21 Mont. 221 | Mont. | 1898
The attorney general has instituted this proceeding as an original one in this court, to have declared invalid and of no force and effect a certain contract of lease entered into between the Montana Railway Company and the
The pleadings and stipulations show the following facts: The Montana Union Railroad Company, the Montana Railway Company, and the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific Railway Company are separate corporations, but the stock of the Montana Union and of the Montana Railway Company is controlled by the Northern Pacific Railway Company. The Butte, Anaconda & Pacific line starts from Butte, and runs to the city of Anaconda. For fourteen miles after leaving Butte its course is south; then it runs northwesterly about twelve miles to Anaconda. The Montana Union runs from Butte to Garrison, a station on the Northern Pacific main line. It practically parallels the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific for a distance of fourteen
It is admitted that the Montana Railway and the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific lines are connected at Anaconda, and that the shortest route from the city of Butte via Anaconda to Stuart, and stations on the Montana Union Railroad north of Stuart, and all stations on the Northern Pacific main line, is by way of the Butte, Anaconda. & Pacific to Anaconda, and from Anaconda to Stuart by the Montana Railway, and from Stuart northerly on the Montana Union to points along the lines of the Montana Union and Northern Pacific. It is also admitted that the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific Company each day runs continuous trains over the route just described, and intends to continue to run such trains.
The proposition advanced by the attorney general is that the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific Railway and the Montana Railway lines are parallel and competing,0 and that for that reason the lease of the Montana Railway to the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific Company is prohibited by the constitution, and ultra vires of the corporation. On the other hand the defendants insist — first, that the facts establish that the above-mentioned lines of railway are not parallel or competing, and are con
It can be safely stated that, unless the legislature has given to the corporations here interested the righc to lease, the power does not exist. This principle is now firmly established by the Supreme Court of the United States, having been laid down by Justice Miller, for the court, in Thomas v. Railroad, Co., 101 U. S. 71, in the following words: “We take the general doctrine to be in this country, though there may be exceptional cases and some authorities to the contrary, that the powers of corporations organized under legislative statutes are such and such only, as those statutes confer. Conceding the rule applicable to all statutes — that what is fairly implied is as much granted as what is expressed — it remains that a charter of a corporation is. the measure of its powers, and that the enumeration of these powers implies the exclusion of all others.” We are, therefore, brought to inquire where the consent is to be found. In considering this question, it becomes necessary to examine the constitution of the state and the statutes, and then to observe their relation to the general subject under consideration, and to one another.
Cutting out of the controlling constitutional provision language not material to railroad corporations, we have the following clause: “No railroad corporation, or the lessees or managers thereof, shall consolidate its stock, property or franchise, with any other railroad corporation, owning or having under its control a parallel or competing line; neither shall it in any manner unite its business or earnings with the business or earnings of any other railroad corporation, nor shall any officer of such railroad company act as an officer of any other railroad company owning or having control of a parallel or competing line. (Article XV, Sec. 6, Constitution of Montana.)
Turning to the statutes, we find that the legislature adopted
Section 911 authorizes any two or more railroad corporations whose respective lines not being parallel or competing lines, are wholly or partly within this state, when their respective lines of road, or any branch thereof, so connect within this state that- they may operate together as one property, to consolidate their capital stock, franchises and pioperty, and thereby to become one corporation by any name adopted, which may be that of one of them, upon such terms and conditions as may be agreed upon by the corporations in the manner provided by the statutes.
Section 912 provides that any railroad corporation whose line is wholly or partly within Montana, or reaches the boundary lines thereof, whether organized ■ under the laws of Montana or of the United States, or of any other state or territory, may lease or purchase the whole or any part of the railroad or line of railroad of any railroad corporation, together with all the rights, powers, immunities, franchises, etc., provided the railroad or line of railroad so leased or purchased is continuous or connected with its own line, and not a parallel or competing line.
