Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/259/214/
Timestamp: 2019-04-24 12:08:01+00:00

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Justia › US Law › US Case Law › US Supreme Court › Volume 259 › United States v. Southern Pacific Co.
1. A combination whereby one railroad system, through stock purchases, acquires control of the whole or a vital part of another, with the effect of materially reducing free and normal competition in interstate trade between the two, violates the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. P. 259 U. S. 229.
and the Atlantic seaboard and intermediate places, the acquisition in 1899 by the Southern Pacific Company, owning the Southern Pacific System, of a controlling part of the stock of the Central Pacific Railway Company, owner of the Central Pacific lines, constituted a combination made unlawful by the Sherman Act. P. 259 U. S. 229. United States v. Union Pacific R. Co., 226 U. S. 61.
3. The principle of United States v. Union Pacific R. Co., 226 U. S. 61, and of the previous cases upon which it rested, does not depend upon the existence of competition when the combination is formed. P. 259 U. S. 230.
4. The history of the two railroad systems here involved, considered and held not to justify the stock purchase in question upon the theory that there was a prior practical consolidation of them, antedating the Sherman Act, through their physical relations and community of stock ownership and control. P. 259 U. S. 232.
5. In view of the important rights and franchises conferred upon the Central Pacific Railroad Company by the United States, a ninety-nine year lease of its railroad made by it in 1885 to its competitor, the Southern Pacific Company, was beyond its corporate capacity in the absence of any act of Congress authorizing or approving it. P. 259 U. S. 233.
6. Approval of this lease is not to be inferred from the fact that Congress had opportunity to learn of it through reports of committees or otherwise. P. 259 U. S. 234.
7. The fact that a combination or contract in restraint or monopoly of interstate trade was entered into before the date of the Sherman Act does not exempt it from the operation of that statute. P. 259 U. S. 234.
part of which were delivered to the government as the collateral called for by the settlement agreement, and acquisition by the Southern Pacific Company of a controlling part of the new company's stock. The guaranty, not mentioned in the settlement agreement, was referred to in the Attorney General's report of the settlement to Congress, and Congress later passed acts authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to dispose of any notes in his possession touching the indebtedness of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, and to settle claims of that road and of the Southern Pacific for transportation services by credits on the Central Pacific notes. The notes were paid primarily by checks of the Southern Pacific.
Held that the commission's acceptance of the guaranty was neither in intention nor in effect a condonation of the violation of the Sherman Act committed in the acquisition of the stock, and that the settlement did not estop the government from prosecuting under that statute. P. 259 U. S. 235.
9. The decree in United States v. Union Pacific R. Co., 226 U. S. 61, does not conclude the government on the issues here involved, since the Central Pacific Railway Company was not a party in that suit up to the final decree in this Court, and the subject matter of that case and the questions decided in it differ from the subject matter here and the questions here presented for decision. P. 259 U. S. 240.
10. Delay of fourteen years in instituting this suit to set aside the control gained by the Southern Pacific through purchase of Central Pacific stock in 1899 was not laches in view of the time consumed by the intervening prosecution to set aside the control gained by the Union Pacific Railroad Company through purchase of Southern Pacific stock in 1901. P. 259 U. S. 240.
11. Whether the leases to the Southern Pacific Company and its acquisition of Central Pacific stock were, in and of themselves, violative of the Pacific Railroads Act of 1862 and supplemental legislation -- not decided. P. 259 U. S. 241.
12. The decree to be entered should sever the control by the Southern Pacific of the Central Pacific by stock ownership or lease, protect, as far as compatible the mortgage of the Central Union Trust Company, and insure both railroads proper access to San Francisco Bay over the several terminals, lines and cut-offs leading thereto, constructed or acquired during the unified control of the two systems, and similar provision should be made respecting lines extending from San Francisco Bay to Sacramento and Portland, Oregon. P. 259 U. S. 241.
13. In framing the decree, the district court may bring in additional parties. P. 259 U. S. 241.
Appeal from a decree of the district court dismissing, upon final hearing, a suit brought by the United States for relief against an alleged unlawful combination between the two railroad companies. The facts are stated in the opinion, post 224.
and also violative of the act, supplemental to the Act of 1862, the Act of July 2, 1864, 13 Stat. 356, and the Act of June 20, 1874, 18 Stat. 111, the government maintaining that the effect of such acts is to require the Central Pacific to maintain physical connection with the Union Pacific to make a through line to the coast, and to furnish equal advantages and facilities as to rates, time, and transportation over such through line.
one of the three Circuit Judges who heard the case dissenting. 239 F. 998.
