Long Branch & Sea Shore Railroad v. Sneden
Long Branch & Sea Shore Railroad v. Sneden
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
By an act of the legislature, approved February 12th, 1874, it is provided that, on the failure of any railroad company,
On a petition being filed, and upon satisfactory proofs, an order was made by the Chancellor, appointing William S. Sneden, receiver, by virtue of this act, therein directing him to take possession of and operate certain designated railroads, among which were those of the New Jersey Southern Railroad Company and the Long Branch and Sea Shore Railroad Company, which latter company is the appellant in this proceeding. This order, being the foundation of the procedure, has not been appealed from, and is not now before us. The act upon which this order rests is certainly one of great importance, both with respect to public and private interests, and with respect to the legal and constitutional principles which its construction and application involve. If, therefore, an appeal had been put in to this order, and in this way this court had been called upon, in the present cause, to enforce the provision of this statute, the subject would have challenged, and, no doubt, would have received a careful and deliberate consideration. But this step not having been taken, it is necessary to allude to the fact only with the purpose to exclude, in an explicit form, every inference that the topic was examined, or that this act, in its legal aspects, was, in any wise, sanctioned by this court.
The subject presented to this court by this appeal, is exclusively this:
After the order already mentioned had been made, and while it remained in force, the appellants, the Long Branch and Sea Shore Railroad Company applied, by their petition, to have their road surrendered and delivered up to them, putting ■their application on the ground that they were desirous of operating their own road, and that they had ample means
It seems to me this conclusion of the Chancellor, under the facts of the ease, was clearly correct.
Those facts were these: The road of the appellants had^ for some years, been run by the New Jersey Southern Railroad Company in connection with its own road, and so intimate had been this union, that the ostensible existence of the former company had been merged in that of the latter. The New Jersey Southern had abandoned and dismantled its northern terminus at Port Monmouth, and, by an extension of the appellants’ road for the distance of three miles, had established a new one at Sandy Hook, thus making the latter road a necessary part of a complete line from its water communication on the north to its water communication on the south. It further appears, that the New Jersey Southern had a lease of the road of the appellants, which was said to have expired, but which was not produced. When cars ceased running, both these roads were in the possession of the New Jersey Southern Railroad Company. It is a fact, I think, which cannot be disputed, that at the time the Court of Chancery laid its hand upon this line of railroads, these two roads, that of the appellants and that of the New Jersey Southern, were in the peaceable possession of the latter company, and that the latter company claimed the right to operate both roads in conjunction. On this state of affairs, the Chancellor is asked to turn over the possession of the road of the appellants to them.
Now, I doubt very much whether, in any case of this kind' such a petition ought to receive even a hearing. The Chancellor was not authorized to take charge of this road for any such purpose as this. From the nature of the proceeding, it would appear that the possession of the road so taken would be returned to the company that was put out of possession by the order of the court. There is nothing in the statute, or in the character of the proceeding authorized by it, which gives, the faintest color to- the notion that the Chancellor, as an..
In addition to this general ground, upon which a denial of the relief prayed was proper, there was a further defect, which should have been fatal to the claim of the appellants. Such defect consisted in the omission of the New Jersey Southern Railroad Company as a party to this proceeding. So far as is shown, • no notice of this petition, or of its hearing, was served upon this company. Upon the plainest principles, it would seem that this road could not be taken by the Court of Chancery from this company and handed over to another claimant, without giving to them the opportunity of being heard.
Under these circumstances, it is not necessary to consider the question raised on the argument, with respect to the admissibility of certain parts of the testimony on which the order appealed from was based. The essential facts, which will justify fully the decision made by the Chancellor, appear by the petitioners’ own showing.
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Order unanimously affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.