Section 913 provides that any railroad corporation organized as in the preceding sections shall have authority to negotiate and deliver its bonds, securities, or obligations, and negotiate the same in such manner as the board of directors may authorize or determine, and to secure the payment of such bonds the corporation may execute and deliver such mortgages or deeds of trust upon all or any part of its property as the directors may determine; and, if any such mortgage shall so provide, it shall be and remain a valid lien upon the property of the corporation irrespective of the law relating to chattel mortgages, and such mortgage shall be taken, held, ■ and enforced as are mortgages of real estate.
The foregoing statutes intended to give, and did give— first, a complete power of consolidation, by which a corporation formed by a consolidation should be a corporation sue
But we must go further, and consider another section of the statutes. By an act approved March 4, 1893, (Third Session Laws, p. 15T) and especially preserved and continued in force by Section 5186 of the Political Code, approved March 13, 1895, the legislature provided as follows: “Any railroad company now or hereafter incorporated pursuant to the laws of this state or of the United States, or of any state or territory of the United States, may at any time by means of subscription to the capital stock of any other railroad company, or by the purchase .of its stock or bonds, or by guaranteeing its bonds, or otherwise, aid such company in the construction of its railroad within or without this state; and any company owning or operating a railroad within this state may extend the same into any other state or territory, and may build, buy, lease, or may consolidate with any railroad or railroads in such other state or territory, or with any other railroad in this state, and may operate the same, and may own such real
There are manifest and numerous irreconcilable inconsistencies between this last section quoted and sections 911 and 912. Although all three statutes refer to the general subject-of consolidation, purchasing, and leasing of railroads by other railroad corporations, the method of procedure to effect a consolidation is different, and restrictions expressly included within the provisions of sections 911 and 912, not necessary to be here set forth in detail, are not found in section 923. But, as more conspicuous than other differences, it is noticeable that in 923 the right to consolidate, lease, or buy is granted without regard to whether or not the railroads owned, by the contracting parties are parallel or competing, or continuous or connected. The later statute was a radical departure from a previous legislative policy. It may be this- departure arose by reason of considerations which led the legislature to believe that principles of public policy do not invalidate reasonable traffic arrangements between lines of railway
Proceeding, then, the case comes to this: If the law (section 923) is not in conflict with the constitutional section quoted, the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific Company can lease the Montana Railway line irrespective of all questions of competition or parallelism. We now speak of leasing only, because the power to consolidate, although expressly given by section 923, obviously can only be exercised in a constitutional manner; that is, by railroad corporations not owning or having under their control parallel or competing lines. The language of the constitution in respect to consolidation is too plain to require any argument on that point. No one could seriously contend that, if the railroad corporations, parties to the lease in question, are parallel or competing, they can consolidate into one resultant corporation, directly or indirectly. Section 923 is to be read as merely authorizing the amalgamation or consolidation of railroads not forbidden to amalgamate or consolidate by the constitution. (Cooley’s Constitutional Limitation, 218.)
The correctness or applicability of these rules of construction is not seriously controverted, we take it, by the attorney general. There is, therefore, authority in the railroad corporations concerned in this suit to make the contract of lease under section 923,- unless such authority is denied under the constitution, for the reason that the lines involved are parallel or competing lines, and that the lease between them is a consolidation of one with the other.
We now directly meet the recurrent questions: Are the roads of the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific and the Montana Railway Companies parallel or competing lines, and, if they are, may, they contract by lease ? The true rule is that whether two railroads are parallel or competing is a question of fact— of physical fact. Actual mathematical parallelism is easily demonstrable by engineers’ maps of surveys and calculations.
Independently of the Montana Union Railroad, the Montana Railway cannot be said to be a parallel line to the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific between Butte and Anaconda. One of the principal terminal points of the Montana Railway line is Stuart, on the line of the Montana Union, while one of the principal terminal points of the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific is Butte. Anaconda is the other principal terminal point of each. From Stuart to Anaconda, though — a distance of about twelve miles —there is a substantial parallelism in their routes. Still, we think it doubtful whether the Montana Railway is a parallel line of the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific in a sense that would prevent its. union with the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific, if such consolidation or union were attempted under the law.