The Central Pacific Railroad Company of California was incorporated under the laws of California in 1891 for the purposes of constructing a railroad from Sacramento to the eastern boundary of California. In 1862 and 1864, Congress, by proper legislation, incorporated the Union Pacific Railroad Company to build from the Missouri River westward, and authorized the Central Pacific to build eastwardly from the Pacific Coast at or near San Francisco, to a common meeting point with the Union Pacific. These acts of Congress authorized the issue of first mortgage bonds, and also second mortgage bonds, and made a land grant of public lands for each linear mile of railroad construction. These acts provided that these two railroads should be operated as one continuous line, and that neither should discriminate in favor of or against the other. Leland Stanford, Charles Crocker, C.P. Huntington, and Mark Hopkins acquired a large part of the capital stock of the Central Pacific Company. The Central Pacific assigned to the Western Pacific a portion of the construction, namely that from Sacramento to San Jose, this with the approval of Congress. C. 88, § 2, 13 Stat. 504.
the Western Pacific, which built from Sacramento to San Jose; the Alameda Company, which built from Niles to Oakland; the San Joaquin, which built from Lathrop to Goshen, and the California & Oregon Company, which built from Roseville north en route to the Oregon line.
The Southern Pacific Railroad Company was incorporated in 1865 under the laws of California for the purpose of constructing a railroad from San Francisco Bay, by the way of San Diego, to the eastern boundary of California. In 1866, Congress passed an act to incorporate the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad Company to construct a railroad near the thirty-fifth parallel of latitude from Springfield, Missouri, to the Pacific Ocean. This act authorized the Southern Pacific to connect with the Atlantic & Pacific near the eastern boundary of California, and both companies were granted public lands. In 1867, the Southern Pacific changed its route to the eastward, so as not to go as far south as originally contemplated; this act was ratified by Congress and the Legislature of California in 1870.
In 1871, Congress incorporated the Texas Pacific Railroad Company to build a line of railroad near the thirty-second parallel of latitude from Marshall, Texas, by the way of El Paso to the Pacific Ocean at San Diego, and to connect on the east with other railroads, and on the west with the Southern Pacific Railroad. The Southern Pacific was authorized to construct a railroad from Tehachapi Pass to a junction of the Texas Pacific Railroad at the eastern boundary of California. Land grants were made to both companies. In 1872, the Central Pacific had extended its lines to Goshen.
other fork to the southeastern corner of the state (near thirty-second parallel), thence across Arizona and New Mexico to a junction in Texas with the Texas & Pacific, thence to a connection at El Paso with the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railroad. The sections of the Southern line were leased for a series of years to the Central. In 1881, the Southern Pacific made a junction with the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe at Demming, New Mexico. In 1882, the Southern made a junction with the Texas & Pacific at Sierra Blanca, Texas. In 1883, the direct line of the southern connection with the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio and its eastern connections was completed through to New Orleans. The same year, it made its junction with the Atlantic & Pacific at The Needles.
The section from Mohave to Needles was leased to the Santa Fe in 1883, and sold to it in 1911. From 1883 to 1885, the Central Pacific was the lessee owner of a system of leases, and the system was known as the "Central Pacific Railroad and Leased Lines." In February, 1885, after the formation of the Southern Pacific Company (of Kentucky), that road became the lessee. We shall have occasion to deal more particularly with that lease later.
with the Union Pacific, extending to Omaha, Nebraska, and to Kansas City, Missouri, connecting at Ogden with the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad and with other connecting roads eastwardly to the Missouri River, and from the Missouri River to the central and eastern parts of the United States.
The Southern Pacific system extends from San Francisco Bay, by way of El Paso, to Galveston, Texas, and to New Orleans, there connecting with steamship lines to New York City controlled by the Southern Pacific. At El Paso, it connects with the Rock Island, which runs to Omaha and Chicago; at New Orleans, it connects with roads extending to points in the central and eastern parts of the United States. It owns branches in Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Oregon, and many in California.
