34 P.2d 1102 | N.M. | 1934
The Santa Fe Northwestern Railway Company appeals from a decree enjoining it from interfering with the receiver of the Santa Fe, San Juan Northern Railroad (hereinafter referred to as the San Juan Railroad) in operating trains, etc., over 23.9 miles of railroad track owned by appellant, running from Bernalillo to San Isidro, in Sandoval county.
It is admitted that prior to the 17th day of April, 1931, the San Juan Railroad possessed perpetual trackage rights over the line of appellant. On that day, six weeks after the decision of this court in San Juan Coal Coke Co. v. Santa Fe, San Juan
Northern Railroad Co.,
The trial court found that both the San Juan Railroad and the appellant railroad, the officials of both of which are the same men, had received from the Interstate Commerce Commission certificates of convenience and necessity to operate as common carriers, and that thereafter each had been engaged as a common carrier in both intrastate and interstate commerce. It also appears that, in the financial set-up presented to the Commission by the San Juan Railroad, the trackage right was valued at $200,000, and that the corporation was authorized to, and did, issue stock on the basis of that valuation.
Appellant attacks the sufficiency of appellee's reply to raise the issue of the validity of the contract of reconveyance set up in appellant's answer by way of affirmative defense. However, we hold it sufficient to preserve the issue of law, argued for the first time at the hearing on the order to show cause, as to whether or not it was necessary for the San Juan Railroad to obtain permission of the Interstate Commerce Commission in order to transfer or cancel its trackage rights over the line of appellant.
Appellant, arguing against the necessity, maintains that the "operation" referred to in paragraph 18 of section 1 of the Interstate Commerce Act, as amended by the *459 Transportation Act of February 28, 1920, c. 91, § 402 (49 USCA § 1, par. 18), is confined to operation which includes both local and through traffic; that, since the trackage rights here involved merely enabled the San Juan Railroad to use the line of appellant as a bridge over which to transport from San Isidro to Bernalillo traffic which had neither its point of origin nor its destination on appellant's line, the Interstate Commerce Commission was without jurisdiction over the transfer of the trackage rights or the abandonment of the service. Appellant's able counsel cites early Interstate Commerce Commission decisions supporting this view. But in F.D. No. 19918, Chicago Alton Railroad Co. v. Toledo, Peoria Western Railway Co., 146 I.C.C. 171, where a similar trackage right was involved, it was held by a divided Commission that the right was in reality an extension of the original line of the railroad, and so within the purview of the Commission. In that case it was said: "As stated, the operation of or over a railroad under an arrangement such as that here considered has the effect of extending the rails and service of the tenant line. In the public interest we can and do take hold of the establishment of such an arrangement, and in the same interest we can and should take hold of its discontinuance." See, also, F.D. No. 6938, Operation of Lines by Louisiana Arkansas Railway Company, 145 I.C.C. 228.
It is a well-settled rule of law that contracts by railroads and other public service corporations to violate, or tending to lead them to violate, their duties to the public, are unenforceable. Williston on Contracts, § 1733. See, also, Farrington v. Stucky (C.C.A.) 165 F. 325; McCowen v. Pew,
The reason for the invalidity of such contracts, when made without special authority, has been thus expressed by Mr. Justice Miller in Thomas v. West Jersey R. Co.,
The necessary effect of the attempted reconveyance of April 17, 1931, would be an abandonment of operations by the San Juan Railroad without the consent of the Interstate Commerce Commission, prohibited by, and made a penal offense under, federal statute. It is manifest, under the foregoing principles, that the agreement was ineffective to divest the San Juan Railroad of the trackage rights here contested. Appellant can claim no rights thereunder, and the trial court rightly refused to recognize it as a defense to this suit.
Appellant maintains that the decree is inequitable because appellee is without assets and therefore unable to carry out the executory features of the contract by which the trackage rights were obtained, i.e., the payment of his part of the maintenance cost of appellant's line and the cost of dispatching trains. Although later developments may have demonstrated the correctness of appellant's contention as to the facts bearing upon this point, the evidence is unsatisfactory, and the trial court refused to make appellant's requested findings of fact thereon.
We recently quoted with approval from Lee v. Board of Com'rs of Monroe County (C.C.A.) 114 F. 744, the following: "There is no public policy recognized by the courts which allows any person, natural or artificial, to take the property of another, and appropriate it to its own use, and deny to the person who is innocent of fraud the right to reclaim it." Shaw et al. v. Board of Education of the Village of Hobbs,
On like principle, the rule is, in the case of receivers, that the receiver cannot accept the benefit of a contract without carrying out its obligations. See 53 C.J. 151, and cases there cited. He may, under the order of court, exhaust the assets of a railroad corporation in experiments, but we know of no rule of law which permits him to levy tribute on others. See Santa Fe, San Juan Northern Railroad Co. v. Helmick,
It appears that no inventory or report showing the property in his hands, required by 1929 Comp. St. § 32-182, has been filed by appellee. Without disclosing to the court any of the facts upon which the railroad's ability or inability to carry out its part of the executory contract could be determined, but, on the other hand, expressly denying in his reply that plaintiff was financially unable to perform the terms, conditions, and covenants of the contract he sought to enforce, appellee asked for and obtained a decree requiring the outlay of money and performance of services by appellant. In a substantial sense, the engagements of the receiver are the engagements of the court appointing him. Atlantic Trust Co. v. Chapman,
Although there is a broad distinction between private corporation receiverships and railroad receiverships [Wood v. Guarantee Trust Co.,
The judgment appealed from will be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
WATSON, C.J., and SADLER and BICKLEY, JJ., concur.
ZINN, J., did not participate.