But, passing that question without decision of it, are they competing lines of railway ? Here again, if we take the separate corporation, the Montana Railway Company, and its railroad line as an independent one, and examine the maps and consider the section through which the roads run, we find there could be no substantial competition with the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific, for the reason that the traffic between Stuart and Anaconda on the Montana Railway, and that point on the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific nearest to Stuart and between such point and Anaconda, and between intermediate points and Anaconda, is entirely insignificant, as there are no towns or freight stations, to furnish ■ business sufficient to make such
But a majority of the court prefer to adopt what we think to be a more practical way of .looking upon this branch of the case, and to consider the constitution as comprehending' by competing lines not only railroads which run between the same two principal points on their own lines, but those which, having one common terminus, yet are actually connected with other railroads, and which, by arrangements with such other railroads concerning the transportation of freight and passengers, are so related to one another in fact as to give them the opportunity by geographical situation to directly cut rates to principal or terminal points. (E. L. & Red River Railway Co. v. State, 75 Tex. 434, 12 S. W. 690.) To apply this by a plain illustration: A merchant in Anaconda buys his goods at San Francisco. The goods are delivered in transit at Butte. From that point to Anaconda the merchant has a choice of routes, one practically as direct as the other. He may ship over the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific to Anaconda, or over the Montana Union to Stuart, and thence to Anaconda via the Montana Eailway route. They are equally convenient and in a situation to underbid one another as to the rates of transportation. Especially is this so in the illustration given, for
Reverting to the constitution, we find no prohibition against a railroad corporation leasing its stock, property, or franchise to any other railroad corporation, or having under its control a parallel or competing line, unless a leasing is a consolidation, or unless there are' other parts of Section 6 of Article XV which should be construed as prohibiting such contracts of lease. Many constitutions, in their provisions to guard against all possible contingencies whereby competition between railroads may be interferred with, do prohibit leasing or purchasing, as well as consolidation; others, in terms much like ours, only prohibit consolidation.
As bearing upon the evident policies of several certain states at the dates of their adoption of their respective constitutions, provisions of organic laws as they stood in 1894 upon this subject may be grouped as follows: The following states provide that no railroad corporation, or the lessees, purchasers, or managers of any railroad corporation, shall consolidate the stock, property, or franchises of such corporation with, or lease or purchase the works or franchises of, or control, any other railroad corporation owning or having under its control a parallel or competing line: Arkansas, Sec. 4, Art. XVII, Constitution of 1874; Kentucky, Sec. 201; Missouri, Sec. 17, Art. XII, Constitution- of 1875; Pennsylvania, Sec. 4, Art. XVII; Texas, Sec. 5, Art. X.
The following states substantially provide only that no railroad corporation, or the lessees or managers thereof, shall
The constitutions of North Dakota (Sec. 141, Art. VII, of the Constitution of 1889) and of South Dakota (Sec. 14, Art. XVII, Constitution of 1889) prohibit in identical language the consolidation of the stock, property, or franchises of railroads owning parallel or competing lines, but especially provide that ‘ ‘any attempt to evade the provisions of this section [pertaining to consolidation] by any railroad corporation by lease or otherwise, shall work a forfeiture of its charter. ’ ’ There we have, in effect, a provision against leasing for a long time, if not altogether.
In West Virginia, by Sec. 11, Art. XI of the Constitution of 1872, consolidation or obtaining the possession of parallel or competing lines by lease or other contract is prohibited without the permission of the legislature. The statutes, Sec. 63, p. 632, Code of West Virginia,'give these rights, and provide the manner of their exercise.
In Wyoming, Sec. 8, Art: X of the Constitution of 1889, there is simply a general prohibition against consolidation or combination of corporations of any kind to prevent competition. No special clause is found as applicable to railroads or any other class of corporations.