The Central Pacific, with its eastern connection at Ogden, forms one great system of transportation between the East and the West, and the Southern Pacific with its roads and connections, and steamboat lines, forms another great transcontinental system for transportation from coast to coast. The Central Pacific constitutes some 800 miles of the transcontinental line of which it is a part. The Southern Pacific system has practically its own line of railroads and steamboat connections to New York, via Galveston and New Orleans.
Pacific to dominate and control it, was violative of the Sherman Act. This case differs from that not at all in principle. These two great systems are normally competitive for the carrying trade in some parts from the East and Middle West to the Coast, and for the traffic moving to and from Central and Northern California, including a great volume of ocean-borne traffic which lands on the coast destined across the continent to the Atlantic Seaboard and intermediate Western and Eastern points, or is destined from the latter points to foreign ports via San Francisco or other Pacific Coast points.
Counsel for the defendants, evidently realizing this situation, make elaborate argument to distinguish the Union Pacific case. The claim is made that the decision there rested only on the fact that a then existing competition was restrained through the purchase by the Union Pacific of the control of the Southern Pacific in 1901; but the principle of that decision and of the previous cases upon which it rested was broader than the mere effect upon existing competition between the two systems.
"a menace and a restraint upon that freedom of commerce which Congress intended to recognize and protect and which the public is entitled to have protected."
Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U. S. 197, 193 U. S. 327. This principle was restated and applied in United States v. Union Pacific Co., supra. It was reiterated and approved by the court as recently as the October term, 1919. United States v. Reading Co., 253 U. S. 26, 253 U. S. 57-59.
acquisition is to suppress or materially reduce the free and normal flow of competition in the channels of interstate trade.
In the instant case, we are not dealing with the principle in the abstract. The proof is ample that the policy of the Southern Pacific system has been to favor transportation on its line by securing for itself, whenever practicable, the carriage of freight which would normally move eastward or westward over the shorter line of the Central Pacific Railroad and its connections, for its own much longer and wholly owned southern route. This course was limited by an arbitrary rule during the time the Union Pacific dominated the Southern Pacific from the stock purchase in 1901 until the so-called "unmerger" in 1913, as a result of the decision of this Court in the Union Pacific case. The compelling motive of this course of conduct is obvious. The Southern Pacific owns and controls the southerly route, and receives 100 percent of the compensation for freight transported by its road and water lines. Over the Central Pacific route it receives but a fraction of the freight, because the Union Pacific, with its Eastern connections, takes up the carrying from Ogden to the East. Self-interest dictates the solicitation and procurement of freight for the longer haul by the Southern Pacific lines. While many practices formerly in vogue are eliminated by the legislation of Congress regulating interstate commerce, and through rates and transportation may be had under public supervision, there are elements of competition in the granting of special facilities, the prompt carrying and delivery of freight, the ready and agreeable adjustment and settlement of claims, and other elements which that legislation does not control.
It is conceded in the brief of counsel for the defendants that "it is true of all such systems that, other things being equal, freight is preferentially solicited for the 100 percent haul."
We reach the conclusion that the stock ownership in the Central Pacific acquired by the Southern Pacific is violative of the Sherman Act within the principles settled by this Court, certainly since the decision in the Northern Securities case, in 1903, and that such stock ownership must be divested from the Southern Pacific Company unless the special circumstances and defenses set up and relied upon by the defendants are to prevail.
of the stock was held by the group to which we have referred. It had been sold and was widely owned in the United States and Europe. The dominating control was maintained from the fact that the stock had not been transferred by its true owners on the company's books, and much of it was held in the name of employees who were used in voting it by the original promoters, their successors, and survivors.
We cannot accept the theory of prior practical consolidation as a justification for a violation of the Sherman Act resulting from the stock control acquired in 1899.
Much stress is placed on the lease, in February, 1885, of the Central Pacific to the Southern Pacific for a term of 99 years. In 1884, the Southern Pacific, a holding company, was organized as a corporation of the State of Kentucky. The organization of this company, which acquired the stocks of the Southern Pacific System and became the lessee of the Central Pacific, was the result of a meeting in New York of Messrs. Stanford, Huntington, Crocker, and Timothy Hopkins, the successor of Mark Hopkins. The plan was then discussed, and the necessary measures directed to carry it into execution.
