233 Mass. 411 | Mass. | 1919
This is an action to recover damages for breach
“Third: that when completed it will lease said railroad to the Boston and Maine Railroad, subject to the approval of the Board of Railroad Commissioners of Massachusetts, upon terms and conditions as set forth in draft of lease hereto attached and made a part of this Agreement, such lease to be modified in such particulars as the Board of Railroad Commissioners may require.” The plaintiff agreed to build the railroad “to the satisfaction of the Boston and Maine Railroad.” The agreement further provided that the cost should be the amount which the vice president and general auditor of the defendant should certify to be its cost, and that its cost should be paid by the issuance of stocks and bonds in such amounts, and the latter to bear such rate of interest, as the defendant might determine. The covenant of the defendant was “to execute the lease, a draft of which is hereto attached . . ., or as the same may be modified by the Railroad Commission of Massachusetts.” The agreement for lease was signed for the defendant by Mellen, then its president. The negotiation for the lease had been previously authorized by vote of its stockholders and directors. The agreement was ratified by vote of its stockholders in October, 1911. At the time the agreement for lease was made, no part of the plaintiff’s railroad was built, but construction was begun in the autumn of 1911 and the line was completed in 1913 from Bondsville to Athol Junction. Mellen, the president of the defendant, gave specific directions in 1912 that no work be done on the line to Chicopee Falls, but that the line to Athol Junction be built first. The plaintiff and the officers of the defendant agreed upon $3,600,000 as the fair cost of the construction of the Hampden railroad, so far as completed. The plaintiff filed its petition with the railroad commissioners for approval of a lease in September, 1912. No action has been taken on this petition. The plaintiff in 1913, having been theretofore authorized to issue stock to the amount of $1,400,000, filed with the commissioners its petition for approval of an issue
A railroad corporation has no inherent or implied power to lease its property. It can only do so when and to the extent and in the manner authorized by the State. Attorney General v. Haverhill Gas Light Co. 215 Mass. 394. Middlesex Railroad v. Boston & Chelsea Railroad, 115 Mass. 347.
It is enacted by St. 1906, c. 463, Part II, § 209, as amended by St. 1907, c. 585, § 8, respecting “Two railroad corporations, which are incorporated under the laws of this Commonwealth, and whose railroads enter upon or connect with each other,” that “ any such corporation may lease its railroad to any other such corporation; . . . Such leases shall be upon such terms as the directors agree, and as a majority in interest of the stockholders of both corporations at meetings called for the purpose approve, subject to the provisions of section sixty-seven of Part I of this act.” That section, to which reference thus is made, provides that “A lease ... of the franchise and property of a railroad corporation . . . shall not be valid or binding until the terms thereof shall, after public notice and hearing, have been approved by the board of railroad commissioners,” /now the public service commission).
It is obvious that the statute makes no express provision for
This agreement for lease was in terms an agreement to make such a lease as might be approved by the commission after a hearing. The authority vested in the public service commission is to approve terms agreed upon by the parties, not to settle the terms of a lease for the parties. Such an approval is not an idle form or a perfunctory ceremony. One manifest purpose of the General Court in providing that no lease of a railroad shall be valid or binding until approved by a public board was to prevent the inclusion of provisions hostile to the interests of the State or the omission of covenants for the protection of the public welfare. It involves a critical examination of the nature of the property to be leased and all the conditions of the lease, to the end that the general public as well as other interests may be fairly dealt with and adequately protected. It is within the plain purview of the statute to prevent extravagance of expenditure by the lessee in paying an excessive rental and thus preventing the diversion of corporate assets which otherwise might be expended for improving facilities for the service of the public and in reduction of rates.
The draft of lease annexed to the agreement for lease is comprehensive in its scope. It contains ten paragraphs covering the whole field of the subject matter. It is framed in general along the lines of leases heretofore approved under the statute. There
The essence of the contract here in suit, therefore,, was an agreement to enter into such a contract, that is to say, such a lease, as the public service commission might approve. As has been pointed out, neither the railroad corporations nor the public service commission have authority to that end. That is in substance an agreement to be bound by a contract the obligations of which are to become effective only when, subject to alterations, it may meet the approval of other persons. The plan for the lease was not and could not in the nature of things be completed until so approved. There was no finality about the matter until such approval. Of necessity under the statute the lease was provisional until such approval. The agreement for lease in its last analysis was to enter into a lease upon such terms as were
It was said in Lyman v. Robinson, 14 Allen, 242, 254, quoting from Ridgway v. Wharton, 6 H. L. Cas. 238, 305, that “An agreement to enter into an agreement upon terms to be afterwards settled between the parties is a contradiction in terms. It is absurd to say that a man enters into an agreement till the terms of that agreement are settled. Until those terms are settled, he-is perfectly at liberty to retire from the bargain.” Sibley v. Felton, 156 Mass. 273. Freeland v. Ritz, 154 Mass. 257. Woods v. Matthews, 224 Mass. 577. Winn v. Bull, 7 Ch. Div. 29. Kent Coast Railway v. London, Chatham & Dover Railway, L. R. 3 Ch. 656, 664, 665. This principle of law governs the case at bar. It is an immaterial circumstance that the parties have agreed upon the draft of the lease which they will submit for approval to the public service commission. Its terms can possess no efficacy until such approval. No liability can arise on the lease until it has been approved. It would be a subversion of the purpose of the statute to permit the establishment of liability for breach of a contract to make a lease when the parties could not make the lease itself binding without the intervention of approval by an independent body, and hence could incur no responsibility on the lease without such approval.
It is not the meaning of the statute to prohibit the assumption of any liability on a lease without approval by a public board and yet to permit freely the assumption of large financial liability for breach of a contract to make a lease. This would allow the accomplishment of a result by indirection which is forbidden by open and straightforward methods. Such a result cannot rationally be presumed to have been, within the contemplation of the Legislature.
This ground of defence is decisive and it becomes unnecessary to consider the numerous others put forward in behalf of the defendant.
Exceptions overruled.