Latrobe v. Western Telegraph Co.
Latrobe v. Western Telegraph Co.
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Certain stockholders of the Western Telegraph Company of Baltimore City filed a hill in equity against the corporation and certain of its directors, and against The Western Union Telegraph Company. The principal averments of the hill of complaint briefly stated, are as follows: That the Western Telegraph Company of Baltimore City
We will commence the consideration of the questions in this case by examining the title to the telegraph line, posts and wires set up as the basis of the complainants' prayer for relief. The Legislature, on the fifth day of February, 1841, incorporated the Western Telegraph Company, and, in the seventeenth section of the Act of incorporation, provided that it should endure for thirty years from its passage. In the year 1853, this corporation made an agreement with the Baltimore and Ohio Eailroad Company, and another agreement in 1855; both of them relating to the telegraph line and its accessories which are in controversy in this suit. By the first section of the agreement of 1853 the Telegraph Company acquired a license, so long as it should exist as a telegraph company, to erect and maintain a line of telegraph upon and within the limits of the railroad. The second section hound the Eailroad Company to build a line between Ellicotts’ Mills and Wheeling along the track of the road, and stipulated that when completed, it should be the property of the Telegraph Company. The ninth and eleventh sections are as follow^:
9. “In the event of the dissolution of the said telegraph company, or a suspension of operations on their
11. “And it is agreed that the ownership of the said telegraph company, hereinbefore recognized, of the posts and wires of the telegraph, is to he taken as subject to the performance by the said telegraph company and its assigns, of all stipulations herein contained affecting said telegraph company.”
The agreement of 1855 provided for a line from Camden Station to Ellicotts' Mills, and for an additional wire from Camden Station to Cumberland. It will be perceived that by the ninth section of the agreement of 1853, the Railroad Company's right arose in each of two cases; first, the dissolution of the Telegraph Company; and secondly, a suspension of its operations. And if the Telegraph Company should resume active operations, the Railroad Company's right was to cease. The corporate existence of the Telegraph Company would have expired by its own limitation on the fourth day of February, eighteen hundred and seventy-seven. On the eighth day of January of that year, the Western Telegraph Company, by due proceedings, was incorporated under the provisions of the Act-of 1868, chapter 111, under the name of The Western Telegraph Company of Baltimore City. The effect of this proceeding must he determined hv the terms of the Act. The seventy-sixth section enacts that the new corporation shall he subject to all the provisions of the Act, and entitled to
As the Western Telegraph Company of Baltimore City had no title to the property in question, the stockholders who filed this bill of complaint are not injured hy the action which they impute to the said corporation, and to the Western Union Telegraph Company. The Court below dismissed the hill, and we approve of its decision.
Decree affirmed, ivitli costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John H. B. Latrobe, and others v. The Western Telegraph Company of Baltimore City, and others
- Status
- Published