The lease of 1885 is set up in the answer and relied upon as showing an existing legal acquisition before the transfer of the Central Pacific stock in 1899. This lease made February 17, 1885, was modified in January, 1888, and, on December 7, 1893, a lease was entered into which recited that the agreements of lease between the same parties, the Southern Pacific and the Central Pacific, dated February 17, 1885, and January 1, 1888, respectively should be cancelled except insofar as they relate to the operation of the demised premises prior to January 1, 1894, and to the adjustment of accounts in respect to such operation.
commerce. However this may be, this Court has repeatedly recognized the fact that the Central Pacific was a corporation receiving much of its authority and power from acts of Congress. California v. Pacific Railroad Co., 127 U. S. 1. In Central Pacific Railroad Co. v. California, 162 U. S. 91, it was held by this Court that, on the return for taxation by the Central Pacific Railroad Company of the value of its franchise and roadway, roadbed, and rails within the State of California, the same might be taxed under the laws of that state. This conclusion was reached against the elaborately stated and strongly expressed dissents of Mr. Justice Field and Mr. Justice Harlan. In the prevailing opinion, delivered by MR. Chief Justice Fuller, it was recognized (p. 162 U. S. 123) that important franchises conferred upon the Central Pacific were of federal creation, including that of constructing a railroad from the Pacific Ocean to Ogden in the then Territory of Utah.
conspiracies, or combinations to restrain the freedom of interstate trade or to monopolize the same in whole or in part. Addyston Pipe & Steel Co. v. United States, 175 U. S. 211, 175 U. S. 228. The principle has often been declared and applied in this Court. It is stated, and the previous cases reviewed, in Philadelphia, Baltimore & Washington Railroad Co. v. Schubert, 224 U. S. 603, 224 U. S. 613-614.
We find nothing in these leases to the Southern Pacific Company which justifies the continued control of the Central Pacific by the Southern Pacific after the Sherman Act became effective.
semiannually, with such security as the commission might deem expedient; that the final discharge of the indebtedness should not be postponed beyond ten years; that the whole amount, principal and interest, should be paid in equal semiannual installments within that period; that any settlement made should provide that, if a default were made in the payment of either principal or interest, the whole sum and all installments should immediately become due and payable; that, unless the settlement authorized should be perfected within one year, the President of the United States should at once proceed to foreclose all liens held by the United States against the railroad companies to collect the indebtedness sought to be settled under the act, and that nothing therein contained should be held to waive or release any right, lien, or cause of action held by the United States.
Under this act, a settlement was effected as of date February 1, 1899. The Central Pacific's debt to the United States for government aid in the construction of lines between Sacramento and Ogden, and Sacramento and San Jose, amounted to $58,812,715.48, one-half of this amount was accrued interest. It was secured by a statutory lien on the bond-aided lines, subject to prior first mortgages. The Central Pacific's bonded debt amounted to $57,471,000, largely secured by first mortgages on its various lines of railroad. The outstanding stock was $67,275,500.
the sum of $2,940,635.78, being one-twentieth of the debt, bearing interest at 3%, payable semiannually, all to mature on default in payment of any one of them. Under the agreement, gold bonds not exceeding $100,000,000 were to be issued, secured by first mortgage on all the Central Pacific lines, bond-aided or not. This mortgage to be prior in lien to any lease of the railroads of the Central Pacific Railroad Company. The bonds were secured by the guaranty of the Southern Pacific. No such agreement of guaranty was embodied in the written settlement, but it was known to the commissioners that the plan contemplated such guaranty. Of these bonds, $58,820,000 were to be deposited with the treasurer of the United States as security for the twenty installment notes. Speyer & Co., within one month after the execution and delivery of the notes, were to purchase from the United States the four notes first maturing by paying the face thereof for the same, $11,762,543.12 and interest. A proportionate amount of the collateral mortgage bonds was to go with the notes.
On February 15, 1899, the commission reported the agreement to the House of Representatives. No reference to the guaranty of the Southern Pacific upon the bonds appeared in the report. In the Annual Report of the Attorney General to the Senate and House of November, 1899, the completion of the settlement, which had been made, was set out, and the guaranty of the Southern Pacific was stated, no doubt by inadvertence, to be upon the notes, instead of upon the bonds. The notes, held in the Treasury of the United States, were paid primarily by the checks of the Southern Pacific, and charged by that road against the Central Pacific.
