from exclud
The facts suggest the very important inquiry, how far railroads, called into being to subserve the public, can be lawfully manipulated by those who control them to advance, incidentally, their own private interests, or depress the business of particular individuals or localities, for the benefit of other persons or communities. As common carriers they are bylaw bound to receive, transport, and deliver freights, offered for that purpose, in accordance with the usual course of business. The delivery, when practicable, must be to the consignee. But the rule which requires common carriers by land to deliver to the consignee personally at his place of business, has been somewhat relaxed in favor of said roads on the ground that they have no means of delivering beyond their lines; but it was held in Vincent v. The Chicago & Alton R. Co. 49 Ill. 33, that at common law, and independent of the statute relied on in the argument, that in cases where a shipment of grain was made to a party having a warehouse on the line of the carrying road, who had provided a connecting track and was ready to receive it, it would be the duty of the railroad company to make a personal delivery of the grain to the consignee at his warehouse; because, say the court, “the common-law rule must be applied, as the necessity of its relaxation” did not exist.
This rule is just and convenient, and necessary to an expeditious and economical delivery of freights. It has regard to their proper classification, and to the circumstances of the
If railroad corporations possess such right, they can destroy a refractory manufacturer, exterminate or very materially cripple competition, and in large measure monopolize and control these several branches of useful commerce, and dictate such terms as avarice may suggest. We think they possess no such power to kill and make alive. Impartiality in serving their patrons is an imperative obligation of all railroad companies; equality of accommodations in the use
The case in hand is but a sample of what might be done by these corporations if the power claimed in this case is possessed by them. Complainants’ stock yard was purchased and fitted up at a heavy outlay of money. It was, at the time, a necessity to defendant’s business. By the express agreement or tacit understanding of the parties suitable connections for receiving and delivering stock were made, of which the defendant availed itself for 12 years. But, after thus accepting the benefits of complainants’ expenditures, the defendant proposes to sever its connections, withhqld further accommodations, decline to receive from or deliver stock at complainants’ yard, concentrate its patronage on the Union Stock Yard Company, require all consignors to way-bill their stock to the care of said favored company, and, by this invidious discrimination, compel complainants to carry on their trade through a rival yard, or else abandon their established and lucrative business. The execution of defendant’s threat would destroy complainants’ business, depreciate their property, and deprive the public of the protection against exorbitant charges which legitimate competition, conducted on equal terms, always insures. Complainants’ yard is on defendant’s road; it furnishes every needed facility; was purchased and improved in the belief that they would receive the same measure of accommodation extended to others sustaining the same relation to defendant; defendant can receive
But defendant, protesting that the proposed discrimination in favor of the Union Stools Yard Company would, if executed, constitute no wrong of which complainants ought justly to complain, contends — First, that complainants, even supposing the law to be otherwise, have an adequate remedy at law, and therefore cannot have any relief from a court of chancery; and, second, that if a chancery court may entertain jurisdiction, no relief in the nature of a mandatory order to compel defendant to continue accommodations to the complainants ought to be made until the final hearing. If such is the law it must be so administered. But wo do not concur in this interpretation of the adjudications. Those cited in argument are not, we think, applicable to the facts of this case. Complainants could, in the event defendant carries its threat into execution and withholds the accommodations claimed as their right, sue at law and recover damages for the wrong to be thus inflicted. But they could not, through any process used by courts of law, compel defendant to specifically perform its legal duty in the premises. And this imperfect redress could only be attained through a multiplicity of suits, to be prosecuted at groat expense of money and labor; and then, after reaching the end through the harassing delays incident to such litigation, complainants’ business would be destroyed, and the Union Stock Yard Company, born of favoritism and fostered by an illegal and unjust discrimination, would be secure in its monopoly. Here an adequate remedy can be administered and a multiplicity of suits avoided.
One other point remains to be noticed. Ought a mandatory order to issue upon this preliminary application ? Clearly not, unless the urgency of the case demands it, and the rights of the parties are free from reasonable doubt. The duty which the complainants seek by this suit to enforce is one imposed and defined by law — a duty of which the court has judicial knowledge. The injunction compelling its performance, pend