133 Minn. 413 | Minn. | 1916
On July 27, 1914, the Minnesota Railroad and Warehouse Commission entered its order, fixing the basis of joint freight rates on railroads within the state. On appeal to the district court of Lyon county by a shipper judgment was entered on March 14, 1916, setting aside the order insofar as it fixed a joint rate for and between the Chicago & Northwestern Railway Company and the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railway Company. These two companies appeal from the judgment.
The trial court found that the line of road owned by the Northwestern company and that owned by the Omaha company constituted one road for the freight passing over them and for purposes of rate making and that the Eailroad and Warehouse Commission was without jurisdiction to establish a. joint rate. This is the question.
1. The Northwestern owns a majority of the stock of the Omaha. Such ownership does not give it ownership of or a legal interest in the Omaha road, nor does it affect the separate legal identity of the two corporations. Ulmer v. Lime Rock R. Co. 98 Me. 579, 57 Atl. 1001, 66 L.R.A. 387; Monongahela Bridge Co. v. Pittsburg & Birmingham Traction Co. 196 Pa. St. 25, 46 Atl. 99, 79 Am. St. 685; Senior v. New York City Ry. Co. 111 N. Y. App. Div. 39, 97 N. Y. Supp. 645; United States v. Delaware & H. Co. 213 U. S. 366, 29 Sup. Ct. 527, 53 L. ed. 836; United States v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co. 238 U. S. 516, 35 Sup. Ct. 873, 59 L. ed. 1438; Richmond & I. Const. Co. v. Richmond, N. I. & B. R. Co. 68 Fed. 105, 15 C. C. A. 289, 34 L.R.A. 625; In re Watertown Paper Co. 169 Fed. 252,
3. The Northwestern was organized in 1859; the Omaha in 1880. In 1883 William K. Vanderbilt, acting for the Northwestern, purchased a majority of the stock of the Omaha. In 1883 his act was ratified and the stock was taken over by the Northwestern. The resolution approving the purchase recited that it was essential to the welfare of the company that more stable and permanent arrangements be made for connection with the Northern Pacific and Canadian Pacific lines and for the traffic of Minneapolis and St. Paul and for the use of the various lines of the Omaha, and that “it was found practicable to secure the control * * * by the purchase of a majority of the common and preferred stocks of said company,” and that the amount purchased was “sufficient to secure the control.” Upon the purchase of the. Omaha stock there was a reorganization of the company and the Northwestern officers and directors became the officers and directors of the Omaha. For practical purposes, and so far as concerns the ultimate power of control and direction, the two companies are officered in common. The Northwestern now owns fifty and a fraction per cent of the stock of the Omaha. Eightyffive per cent of the remainder is owned by Northwestern stockholders.
The state does not claim, as we understand its position, that the mere ownership of a majority of the Omaha stock makes the two roads one.
It does claim that the two roads as controlled and operated are one continuous road or line for rate making purposes, and that a majority ownership in one of the stock of the other is important in determining whether there is a unity of operation of the two properties under a .single and undivided control.
The Northwestern has terminals at Chicago and Milwaukee and lines
The physical operation of each is in a way distinct. The Northwestern engines do not run over the Omaha line nor the Omaha engines over the Northwestern line. The employees of one company are not employees of the other. The employees of one do not work on the line of the other. Each company maintains its own roadbed, provides its own rolling stock, and pays its own employees. Such facts are indicative of separate ownership and operation. The state refers to others tending to show a unity of operation as one line. They are evidentiary in character. Sometimes they are in dispute or their apparent effect is explained or minimized. The inferences to be drawn from them and their probative force were for the court. Through freight and passenger trains originating on one road pass over the other to their final destination. Freight in less than carload lots going from one to the other is handled as if over one road. Freight passes from one over the other without the usual traffic contracts. The car distribution differs from that usual between separate roads. The cars of the two companies are “system” ears and not “foreign” as are the ears of other roads. Less effort is used to keep the cars of one company off the line of the other than off the lines of foreign roads, and the “system” ears pass more freely from one road to the other. The Northwestern has loaned the Omaha money in time of need, and has built tracks or branches which touch only the Omaha. The two companies advertise and solicit freight and passengers as a single line. The designation “Chicago and Northwestern Line” applies to both and to each. Throughout, their cars are of the samé type and appearance. Freight receipts to be divided between the two roads and foreign roads are divided
The purpose of majority ownership of corporate stock is corporate control. This is its legitimate effect, and under the form of lawful control there may arise legal consequences not unlike those arising from single ownership. Thus in Pearsall v. Great Northern Ry. Co. 161 U. S. 646, 16 Sup. Ct. 705, 40 L. ed. 838, an arrangement whereby one railroad was to acquire one-half of the capital stock of a competing and parallel line was held in violation of the Minnesota statute forbidding the consolidation with, purchase or lease of parallel or competing lines. The court said: “With half of its capital stock already in its hands, the purphase of enough to make a majority would follow almost as a matter
It was the fixed purpose of the Northwestern, when Vanderbilt with the concurrence of its president arranged for the acquisition of a majority of the Omaha stock, to bring the two roads under one control and operation. It meditated no wrong and did none. Business sagacity prompted the purchase and no public policy was offended. It was beneficial to the companies and to the public. The present operation is not the result of a co-operation of two distinct companies having separate interests. The directing control of the two roads is one and single. There is a single and paramount control and domination of both properties and a unity of operation as a continuous line. Whatever the form this is the reality.
'Chapter 90, p. 76, Laws 1913, the distance tariff statute, and chapter 344, p. 486, Laws 1913, the joint rate statute, are not to be so narrowly construed that once it is shown that a line of singly operated railroad is owned by two legal entities, regardless of the singleness of control and operation, the distance tariff law is inapplicable and the joint rate statute applicable. Our conclusion is that the finding of the trial court is sustained, and that the distance tariff law is applicable and that there was no authority for establishing a joint rate.
Judgment affirmed.