States. On March 3, 1901, c. 831, 31 Stat. 1023, the Secretary of the Treasury was authorized and directed to settle claims for interest growing out of transportation services for the government over nonbond-aided lines of the Southern Pacific and the Central Pacific by crediting the amounts on the Central Pacific notes.
Neither the agreement between the commissioners, the railroad company, and Speyer & Co. nor the report of the commission to Congress contained any reference to the proposed acquisition of the stock of the Central Pacific by the Southern Pacific. The Speyer plan for the adjustment of the affairs of the Central Pacific was dated February 8, 1899, was put out February 20th of the same year, was extensively published in American and European financial circles, and was given publicity in the Commercial and Financial Chronicle in the February, 1899, issues of that journal. Under the terms of the plan, the Central Pacific Railway Company, successors to the Central Pacific Railroad Company, was organized as a corporation of the State of Utah on July 29, 1899. The Central Pacific Railroad Company (the old corporation of 1861) conveyed all of its property to the new company. On August 1, 1899, the Central Pacific Railway Company executed a refunding mortgage of $100,000,000 to the Central Trust Company of New York, trustee, and a mortgage of $25,000,000 to the Union Trust Company of New York. The Southern Pacific Company executed instruments subordinating its lease to the lien of these mortgages. Thereupon, carrying out the Speyer plan for the Southern Pacific to acquire the stock of the new Central Pacific Railway Company, $20,000,000 of the preferred shares of the latter company were issued, which were taken by the Southern Pacific at par. The outstanding stock of the old Central Pacific was taken by the Southern Pacific, share for share, plus 25% in the bonds of the Southern Pacific.
To consummate this transaction, Southern Pacific mortgage bonds amounting to $36,819,000 were issued; $20,000,000 thereof were used to acquire the new Central Pacific preferred stock, the balance to provide the 25% in bonds required to aid in the share for share exchange of the outstanding Central Pacific stock in the hands of private owners. Thus, the Southern Pacific under the Speyer plan was to become the owner of the Central Pacific Railway Company stock.
"We do not say that the commission was authorized to violate or to sanction the violation of the act of Congress, but the adjustment they effected necessarily involved the question of its pertinence to the business in hand. The acceptance of the guaranty of the Southern Pacific was a recognition that it had sufficient corporate interest in the Central Pacific to justify it. Without such interest, its accommodation guaranty of $100,000,000 of bonds of another company would manifestly have been ultra vires -- a gross, indefensible excess of its corporate powers. Again, the acceptance of the guaranty implied a recognition of its possible natural result -- that is to say, the enforcements of the rights of a guarantor against the property of a debtor. The addition of the stock ownership by the Southern Pacific to its long leasehold interest did not so change the situation as to make unlawful what was not so before."
was concerned, from motives of self-interest sufficient in the opinion of those who controlled it to warrant such action. The commissioners, acting for the government, accepted such guaranty. They did not thereby condone, or intend to condone, any act which had the effect to violate the Sherman Act. Nor could this settlement estop the government from prosecuting an action under the provisions of the act.
It is insisted that the decree in the Union Pacific case is decisive of this controversy, and amounts to an adjudication against the government of the issues involved. The conclusive answer to this contention is that the Central Pacific was not a party to that suit up to the final decree in this Court. That suit and the present one do not relate to the same subject matter. The issues and questions therein decided are not the ones presented for decision here. Cromwell v. County of Sac, 94 U. S. 351; United Shoe Machinery Co. v. United States, 258 U. S. 451.
The defendants contend that the suit is barred by laches on part of the government in failing to institute it earlier. Without deciding that this defense is available when an action is brought under an act of Congress embodying, as does the Sherman Act, an expression of public policy enforceable by criminal prosecution and by civil suit instituted by the Attorney General, we are unable to discover that laches exists in the failure to more promptly prosecute the suit. The stock acquisition complained of was in 1899. In 1901, the Union Pacific acquired control of the Southern Pacific by purchase of sufficient stock to accomplish that purpose. The Union Pacific case was begun in 1908, and a final decree reached in 1913, and in 1914 this suit was begun.
stated, which, in our view, dispose of this cause and require a reversal of the decree of the district court.