In Georgia Article IV, Part 4, Subdivision 11, of the Constitution denies to the legislature the power to authorize any corporation to make any contract with another corporation ‘ ‘which may have the effect or be intended to have the effect to defeat or lessen competition in the respective .businesses or to encourage a monopoly. ’ ’
In Utah, Sec. 13, Art. XII, Constitution of 1895, consolidation is prohibited with any other railroad “owning a competing line. ’5 This utterance is the very latest constitutional
Comparison between these various constitutional limitations shows that no one is precisely like the prohibition of the Montana constitution. Similarity exists in but one principal respect. Almost every constitution imposes various limitations upon the power of consolidation, and so general is antagonism to the consolidation of competing railroads that, where the constitutions are silent, statutory enactments frequently prevail by which the principle is affirmatively established that there shall be no consolidation of competing railroads. Minnesota, Sec. 2716, St. 1894; Arizona, Sec. 318; New Hampshire, Gen. St. p. 377, Sec. 11; New York, Laws 1869, ch. 917, Sec. 9; North Carolina, Battle’s R. S., p. 751, (65); Wisconsin, Rev. St. Sec. 1833. In Florida, Sec. 2248, St. 1892, parallel or competing roads may not consolidate except by consent of the railroad commission. Other states, by withholding the power to consolidate, prohibit the exercise of it.
Conforming to this general policy, Montana has by no uncertain language aligned herself with her older sister states, where experience has demonstrated that the merger of two competing railroads into one is apt to result in stifling free competition, and hence is disadvantageous to the well-being of the state. Sufficient demonstration of this proposition consists in the statement that great accumulations of property in the hands of any corporate power, likely to hold on to such accumulations, are dangerous to public welfare. The life of an individual is too limited to render such dangers very great where tremendous wealth is in his hands, but a corporation seldom feels that the bounds of human life, or even of its own chartered existence, should too closely circumscribe its actions. Restraints by limitations upon and within their grants of powers are necessary, lest they may become much too strong for society.
If, for instance, consolidation were allowed with no bounds of restraint, a railroad’s possessions might become a colossal
What is a consolidation of one railroad corporation with another? Rorer on Railroads p. 588, thus deiines it: “The-consolidation of two or more railroad corporations is the permanent union of their interests, management, and control, either in the formation of a new company out of the consolidated ones, or else by a consolidated management of the old ones unitedly, whilst their distinct corporate entities still remain. It can only be brought about by authority of law. A mere co-operating temporarily in the running of lines and transacting the business of two or more roads does not amount, to a consolidation thereof. ’ ’
The supreme'court of Alabama, in Meyer v. Johnston, 64 Ala. 603, said: “When the rights, franchises, and effects of two or more corporations are, by legal authority and agreement of, the parties c ombined and united into one whole, and committed to a single corporation, the stockholders of which are composed of those (so far as they choose to become such)of the companies thus agreeing, this is in law, and according to common understanding, a consolidation of such companies, whether such single corporation, called the consolidated company, be a new one then created, or one of the original companies, continuing in existence with only larger rights, capacities, and property. Acceptance of this as correct makes it easy to understand that authority given to consolidate ‘to-such extent, and on such terms, as the parties may agree-upon’ confers the power to constitute one of the original companies the consolidated company. ’ ’
In Mackintosh v. Flint & P. M. R. Co., 34 Fed. 582, the court, recognizing a difference between a purchase and a consolidation, observed: “Under the general railroad law, companies are allowed to consolidate when they form continuous or connecting lines. This contemplates the formation of a new corporation, and requires the consent of the majority of the stockholders in each company. This statute, however, does not cover this case. This is not to be a consolidation, but a purchase of the latter company’s stock, property, and franchises, and to use the same as part and parcel of the purchasing company, and then to bring the acquisition within the op
Elliott on Railroads says: “.Ordinarily, the effect of a consolidation is to dissolve.the old companies and to form a new one; but this result does not always follow, for it depends largely upon the terms of the consolidation, and the legislative intent as manifested in- the statute under, which the consolidation takes place; and the constituent companies usually have at least a qualified existence for the purpose of winding up their affairs and preserving the rights of their creditors. The term ‘consolidation’ is an elastic one, and may include a union of two or more corporations into a new one with a different name, with or without extinguishing the constituent corporations, or the merger of two or more corporations into another existing corporation under the name of the latter. There is, as- we have already said, a distinction between these modes of consolidation. In the latter case, if the merger is complete, it is evident that the one corporation is extinguished, unless kept alive for certain purposes, while it is equally clear that the other, in which it. is merged, is not dissolved. In other words, the legislative intention in such a case would seem to be to unite the two companies under the old charter of one of them, while statutes authorizing the consolidation of two or more corporations in the ordinary way are generally construed as authorizing the formation of a new and distinct corporation, thus extinguishing all the constituent companies unless a contrary intention is manifest.” (Sec. 335.)
