72 F. 594 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1895
This is an application by the receivers of the view York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad Company (hereinafter called the “Erie Railroad Company”) for instructions relative? io a contract made between the company and Wells-Fargo Company on March 16, 1888, for the conduct of an express business over the lines of the railroad company. Under the terms of this contract the express company agreed to pay to the railroad company 40 per cent, of the entire gross earnings received from the operation of the express business over the lines covered by the contra cl. On the same day (March 16, 1888) a further contract was made, the two contracts being parts of the same transaction, whereby the express company guarantied that the proportion of gross earnings to be paid to the railroad company under the first-named contrae.! should amount to not less than $500,000 a year; that is io say, $41,660.66 a month. For the months of July, 1894. to February, 185)5, inclusive, the express company has not paid the full amount of the minimum guaranty for which provision is made in the contract above referred to. The whole amount claimed for said months is 8333,333.28, of which the sum of $296,542.59 has been paid, leaving a balance claimed by the receivers amounting to $36,-790.69, wherefore the receivers ask the instructions of the court. The relations of the two companies always have been, and, despite existing differences, are, amicable; and by arrangement between counsel the express company has answered the petition of receivers, and been heard upon tin; application, apparently with the expectation that upon the court’s construing the contract all differences between the parties to it can be mutually adjusted without litigation. The express company has paid to the receivers the full 40 per cent, of the gross earnings provided for, which, however, did not amount to the minimum guaranty. It has declined to make further payments on account of said eight months, to offset losses which it has sustained by reason, as it contends, of the failure of the railroad company and ihe receivers to perform the terms
The main grounds upon which the express company resists the claim of the receivers are these: (1) Loss of business arising from the refusal of the receivers to expedite the train service over the lines of the railroad. (2) Losses arising by reason of the strike at Chicago in the summer of 1894.
Inasmuch as the several contracts between the companies must be construed in the light of the surrounding circumstances, a somewhat full review of the facts is necessary.
Prior to 1888 the express business of the railroad was transacted, under contract with the railroad company, by the Erie Express Company, which also had a contract with the Chicago & Atlantic Railroad Company, dated May 15, 1887, the two roads making together a continuous line from New York to Chicago. This contract between the Erie Express and the Chicago & Atlantic contained explicit and comprehensive provisions as to the character of service to be rendered, and the manner in which the business should be conducted, and reserved to the Chicago & Atlantic, as consideration for the rights and privileges and facilities thereby granted, 40 per, cent, of the gross earnings of the express company for the distance carried over the Chicago & Atlantic Railway. This contract was to continue in force for 10 years, and thereafter, unless and until terminated by 60 days’ notice in writing. It contained a clause providing that in case the New York, Lake Erie & Western Railroad Company should contract with any other express company (than the Erie Express Company) for the conduct of express business over its line, the Erie Express Company should have the right to assign its contract with the Chicago & Atlantic to such other express company, which should have and enjoy all the rights and privileges, and be subject to all the covenants and conditions, therein provided to be enjoyed and performed by the Erie Express; it being “mutually understood and agreed that, in case such assignment is made, it shall be upon condition that the company to which said assignment is made shall agree that from and after the date of such assignment the minimum sum to be paid the railway company hereunder by such company shall be $86,000 per year.” The terms of the contract of the Erie Railroad Company with the Erie Express Company do not appear, nor does the date of its expiration. On March 16, 1888, the Erie Express Company executed a written agreement with the Wells-Fargo Com
“First. To provide on on eh of its daily passenger trains sufficient facilities of the Mnd customarily furnished to express companies by railroad companies for the transportation of all freight and express matter which maybe tendered by the express company to the railroad company, a.t any station at which passenger trains may stop, and to receive and transport such freight and express matter upon such passenger trains leaving such station next following such tender, and locarryanddelivcrthesamewithout detention. And said railroad company further agrees that in case the amount of freightand express matter so tendered for transportation by said express company shall be in excess of the amount that can conveniently be carried upon the regular passenger trains of said railroad company, or if competition with other express companies shall make it necessary in order to enable said express company to retain its due and fair share of the express business between any points on said lines, the railroad company will run special express trains between such points, leaving and arriving at such time as will enable the express company to compete for business with express companies having similar trains run over railroads upon which such other companies may be doing an express business. If the shares of the earnings of such special express train accruing to the railroad eonxpany at the rate hereinafter fixed shall be less than the actual cost of running such train, then the express company shall pay to said railroad company the dif-*598 ferene.e between such, earnings and such actual cost. * * * The lines of road to .wiiicli this contract shall be applicable are given, together with their respective mileages, in the schedule hereunto attached. And the said railroad company hereby further agrees that, in addition to the lines mentioned in said schedule, this contract shall include any and all other lines of road which it may lease, operate, or control, or over which it shall have running arrangements, during the existence of this contract.”
