80 F. 745 | 7th Cir. | 1897
after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellee, being receiver, represents, in a sense, the creditors of the Chicago & South Atlantic Railroad Company. The sum recovered, $168,922.88, with interest, as allowed, now amounts to more than $312,000. This money, or a large part thereof, would doubtless be used by the receiver in discharge of the debts of the Chicago & South Atlantic Railroad Company. But it is the right of the company which is in question. No creditor is here asserting any lien in his own right; nor is it anywhere intimated as a theory of the case that certain creditors had liens in their own right, and that by a species of subrogation the debtor company may, in this proceeding, assert such liens. As the record comes before this court, the creditors have no right which transcends that of the company. If there were no creditors, and the purpose were to divide the large sum mentioned above among the few persons who made the trifling
“All moneys, lands, stocks, bonds, and other things of value that have been and shall hereafter be contributed, donated, or subscribed by any state,*752 county, city, community, corporation, or individual for the purpose of conj structing or maintaining the Indianapolis, Delphi & Chicago Railroad shalll from henceforth belong to, and he absolutely owned by, the Chicago &' SoutM Atlantic Railroad Company, subject, however,” etc. I
The Indianapolis, Delphi & Chicago Railroad is the road from! Indianapolis to the state line, which the Indianapolis, Delphi & Chi-I cago Railroad Company was authorized to build. ' That company,! retaining its franchise to so build, and being deemed, held, and byl necessary implication declared, the owner initially of everything! given in aid of said franchise, transfers a limited and special do-l minion over all the “things of value” referred to in the contract asl then extant or in expectancy to the Chicago & South Atlantic. It I may be here added that profit as to a contractor or in any other! way to the Chicago & South Atlantic was not stipulated for or pro-1 posed. When, under the administration of that company, the road should be completed, and cars running from Indianapolis to Chicago, the two corporations were to merge into a third, and the entire property was to vest in the consolidated concern. By the third section of the writing of 1875 the directors and officers of the Delphi Company and their successors “shall continue in office for the purpose of preserving and guarding the trusts created in the articles of agreement.” By the eighth section of the same writing, after the idea of a surrender or alienation of its franchise by the Delphi Company is excluded, “the true meaning and intent of” the contract is declared to be that the Chicago & South Atlantic shall be owner of the property of the Delphi Company “for the purposes hereinbefore expressed”; that is, to carry on the work of building the Indiana portion of the road in question. In the preamble to the writing of 1873 it is recited that the Delphi Company “has been and now is obtaining, and is hereafter to obtain, subscriptions and donations for the purpose of building” the road in Indiana; and the immediate purpose of the contract is expressed to be “an early commencement and completion of the work of building” the road. The property alienated or put in the dominion of the Chicago & South Atlantic by the contract was, as before noted, all the property which the Delphi Company then had, or which might, pending the contract, be given or subscribed by any person or corporation in aid of its franchise to build the road.
The limitations fixed in the contract on the ownership thus vested in the Chicago & South Atlantic appear to be three in number, and to be limitations in time. Such ownership commenced when the writing of 1873 was executed. It would cease, apparently, first, if the work of construction were not commenced on or before the 1st day of July, 1874; again, if the work were not thereafter prosecuted,— that is, followed up or carried on with substantial continuity; and again, if diligence by the Chicago & South Atlantic in such prosecution should not be commensurate with the means for the time being available. These limitations seem to be set down, the first and third in the section marked 1; the other, in the section marked 2 of the writing of 1873. The learned counsel for appellee does not identify the second of these limitations. He reads in the contract only the
The master states in his report that the seizure or resumption of active control by the Delphi Company in the fall of 1877 “rendered the completion of the road by the Chicago & South Atlantic impossible if it were otherwise able to have completed its construction.” He says also that the Chicago & South Atlantic Railroad Company was in 1880, “and had been for some years, without means to complete said road, yet the purpose to build said road had not been abandoned, and efforts were made by said road from time to time to raise means with which to prosecute the enterprise.” The total value, so far as the master saw fit or was able to compute, of the construction work done under the administration of the Chi
“In November, 1878, lumber was provided by said road to construct a bridge over the Kankakee river to the state of Indiana, and some work was done in the fall of 1878 in Lake county, and some ties were delivered at that time in said county to be used in said road, and ordered by said company.”
