120 Mo. App. 634 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
(after stating the facts).
The admission made by the defendant that the St. Louis & Gulf Railway Company had constructed a standard gauge railroad from Zeta through Dudley to Campbell and put it into operation, prior to the demand on defendant for payment of his subscription, takes out of the case the question of whether building a line to Campbell to connect with the old line from Zeta to Bloomfield at the latter place, was a compliance with the condition of the subscription; or whether a new line should have been constructed the entire distance from Zeta to Campbell. In connection with the admission, defendant’s counsel stated, in effect, the defense to the action, namely; that though the road had been constructed from Zeta to Campbell, it was neither constructed or operated into or through the town of Bloomfield. Whether this position is well taken or not is the point for decision. In support of it the proposition is advanced that constructing and operating a road through or into Bloomfield meant through or into that portion of the town covered by
The real question is whether or not operating the line through the northwest corner of the extended territory of the city, in connection with such continued operation into the original city limits as the evidence for plaintiff tends to establish, constituted performance of the condition on which the defendant agreed to pay. The primary inquiry in this connection is, of course, what the parties intended at the time they made the contract; and in answering this inquiry we have the right to consider the subject-matter of their agreement, the inducement which influenced the defendant to subscribe, the circumstances under which the subscription was made and the phraseology in which it was made. [State v. Old Town Bridge Co., 85 Maine 17; Rogers v. Galloway Female College, 64 Ark. 627, 39 L. R. A. 636, 639.] The subject-matter is the construction of a railroad from Zeta through and into Bloomfield and thence to Campbell; a line some forty-three miles in length. What induced defendant to subscribe is stated in the contract itself. The main inducement was the benefit to accrue to him from the construction and operation of the road; and though other good and valuable considerations are mentioned in the instrument, there was no proof, nor attempt to prove, that any other consideration existed. Defendant is a citizen and business man of the town of Bloomfield, and it is fair to presume that he subscribed because he thought the building of the road according to the terms of the contract would bene
In Tobey v. Moore an owner had conveyed to different grantees several city lots with a restriction that no buildings designed for certain enumerated trades and callings, should be erected within eight feet of the street on which the lots abutted. Subsequently the municipal authorities of the city had widened one of the adjacent streets and a lotowner having begun to erect a prohibited building within eight feet of the street as widened, it was held that the restriction in the deed had reference to the line of the street as it was when the conveyance was executed, and only prohibited the designated buildings from being erected within eight feet of said line; not within eight feet of the line of the widened street.
Rotheberger v. Glick was an action for a. subscription for the erection of a church building on a certain lot. The house was not built on the site described in the subscription contract, but on one across the street
Soohan v. Philadelphia involved the construction of the will of Stephen Girard, who had left a trust fund for the erection and support of a college for the benefit of orphan children. The will gave a preference to orphans born in the city of Philadelphia, and they were entitled to the benefit of the fund in the first instance. The question was whether that meant the territory of the city of Philadelphia as it was at the death of the testator, or the territory within its subsequent boundaries. The court held that the intention was to give a preference to orphans born within the original corporate limits of the city.
We are cited by plaintiff’s counsel- to a series of cases supposed to support the proposition that it was contemplated by these parties that the corporate limits of Bloomfield might be extended in the future and if that happened, building the projected railroad into or through the extended territory would be a performance of the conditions on which the subscription was made. The cited cases are Gas Light Co. v. St. Louis, 46 Mo. 121; People ex rel. v. Gas Light Co. 153 N. Y. 528; People ex rel. Chicago v. Telephone Co., 77 N. E. 245; Ill. Cent. R. R. v. Chicago, 176 U. S. 646; City of Des Moines v. Water Works Co., 95 Ia. 348; Ind., etc., R. R. v. Hoffman, 161 Ind. 593. The point of law decided in several of these cases was that a contract made between a municipality and a public service company for furnishing service to the municipality and its citizens at stated prices or for the use of the street by the company, applies not only over the territory within the city limits when the contract is made, but territory included afterwards. Some of the other cases determine, in substance, that reasonable municipal ordinances for the regulation of public service corporations and their charges will be enforced
In Gas Light Co. v. St. Louis, the city and the Gas Light Company had entered into a contract in 1846, by which the company agreed to furnish, and the city to take, gas at a certain price. Subsequently the limits of St. Louis were extended and the company claimed the right to collect at the same rate for gas furnished in the enlarged limits; whereas the city contended that the price originally fixed ruled only within the limits as they then existed. The court said that a city ordinance or contract designed for the city at large, operates throughout its boundaries, whatever changes occur in them.
