92 F. 735 | 7th Cir. | 1899
after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
Upon this record three questions are presented for consideration: First, is the Wiggins Ferry Company shown to be liable for the rental reserved by the lease? second, are the Venice & Carondelet and the East St. Louis Connecting Railways parallel or competing lines of railway? and, third, do the leases amount to a “consolidation,” within the meaning of the constitution of ,the state of Illinois prohibiting the consolidation of the stock, franchises, or property of parallel or competing lines of railway? These questions will be considered in their order.
1. The bill is brought to recover rental claimed to be due upon the lease. The . sole averment connecting the Wiggins Ferry Company with the transaction is that it “has some interest in the East St. Louis Connecting Railway Company, by virtue of which it controls and 'operates the said connecting company, and has an interest in, and is bound by the terms of, the leases above set out, but the precise nature of the relation existing between the said defendant companies is now unknown to these complainants, and in making up the reports of gross earnings required by the lease caused its agents and bookkeepers to fraudulently suppress and reduce the earnings of through traffic passing over the leased premises and the other lines operated by the Wiggins Ferry Company”; by reason whereof “only one-half of the proper earnings from such through traffic appeared in the account from which the annual statement was rendered to the said Louisville, Evansville & St. Louis Consolidated Railroad Company as a basis for fixing the annual rent to become due and payable under the terms of the said contract of lease, * * * and by means whereof it was deprived of large revenues, amounting in the aggregate, for the years mentioned, to about the sum of $50,000, which these complainants are entitled to have and receive from the said defendant companies or either of them.” It is to be observed that this is a suit founded purely upon the lease qnd to recover the rental thereby reserved. The only ground upon which the equity jurisdiction can be invoked or sustained is to enforce the accounting which the lease required to be kept of the gross earnings of the lines specified in the lease. The lessor company, however, had no equitable lien upon, or any right to, those gross earnings, or any part of them. The account of them which was to be kept had no function except as a measure of the quantum of rental to be paid under the lease. The language of the contract is explicit, and leaves no room for contention in this respect. The lessee is to pay as rental the sum of $8,000 per annum in equal monthly installments at the end of each and every month. This amount of rental was absolute for the first three years of the lease, but thereafter, should the gross earnings of the East St. Louis Connecting Railway Company from all its business, including the earnings of all lines, exceed the sum of $160,000 for any one yea:;, then the lessee covenanted and agreed to pay as rental a sum equal to 7 per cent, of such gross earnings; .8 per cent, if the gross earnings should exceed $170,000 for any one year, and 9 per cent, if it
2. The constitution of the state of Illinois (article 11, § 11) provides: “No railroad corporation shall consolidate its stock, property or franchise with any other railroad corporation owning a parallel or competing line.” Were these two railways “parallel or competing lines,” within the meaning of this provision? They were both designed as belt lines of railway, intended principally to connect the termini of the many railroads terminating at East St. Louis with the river transfers to the city of St. Louis. There was the Madison Ferry Transfer at the north and at or near Venice, the ferry of the Wiggins Ferry Company between Venice and Cahokia creek,' and that of the
3. Is a lease for 10 years a consolidation of the franchises or property, within the constitutional provision? It is contended that the term “consolidation” means a permanent union of the interests, management, and control of two roads, either in the formation of a new company out of the consolidated one, or else by consolidated management of the old ones unitedly while their distinct corporate entities still remained. This distinction is true in the general sense in which one speaks of the “consolidation” of railroads. The term may also mean Ihe act of forming into a more firm or compact mass, body, or system. The constitutional convention, representing the people of the state, sought to provide against monopolies, and to preserve to the public the benefit that would accrue from competition between parallel or competing lines of railway. It sought for practical results. It intended to provide that parallel or competing lines should continue to be competing, and this it aimed to accomplish by prohibiting the consolidation of the stock or the franchises or the property of any' such competing lines of railway. The union of such lines was prohibited, in view of the objects sought to be accomplished. The term “consolidate,” we think, must be construed to have been used in the sense of “join” or “unite.” To permit two such competing lines of railway under a single management and a single control would accomplish the very purpose which the constitution sought to prevent. We must have regard to the spirit and 1he object of that constitutional provision, and not juggle with the technical meaning of the word. The prohibition goes to the consolidation or uniting of the stock of two competing roads, or of the franchises of two competing roads, or of the property of two competing roads. The doing of either would create the prohibited monopoly, and'either is within the intendment and meaning of the constitutional provision. Nor do we think that there is force in the contention that this union or consolidation was by means of a temporary arrangement, if thereby that is accomplished which is prohibited by the constitution. If it be lawful, by means of a lease for 10 years, to consolidate and unite the properties of competing lines of railway, -we perceive no reason why a lease for 99 years would not be equally valid. We cannot draw the line in that respect between what is permanent and what is temporary. Whatever produces the prohibited result is obnox
These leases being, then, invalid, the constitution imposed upon railroad companies an absolute prohibition to enter into them. They were absolutely void from their inception. It was ultra vires the corporations to enter into them. Being void, the covenants contained in them were of no binding effect, and no recovery can be had upon them. A railroad corporation cannot lease its line of railway without statutory power so to do. It certainly cannot when there is an express constitutional prohibition so to do. These contracts, therefore, being prohibited, are void ab initio, and no suit can be maintained upon them. Thomas v. Railroad Co., 101 U. S. 71; Pennsylvania R. Co. v. St. Louis, A. & T. H. R. Co., 118 U. S. 316, 6 Sup. Ct. 1094; Central Transp. Co. v. Pullman’s Palace-Car Co., 139 U. S. 24, 11 Sup. Ct. 478. In the latter case it is said: “The objection to the contract is not merely the corporation ought not to have made it, but that it could not make it. The contract cannot be ratified by either party because it could not have been authorized by either. No performance on either side can give the unlawful contract any validity, or be the foundation of any right of action upon it.” In Bank v. Hawkins, 34 U. S. App. 423, 18 C. C. A. 78, and 71 Fed. 369, we drew a distinction between acts of a corporation without power conferred upon it and those acts done in excess of conferred powers. We held that the latter acts were illegal as to shareholders, but that the corporation was liable therefor to innocent parties. The doctrine of that case, however, is shaken, if not overruled, by the decision of the supreme court in Bank v. Kennedy, 167 U. S. 362, 17 Sup. Ct. 831. But, even under the doctrine as we declared it, we think the contract here in question would be held wholly beyond the authority of the corporation to make or to perform for any purpose; but, avhether so or not, it is our duty to conform our judgment to the ruling of the ultimate tribunal. Here the appellee brings his suit upon this prohibited and void lease, and seeks to recover rentals due under it. He invokes the performance of a contract which is prohibited by the fundamental law of the state, and which neither the lessor nor the lessee had power or authority to make. He necessarily relies upon an illegal and void contract, and therefore he cannot recover. Miller v. Ammon, 145 U. S. 421, 12 Sup. Ct. 884; McCormick v. Bank, 165 U. S. 538, 17 Sup. Ct. 433; Bank v. Kennedy, supra. In McCormick v. Bank, supra, there is a suggestion that in such case there may be a recovery for the value of that actually received and enjoyed under the illegal contract. Whether that suggestion can be applied here, and whether jurisdic-
Judge SHOWALTER took no part in the decision of this case.