147 Ky. 513 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1912
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
On July 25, 1893, tbe appellant Eailroad Company and tbe Capital Eailway Company entered into tbe following contracts:
“WHEEEAS, Tbe Capital Eailway Company of Frankfort wishes to cross with its street-car railway, tbe main track of tbe Louisville & Nashville Eailroad at Ann street, in tbe city of Frankfort, Ky., and
“WHEEEAS, Tbe Louisville & Nashville Eailroad Company has consented that said Capital Eailway Company may make said crossing upon tbe terms and conditions set forth herein, to-wit:
“WITNESSETH: That the said Louisville-& Nashville Railroad Company consents that said Capital Rail- ' way Company may make said proposed crossing and any ■'additional crossing that may become necessary ' in consequence of any aditional track or tracks that may be put> down-'-by said Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, parallel with its present track, but said crossings are to be constructed by the Capital Railway Company at its own expense, and without expense, damage or injury to the said the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, or its property whatever, and are to be constructed in such a manner and are to be of such character as to make the rails of said The Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company continuous over the crossings; and this permission is given upon the express condition that said Capital Railway Company is to construct and maintain said crossings free of expense to said The Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company; and in the event the said Capital Railway Company shall at any time fail ..or refuse to maintain said crossings at its own expense, -as.herein provided for, then, and in that event, said the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company may take up and remove all such crossings as the said Capital Rail■way Company, its successors or assigns, may have put down or constructed, or the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company may, if it chose to do so, furnish the necessary labor and material and repair and put in order said crossings at the expense of said Capital Railway Company, its successors or assigns, and the Capital •Railway Company hereby agrees that it, its successors or assigns, shall pay the actual cost thereof.
“And this permission is given upon the further con-dition that the trains of said The Louisville & Nashville .Railroad Company shall have precedence over the •crossings. Said Capital Railway Company hereby agrees that all of its cárs shall be stopped before passing :over the crossings, and its motormen, drivers, conductors, or other employes, shall see that the track is clear before crossing.
- ■ “And said Capital Railway Company shall be liable -for -all- damages to people or of property lay reason of the .
“It is further agreed that, if any overhead wires, are erected by, or for, the said Capital Eailway Company, such wires shall be at least twenty-two (22) feet above the top of the rail or tracks of said The Louisville & Nashville Eailroad Company.
“All such crossings shall be made according to plans submitted to, and approved by, the Chief Engineer of the Louisville & Nashville Eailroad Company.
“The Louisville & Nashville Eailroad Company here-, by expressly reserves the right at any time to lay such additional track or tracks parallel with its present tracks, or approximately parallel thereto, where the same is hereby authorized to be crossed by the said' Capital Eailway Company, as it may from time to time deem necessary.
“Witness¡ the signature of the parties, the date and year first herein written.
“Capital Eailway Company,
“By Pat McDonald,
“President.
‘ ‘ The Louisville & Nashville Eailroad Co.,
“By J. C. Metcalfe,
“General Manager.”
It appears that there was at the time only one track of the appellant company at the point of intersection named in the contract. It further appears that the railroad company, having built a new passenger station in Frankfort, found it necessary to lay an additional parallel track, and to grade and reconstruct the track named above. It thereupon presented the contract of’ 1893 to the appellees, and requested them to cause the/ crossings over the two tracks to be built at the expense of the appellees. Upon the failure by the appellees to' construct them, the railroad company built them, and’ brought its action to recover the cost. By consent of-the parties the action was transferred to equity.' Upon, a submission the petition was. dismissed, and the Louis-' ville & Nashville Company appeals.
Several questions are presented by the record. The first one is whether the appellee companies are bound’ by the original contract made with the Capital Eailway/ Company. Its answer demands an examination of the; connection or derívate relation of the companies. " It;
The Frankfort and Suburban Company operated until December, 1902, when it failed. It shut down operations and its tracks were covered over by the city of Frankfort with macadam. The crossing was taken up by the railroad company. In 1903 the Frankfort & Versailles Traction Company was organized. Mr. Buckley was a stockholder, secretary, and. a. little later, general manager of the new company. On December 28, 1903, the Frankfort and Suburban Company conveyed its properties to the new company. The deed conveyed “the entire holdings of real and personal property, corporate and incorporate, tangible and in
The Central Kentucky Traction Company, the appellee, later, by merger, took over the property of the Frankfort & Versailles Traction Company — at least in an amended petition filed upon September 20, 1909, it was charged that the Central Kentucky Company had acquired a right, title and interest in and to the property of the Frankfort & Versailles Company; and that both of said companies were the successors and assigns of the Capital Eailway Company and the Frankfort and Suburban Eailway Company. The relationship of the two corporations was not denied in the reply. The principal defense was made by the Central Kentucky Traction Company; the Frankfort & Versailles Company having filed its answer in which it' set up that it had no real interest in the controversy, was operating, no railroad, and was no longer a going concern. There is in the record, marked “Tendered” a copy of the agreement, properly authenticated, whereby the Frankfort & Versailles Company was merged into
From the foregoing it will be seen that in so far as-the rights and obligations under the original contract are concerned the Central Kentucky Traction Company is as much entitled to enjoy the rights as was the original Capital Railway Company; and it just as much owes the duty to discharge the other side of that contract as-did the Capital Railway Company. This position is not in the least affected by the fact that a new franchise was granted by the city of Frankfort in 1903 to the Frankfort & Versailles Traction Company; for while a franchise was necessary to permit any one of the sundry companies to operate a street railway system in Frankfort, that franchise has naught to do with the contract rights and contract obligations imposed under the contract before us. The Capital Railway Company, in the beginning, saw fit to make it a matter of contract with, the Louisville & Nashville Road, rather than to ex-eccise any legal effort to force -the right. Having made, it a matter of contract, it and its successors and assigns are bound by it.
It remains to be seen whether the contract itself applies to the two crossings which were put down after the building of the new station. The contract is not as-clear as it might be. Its preamble recites -that the Capital- Company desired to cross -the main track of the-Louisville & Nashville Road at -the intersection named;that the Louisville & Nashville Road had consented that.
It is further. argued for appellees that the contract gave no right to the railroad company to do the original .construction of such crossings, with the consequent right to look to the street railway company for the cost; and that the provision in the contract, whereby the railroad company might do the work itself, extended only to the maintenance, repairing and putting in order of the
For the reasons given the judgment of the trial court is reversed, with directions to enter judgment in favor of the appellant against the Central Kentucky Traction Company for the sum of $548.65, with interest from the time of the filing of the petition.