We do not find it necessary to pass upon the government's contention that the leases to the Southern Pacific and the acquisition by it of Central Pacific stock were, in and of themselves, violative of the Pacific Railroad Acts of Congress of 1862 and subsequent supplemental legislation.
We direct that a decree be entered severing the control by the Southern Pacific of the Central Pacific by stock ownership or by lease. But, in accomplishing this purpose, so far as compatible therewith, the mortgage lien asserted in the brief filed for the Central Union Trust Company shall be protected.
In addition, the several terminal lines and cut-offs leading to San Francisco Bay which have been constructed or acquired during the unified control of the two systems for the purpose of affording direct or convenient access to the bay and to the principal terminal facilities about the bay should be dealt with, either by way of apportionment or by provisions for joint or common use, in such manner as will secure to both companies such full, convenient, and ready access to the bay and to terminal facilities thereon that each company will be able freely to compete with the other, to serve the public efficiently, and to accomplish the purpose of the legislation under which it was constructed. And a like course should be pursued in dealing with the lines extending from San Francisco Bay to Sacramento and to Portland, Oregon.
To the end that an appropriate decree may be framed, the district court may and should bring in additional parties whenever that may become advisable in executing our directions.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS and MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
I am unable to concur in the opinion and judgment of the Court. To this I feel constrained because I think it is unjust for the government to enforce a dissolution of the relation existing between the Central Pacific Railway Company and the Southern Pacific Company. I put my action on that ground alone, though much can be said on the other grounds urged by the government and contested by the appellee companies.
Prior to this relation, another existed between the two companies or systems (they may be said to have had that pretension and extent) constituted by a lease for 99 years, executed in 1885 by the Central Pacific Railroad Company to the Southern Pacific, giving to the latter the dominion of a proprietor. Waskey v. Chambers, 224 U. S. 564, 224 U. S. 565.
The Central Pacific Railroad Company was a bond-aided road, and, on account of it, was under obligation to repay the government the aid it had received, and Congress, by an act passed July 7, 1898, 30 Stat. 659, created a commission with power to settle the indebtedness. An agreement of settlement was made in which the Southern Pacific was a participant, and by it assured the payment of the securities provided for in the agreement of settlement between the Central Pacific Railroad Company and the government.
rights and control the Southern Pacific, as lessee, had of the Central Pacific Railroad Company.
Was it a justifiable substitute? The answer should be in the affirmative. When the Act of 1898 was passed, the situation was serious, the problem complex, and, because the problem was complex, three Cabinet officers were selected to solve it. These were the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of the Interior, and the Attorney General. Their prominence in the government, their official concern with the subject matter, assured fidelity in the execution of the trust, and repels charge or intimation that they were, or could be, actuated by anything other than a strict consideration of duty and the exercise of their trust, and their ability assured judgment in the selection of means. The problem, it is to be remembered, was something more than to ascertain the amount of the debt. It involved, it might be, foreclosure of the government's liens and, it might also be, government ownership and all that that meant.
The debt was known to be $58,812,715.48. It was secured by a mortgage on the lines of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, it is true, but the mortgage was subordinate to other mortgages for about the same amount. It was to be rescued from this subordination, and given independent and certain solvency. The power given to the commissioners was necessary to and commensurate with the purpose. The power was "to settle the indebtedness" "upon such terms and in such manner" as "might be" "agreed upon" and to take "such security as" might "seem expedient." The only limitation was that the payment was not to be extended more than ten years.
situation, or that demanded the separation of the Southern Pacific from the Central Pacific, and that the guaranty of the former could be accepted, and all that would follow from it. And it is to be remembered that the action of the commission received the sanction of the President, and was reported to Congress. If either had objected, the settlement as planned could not have been accomplished, and both would have objected if they had discerned anything sinister or inimical to law in it or that would result from it.
It is said, however, that there was no affirmative approval by Congress, and that its approval cannot be assumed from nonaction.