Further citations from the great number of cases that we have studied would be superfluous, for they are practically uniform in defining a consolidation of corporations to be a merger, a union, or amalgamation, by which the stock of the two corporations is made one, by which their property and franchises are combined into one; by which their powers, become the powers of one, by which their names are merged into one, and by which the identity of two practically, if not actually, runs into one. . •
Section 911 of the Civil Code of Montana is not merely a
Ordinarily no idea of a lease would ever enter into any explanation of what constituted a consolidation, unless such contract of lease was for so long a period of time, or by its terms was such as to make it a practical merger of one corporation into another. Lease does not imply consolidation, nor consolidation lease. The power to consolidate, as has been seen, is a power to make two corporations one; the power to lease carries with it no power to pass anything except the right to use the property leased. In the lease under consideration there is no merger of ownership, no communion of interest, no distribution of receipts based upon a contingent measure of profits, no. common ownership of shares of stock, no joint management, and no yielding up of an independent corporate existence by the lessor to the lessee.
As was said in State v. Vanderbilt, 37 Ohio St. 590: “Power to lease does not imply the power to consolidate, nor power to consolidate the power to lease. They are distinct and independent powers. Nothing passes under the lease except the right to the use. The lessor retains its existence, and its right to consolidate with connecting lines. There can be no consolidation except as to connecting lines. These connecting lines belong to the lessor companies, but these have not entered into the consolidation. \ ’
In Mills et al., executors, v. Central R. of New Jersey, 41 N. J. Eq. 1, 2 Atl. 453, a question arose involving the power to lease under a power to consolidate. Chancellor Runyon, for the court, expressly held that power to consolidate did not involve authority to lease, and did not enlarge an authority to convey lands, etc., conferred by a charter to a railroad com
We cannot approve altogether of the reasoning of the chancellor, except as it was applicable to the facts of that case, which involved a railroad lease of 999 years. We are of the opinion that a lease, fair in its terms, for 10 years, in no manner involves an abandonment of a railroad enterprise, or is in fact more than a temporary parting with the control of the lessors’ corporate property. Reservations in this lease of the Montana Railway Company to the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific give the lessor corporation right to repossess itself of its property, and to oust the lessee, and terminate the lease, in the event of certain violations of the covenants of the contract. There is nothing contained in its provisions from which an abandonment can be inferred. The case cited is none the less a strong support of the view that the prohibition against a power to consolidate does not include a prohibition of a power to lease when the legislature has clearly authorized such latter power; for, if a lease of 999 years is not a consolidation, a fortiori, a lease of 10 years is not.
Distinction has also been made between union and consolidation and purchasing by one railroad corporation of another’s property and franchises. By the railroad law of New Jersey power was given to railroad companies to lease their roads to any other corporation, or to unite and consolidate. But the court held, in Elkins v. Camden (& Atlantic R. R. Co., 36 N. J. Eq. 5, that there could be no purchase of a rival railroad under a power of consolidation, as the powers given did not authorize it.
