94 Va. 647 | Va. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is the case of a petition for the writ of mandamus.
The record discloses the fact that if the writ were awarded as prayed for, the court would be powerless to make it effectual, and this constitutes an insuperable objection to granting it.
“It is well settled as a fundamental principle in the law of mandamus,” says an able test writer, “that courts will not grant this estraordinary remedy where to do so would be
It appears from the record that the Winchester & Strasburg Eailroad Company, on July 28, 1870, leased its railroad to the Baltimore & Ohio Eailroad Company, that the road has ever since been operated under said lease and a renewal thereof by the latter company, and that the lease will not expire for a number of years. It further appears that more than a year since, in a proceeding instituted to that end, receivers were appointed by the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Maryland of all the railroads and property, franchises, assets, credits, and effects of the Baltimore & Ohio Eailroad Company, including all railroads leased or controlled by it, and that the said railroads were taken possession of by the receivers, and are now being operated by them under the orders and direction of the said court.
The possession and control of the railroad of the Winchester & Strasburg Eailroad Company by the receivers cannot be disturbed, nor their operation of it interfered u ith, by any court other than that which appointed them. This is the established doctrine of both the State and Federal courts.
If the Winchester & Strasburg Eailroad Company were required to construct its road from Strasburg Junction to the town of Strasburg as prayed for by the petitioner, this court would have no power to compel the receivers of the Baltimore & Ohio Eailroad Company to run their trains over the extension; nor can it require them to make traffic arrangements with the Southern Eailway Company so as to furnish the citizens of Strasburg with the railroad facilities which they desire. The receivers are amenable only to the orders of the court which appointed them. If, therefore, the road were extended
There is another equally cogent reason against granting the writ. It appears from the testimony that it would cost from $39,000 to $40,000 to construct the desired extension. It also appears that the Winchester & Strasburg Railroad Company has no property except its railroad, and is devoid of the means with which to make the extension, if it were required to do so. Its only source of income is from the operation of its railroad by the said receivers, who, under the order of the court, are authorized to carry out the terms of the lease only so far as they can do so from the earnings of the road. The earnings up to this time have been but little more than sufficient, after paying expenses and taxes, to pay a dividend of four per cent, on the 746 shares of the capital stock of the company held by persons other than the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, it being the owner of the remainder (5,254) of the 6,000 shares of stock. So it appears that, if ordered to make the desired extension and to construct its road to the town of Strasburg, the Winchester & Strasburg Railroad Company would be financially unable to obey, and the writ of mandamus would, on that account, prove ineffectual.
For the foregoing reasons the writ must be denied.
Mandamus refused.