This is apparently a prefatory statement to what follows:
“And until the appropriation of said part of said line of road as herein set forth in Lake counts’, the same was in the possession of the Chicago & South Atlantic Railroad Company, though such road was at that time, and had been for some years, without means to complete said road, yet the purpose*756 to build said road ha'd not been abandoned, and efforts were made by sai< road from time to time to raise means with which to prosecute the enterprise.”
The master does not indicate what the work last referred to was, nor does he give any value to the same, or to the ties or lumber, if any were in fact used. The purpose of the statement is apparently to signify an assertion of right persisted in up to that time by the managing agents of the Chicago & South Atlantic. On March 12, 1876, the president of the Chicago & South Atlantic wrote to the vice president:
‘‘The work must be put under headway this spring, .otherwise we will lose our subsidies and the moral effect. * * * Now you should by all means get the road under headway.”
Other letters interchanged between the date last mentioned and October 4, 1877, indicate, as the status at the time, substantially a complete cessation of the work of construction, in response to a letter written October 3, 1877, by the president of the Chicago & South Atlantic detailing the action of the Delphi Company on September 29, 1877, and the letting of the contract by that company as before noted, the vice president wrote on October 4, 1877, “My advice is, simply protest and keep quiet.” The contention by appellant that for more than two years prior to September 29, 1877, the work of building the road in Indiana had ceased, seems well made. The Chicago & South Atlantic was advised at once of the action taken by the Delphi Company based on the failure to prosecute the work. Whatever the former company afterwards did, if-anything, in Lake county, was done with notice that the latter denied any ownership on the part of the former over any part of the road in Indiana.
It is said that the action of the Delphi Company on September 29, 1877, was a forfeiture; that the law abhors forfeitures; that time was not of the essence of the contract; and that there could be no forfeiture or rightful resumption of control by the Delphi without a formal request to the Chicago & South Atlantic to proceed, and a refusal after such request. But the contract declared that the prosecution of the work of building was a principal condition of “the ownership of* said things of value by the Chicago & South Atlantic Bailroad Company.” The contract fixed a limitation upon whatever ownership or dominion vested by that instrument in the Chicago & South Atlantic over said “things of value,” or the unfinished road so far as constructed with said “things of value.” This ownership ceased by its own limitation. The case is not one of the forfeiüire of an estate upon condition. It is an instance, rather, of a conditional limitation. The Delphi Company had to make sure as a fact of that cessation or failure to prosecute the work which by the contract limited the dominion of the Chicago & South Atlantic. In such event, there was no longer any ownership in the Chicago & South Atlantic to be displaced by re-entry. The contract made no provision for any demand or notice. The Chicago & South Atlantic was not prejudiced in any way by want of prior formal demand and notice. On the showing of the record, the un
Upon the argument of this case, I was strongly inclined to the opinion that the cancellation of its contract by the Delphi Company was not made in good faith, particularly in view of the fact that there was a personal consideration passing to Mr. Haymond, and that he appeared to have acted in excess of his authority. While the cessation of the work might have authorized the Delphi Company to put an end to the contract by legal proceedings in the nature of a foreclosure, or perhaps even by notice, it did not seem to me that it could be legally done by a summary seizure and appropriation of the unfinished road, by which it
But as my brethren have placed a different construction upon the contract and the acts of the parties, and as the case depends largely upon the view taken of the testimony, which is very voluminous, and no question of law is involved which is likely to become important as a precedent, I am disposed to acquiesce in the opinion of the majority.