In Gere v. N. Y. Central, etc., R. R. Co., 19 Abbott’s
The court, through Kennedy, J., first disposed of the question of power to lease by holding that it existed under the statutes referred to, and then discussed the prohibitory section above quoted in the following language: “The leasing of one railroad by another, whether for a longer or shorter period, is not a merger or consolidation. The term ‘lease’
Thompson on Corporations, Vol. 5, Sec. 5891, approves of the doctrine of Gere v. N. Y. C. etc. Co., supra, and says that “a statute prohibiting railroad corporations whose roads run on parallel or competing lines from merging or consolidating does not prohibit one such corporation from -leasing its road’ to another. ” - - .
As against the right to contract by lease, the learned attorney general relies upon the case of State v. Atchison, etc., 24 Neb. 143, 38 N. W. 43. There the question arose of the power of two lines of railway to consolidate, when, after they were consolidated, they would form a continuous line without-break of gauge-or interruption. It was held that the Atchison & Nebraska Railway, extending-from
Pearsall v. G. N. Railroad Co., 161 U. S. 646, 16 Sup. Ct. 705, also cited by the attorney general, involved a proposed arrangement between the Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railway corporations, by which there was to be an organization of a new corporation, which should issue its bonds, payment of which was to be guaranteed by the Great Northern, part of the capital stock to be transferred to the shareholders of the Great Northern; and a traffic contract was to be entered into by which the common earnings were to be divided, and traffic was to be exchanged. The statutes of Minnesota forbid railroad corporations to consolidate with, lease, or purchase, or in any way to become owner of or control, any other railroad corporation, or any stock, franchises, rights, or property thereof, which owns or controls a parallel or competing line. The case was decided upon the theory that the arrangement was a consolidation of two competing corporations. The agreement between them was regarded as nothing less than a purchase of a controlling interest, and as practically contemplating the absolute control of the Northern Pacific by the reorganized corporation. The ‘ ‘ultimate amal
We are not unmindful of the spirit which pervades the more modern constitutions against arrangements between competing lines of railroad which may result in monopolies of traffic, and we are not disposed to yield at all in that rigidity of interpretion which we believe must be placed upon the prohibition of the constitution against consolidation of such roads. On the other hand there are certain fundamental principles of construction by which courts must be guided in correctly ascertaining the intent of a written constitution. Judges are not at liberty to declare an act of the legislature void because, £ £in their opinion, it is opposed to a spirit supposed to pervade the constitution, but not expressed in words. ” (Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, p. 204.) The framers of the constitution are presumed to have employed language with sufficient precision to convey the intent of the instrument framed. And when they only prohibited consolidation of competing railway lines, we understand the word to have been used in its natural sense, and that the constitution intended what it says; that is, forbids what it has forbidden. Nor does an apparent impolicy of a statute authorize a court to declare it void. 1 ‘When the fundamental law has not limited, either in terms or by necessary implication, the general powers conferred upon the legislature, we cannot declare the limitation under the notion of having discovered something in the spirit of the constitution which is not even mentioned in the instrument. ’ ’ (People v. Fisher, 24 Wend. 215.)
There is a conclusive presumption, when a state law is attacked upon the ground that it is void, that it is valid unless the constitution of the state prohibits it. Before it can be set aside as invalid, we must find- that ‘ ‘limitations have been imposed upon the complete power which the legislative department of the state has vested in its creation. ’ ’ (Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, p. 206.)
In conclusion, it is our unanimous and mature judgment that, while the constitutional section quoted absolutely prohibits consolidation, whether. it be direct or indirect, still the difference between a lease and consolidation is. too plain to allow any interpretation being put upon the constitutional section quoted, .whereby the power to lease is denied by the prohibition against consolidation.
It is unnecessary to dwell upon the latter clause of section 6, Article XY of the constitution, heretofore quoted^ by which one 'railroad shall not unite its business, etc., with the business of anothér railroad, as we are all of' the opinion that it cannot be applied at-all to the case before us, but pertains to different conditions. ■ ■ ; • -
The petition is denied.. - - Petition denied..