In Ill. Cent. R. R. Co. v. Chicago, the charter of the railroad company provided that it should not locate its tracks in any city on its line without the consent of the common council. It attempted to locate certain tracks along the water front of Chicago on the shore of Lake Michigan, against the will of the city; contending that said charter provision only applied to the city of Chicago as it was in 1851, when the charter was granted; and that as the territory on which the company was attempting to lay a track was not then within the limits of Chicago, the consent of said city to the laying of the track was not required, though the land on which it was to be laid was afterwards taken into the city. The court said the object of the charter provision was to protect cities in general and not simply as they existed at the date of the charter. -
The other cases relied upon by plaintiff are similar to the two we have just digested, which manifestly are not in point on the proposition w;e are considering. It is just and reasonable to say that when a city contracts for service to be rendered to it as a corporate entity, or for a service at a given rate to all its citizens, an expansion of the service corresponding to the growth of the city is contemplated. It is also reasonable that ordinances designed for the government of a municipality
The next question to be considered is whether or not such construction of the new line, and operation of it in connection with the old line, into the original limits , of Bloomfield as plaintiff’s evidence tended to establish, constituted performance of the conditions of the subscription. It is to. be observed that the contract did not make the payment of the donation depend on a continuous operation of the railroad through Bloomfield for five years, but on the road having been constructed, its operation begun and a bond given to the subscribers conditioned that it should be maintained and operated for five years. The bond was given. Hence the question in this connection is twofold; was the line constructed into Bloomfield within the true meaning of the contract, ■and if so, was the operation of it into the city begun within such meaning? A substantial compliance with the conditions of a subscription is what the law of this State requires in order that the liability of the subscriber may become fixed. [Mo. Pac. R. R. v. Tygard, 84 Mo. 263.] By substantial compliance we understand
The next inquiry is, was its operation begun? Plaintiff insists that it was, because the evidence shows without dispute that, for a while after the through line was put into operation from Zeta to Campbell, all trains ran to and from the old station. It is true that the witnesses agree as to this fact, but it does not follow necessarily that the operation of the road into Bloomfield was begun in the sense of the contract. We construe the proviso to mean that the operation should be begun in good faith and with the intention of continuing to run trains in and out of the city for five years, not merely to do so temporarily, for the purpose of fulfilling the letter of the subscription contract, and then divert them. It is true the contract makes the liability of the subscribers depend, not on a permanent operation of the road into Bloomfield, but on the railroad company’s beginning to operate it; providing other redress for the subscribers on the company’s bond if operation into the city was discontinued later. Nevertheless, we hold the agreement was that there should be a bona fide commencement of operation with a present intention of continuing it for five years. An operation designed to be temporary, either in order to conform to the words of the subscription, or as a makeshift until a depot was built outside Bloomfield, and to be stopped as soon as the new depot was finished, was not beginning to operate the road into Bloomfield within the sense of the contract. A case in point on this proposition is Texas & Pac. R. R. v. Marshall, 136 U. S. 395, wherein relief in equity was sought by the city of Marshall, Texas, against the violation by the railroad company of a contract to permanently establish the eastern terminus of the company’s line of railroad at Marshall, and to construct and maintain there the main car works and machine shops, in consideration of a large bonus given to the company by the city. The
“It appears to us so far from this, that the contract on the part of the railroad company is satisfied and performed when it establishes and keeps a depot, and sets in operation car works and machine shops, and keeps them going for eight years, and until the interest of the railroad company and the public demand the removal of some or all of these subjects of the contract to some other place. This was the establishment at that point of the things contracted for in the agreement. It was the fair meaning of the words ‘permanent establishment/ as there was no intention at the time of removing or abandoning them.”
This high authority lays stress, as will be seen, on the good faith with which the railway company located its terminus and shops, and on whether or not it did so with the intention of making the location permanent or merely temporary; that is, on whether the intention was to keep its agreement with the city in good faith, or merely in appearance. The same principle is
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.