The line of Chicago & Atlantic (now Chicago & Erie) is not included in the schedule annexed to the contract.
By the second clause the express company agrees to pay to the railroad company 40 per cent, of the entire gross earnings received by it in the operation of the express business on said lines included in said, schedule, or afterwards acquired in the manner above stated. Succeeding clauses provide in detail for manner of payment; for the carrying of safes, of express messengers and guards; for lighting and heating; for telegrams for agents; for damage claims, and other matters not germane to the question now under discussion; The thirteenth clause provides as follows:
“Thirteenth. It is the intention of this contract to make the operation of the express business over the lines herein mentioned mutually advantageous to the railroad company and express company; and it is understood and agreed that the railroad company shall, to the extent of its ability, assist the express company in acquiring traffic, and also in securing connections, arrangements, and contracts with other railroads and transportation companies. And the railroad company hereby agrees that it will, during the existence of this contract, keep and maintain its equipment, and will keep its train service in such a state of efficiency as will enable the express company to successfully compete with express companies doing business over the lines competitive to the lines covered by this contract, and the express company will, to the extent of its ability, assist the railroad company in securing freight and passenger business; and it is agreed and understood that the express company shall not make contracts with lines competitive with said railroad company for the transaction of an express business, except upon consultation with and approval of the railroad company, and except, further, in case railroad companies with which the express company has contracts covering after-acquired lines should, by extension, lease, or trackage arrangements, become competitive with said railroad company. It is further agreed and understood that the express company will forward by the lines of the railroad company all its business, foreign and domestic, for points east of Chicago, reached by said lines of said railroad or its connections, and, in like manner, will send all its west-bound matter originating east of Chicago by way of said lines, except as hereinabove provided. But this provision shali not be construed to compel the express company to use the lines of the railroad company for through business between New York and Chicago, if, by reason of the expiration or determination of the contracts now existing, or the failure or inability of the railroad company to secure another route, the express company should lose the right to do the express business between the western terminus of the lines of the railroad company and Chicago.”
The collateral contract of March 16, 1888, between the same parties, guaranties the payment by Wells-Far go Company to the Erie Railroad of $500,000 in cash, as a further consideration for entering into the main contract, and that the proportion of gross earnings to be paid under its provisions “shall amount to not less than $500,000 yearly for the lines included in the schedule attached to said contract.”
At the time these contracts were made, two special express trains..(líos. 13 and 14) were being run one each way between liew
It further appears that, not long after the making of this contract, the railroad company presented bills to the express company for the difference between the earnings and the actual' cost of running said two trains, which, as was said before, had been regularly run on the road during the time of the Erie Express Company. , The Wells-Fargo Company declined to pay, and that claim, with other differences arising between the companies, was adjusted by a further contract dated November 1, 1889. That contract recites that questions have arisen between the parties as to the true meaning and construction of certain clauses of the two agreements (the main contract and the contract of guaranty) entered into March 16, 1888, which differences the contract of November 1, 1889, is to harmonize. It provides that for a limited period the minimum guarantied shall be $450,000, instead of $500,000; manifestly not an agreement as to the meaning of the former contract, but a distinct modification of its terms. It contains further provisions as to sharing the loss or damage sustained by an accident at Shohola; as to the express company’s maintaining an accounting department; as to the transportation of milk, garden, or other products; and as to the interpretation to be given to the seventh paragraph of the main contract. Its second clause reads as follows:
“Second. The railroad company agrees to withdraw the hill which it has rendered against the express company for the difference between the earnings and actual cost of running trains between New York and Chicago now known as trains ‘Nos. 13 and 14,’ and will continue them, or a similar service, making no charge for the same.”
This paragraph undoubtedly modified the original contract so as to require the railroad company to continue the two special express trains which it'had put on the road before the Wells-Fargo Company succeeded the Erie Express, and to run them so as to furnish service similar to that already afforded by them, without any charge to the express company. But it would be too broad a construction of the contract of November 1, 1889, to hold that the railroad company thereby assumed the obligation of expediting and improving the service of those two trains, to an unlimited extent, entirely at the cost of the railroad company, no matter how great that cost might be. It would need much plainer language than is here employed to warrant such a construction.
The other question to be decided on this application is whether the express company may offset against the claim now presented its losses sustained in consequence of interruption to business or diminution of earnings arising by reason of the strike in Chicago in the summer of 1894. It seems from the affidavits that such interruption as there was in consequence of the strike occurred on