57 F. 799 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1893
The defendant corporation, owning
and operating an extensive systém of connecting railroads, made a contract with the corporation petitioner in April, 1883, by which it leased from the petitioner its main line of railroad, extending from Salamanca, Y. Y., to Dayton, Ohio, various branches of said road, and the leasehold estates of the petitioner in a number of roads operated as part of its system. Defendant entered into possession of the property under the lease, and for several years operated it, so far as appears, in accordance with all its terms and covenants. As rental or compensation for the use of the property, the defendant agreed and covenanted to pay 32 per rent, of its gross earnings. An increase of percentage was provided for ' under certain contingencies, the details of which are not material to the present discussion. It was further provided in the lease that a breach by the defendant of any of the covenants and agreements contained therein should be cause of forfeiture, at the option of the petitioner; that, in the event of such forfeiture, petitioner might enter into possession of the property, —its rights to recover all rent in arrear not to be affected by such forfeiture; and that all damages sustained by petitioner by reason of such forfeiture should be recoverable against the defendant.
It appearing that the defendant was without money to pay its maturing indebtedness, or any immediate hope of raising it; that its property was liable to seizure upon 'attachments and other process in a multiplicity of suits brought in many different courts, under circumstances which would lead to wasteful strife and contention as to the priorities of rival creditors, and would paralyze the operation of the road, and prevent it from continuing, until the final marshaling of its assets and adjustment of conflicting interests, to discharge its duties as a public carrier of passengers,
Upon this state of facts, and upon a verified petition and supplemental petition showing the essential importance to petitioner of prompt and full payment of the sums stipulated by the lease, to enable it to discharge its own obligations to its bondholders, and to the subordinate roads of its system which itself leases, the New York, Pennsylvania & Ohio Railroad prays;
“That (lie court would declare and order that the receivers perform all the obligations of the said lease; that the covenants and provisions of the said lease, during (he lime it lias existed and may exist, constitute a charge upon and obligation against the defendant company, and all its property, superior to the rights and claims of any mortgagee of said property; that the receivers i>ay to the petitioner the amount of rent now remaining due and unpaid; that, if the receivers are without money in hand to presently malee such payment in full, (hey have liberty to agree and arrange with the petitioner for an extension of time for payment, and thereupon to issue their certificates as receivers for all rent now, or at any time hereafter, due or unpaid; that such certificates be decreed and declared, upon the fac;e thereof, to be a charge and lien upon all the property and franchises of the defendant company in the possession of the court and the receivers, prior to any and all of the outstanding mortgages upon the said property and franchises of the defendant company; and that the court would grant to the petitioner such other and further relief in the premises as may, upon consideration, appear to be just and equitable.”
The petitioner, upon this application, has carefully refrained from declaring a forfeiture of the lease for covenant broken, and does not ask to be restored to the possession of its property. The question to be passed upon at this stage of the proceedings, therefore, lies somewhat within the scope of the oral argument. Whatever may have been the intent of the parties to the lease when they entered into their contract, there is no suit to reform it now before ihe court, and it must be construed according to its terms. It provides distinctly and specifically for the payment of certain
But no facts making out siich a case are before the court. The receivers are not asking for instructions as to which course they should elect. Hor, indeed, is such a question one which it is to be expected that the court should decide. It is a question, not of law, but of business judgment, which requires for its intelligent answer an extended experience, a special knowledge, and an inti
The prayer of the petitioner is denied.