The government makes much of this, ignoring all else, and ventures, in a kind of desperation, against the circumstances, the incredible assertion that Congress was ignorant of the guaranty of the Southern Pacific and its contributing efficiency, and this against an irresistible presumption to the contrary and in defiance of the fact that the Attorney General reported to Congress the terms of settlement, and that the notes taken in settlement were guaranteed by the Southern Pacific, and in defiance of the further fact that the bonds that it was provided were to be deposited as security for the notes with the Secretary of the Treasury had indorsed upon them the guaranty of the Southern Pacific, and that the financial and commercial journals of the country, addressing the business world -- the world that was to accept the notes which Congress authorized the Secretary to sell -- explained the settlement and the relation of the Southern Pacific to it, and the assurance of safety and value the guarantee of the Southern Pacific gave.
guaranty which carried obligation, and that the guaranty was the prompting of interest on the part of the Southern Pacific. I concede the latter. The enterprise that is necessary, and is exhibited in the conduct of great railroad systems, whose traffic is concerned with a continent, is not induced by the altruistic; it is, and naturally must be, prompted by interest; but it, as other transactions of the business world, is entitled to legal sanction and remedy.
The Court asserts an interest in the Southern Pacific that urged its guaranty, but does not explain the interest. It is of pertinent concern to consider what it was. It manifestly was no other than the relation of the company to the Central Pacific Railway Company through stock ownership. The company would necessarily have no concern or interest in the Central Pacific (the new company), or the payment of the old company's debts to the government, if it was to be separated from the Central Pacific and declared a competitor and a business antagonist, and this must have been apparent to everyone connected with the transactions if they gave any reflection to them -- anything but a haphazard and reckless attention, inconsiderate of practical and legal consequences. This cannot be assumed, and the contrary must be -- that is, that the guaranty of the Southern Pacific was accepted as necessary to the settlement of the debt.
I repeat, and summarize, that the situation was of great concern to the government. Its solution was the consummation desired, and through the aid of the Southern Pacific. The company's guaranty was assurance to the business world that behind the notes and bonds of the Central Pacific were the great properties of the Southern Pacific and the competency of its management, and the company made sacrifices in addition to the guaranty, and they, and it, were accepted by the government, and therefore the benefit that the company expected cannot be denied it.
There was no thought in anyone's mind that the acquisition of stock by the Southern Pacific in the Central Pacific would be a restraint upon competition, or a detriment to the public interest. The attitude of those concerned in the transaction can be accurately realized by the reflection that the interest control, if it may be so called, that the Southern Pacific acquired in or over the new company (the railway company) was not greater nor more offensive to law than it had in or over the old company (the railroad company). The latter control existed from the enactment of the law until it was superseded by the agreement, a period of eight years. And there was no revulsion against or condemnation of the control -- not by the government, whose duty it was to proceed against it if it violated the Anti-Trust Law; not by any business interest, though for such interest the law was enacted as a protection. This suit was not brought until 1914, fifteen years after the agreement -- not, however, by the government of the agreement, but by the government of a much later time.
I think, however, that the decree of the district court should be affirmed.
"Q. Please state whether the Central Pacific could have complied with the conditions imposed by that act of Congress [Act of 1898] without a financial readjustment of their affairs of the kind contained in the readjustment which you arranged for?"
The question was objected to, but the witness answered.
"The Witness: Without some kind of readjustment, they could not have complied. I am not prepared to say that the adjustment we made was the only kind, but some kind of adjustment seemed absolutely necessary."
"Q. And you made a plan of readjustment?"
"Q. I put before you, for convenience of reference, the plan of readjustment which was used when Mr. Ruhlender was testifying. You recognize that as the plan of readjustment which was arranged for?"
"Q. Mr. Speyer, when you started to work upon that plan of readjustment, did you expect and count upon the intervention and aid of the Southern Pacific Company?"
"A. I knew I could not carry it through without the help of the Southern Pacific, or some other railroad company, in case the Southern Pacific had not come to assist."
"Q. Did you ever contemplate or work upon any plan which did not involve the intervention and aid of the Southern Pacific Company?"
"Q. And that plan could not have been carried through without the intervention and aid of the Southern Pacific Company."
The question was objected to.
"Q. Mr. Speyer, considering the terms required by the act of Congress, namely, the requirement that the entire debt of $58,800,000, in round numbers, would have to be paid in ten years, in twenty semiannual installments, would anyone at all familiar with the Central Pacific affairs know that the Central Pacific, with its own resources and credit, could not comply with those conditions?"
"Q. It would be obvious to any one at all familiar with the affairs of the Central Pacific that it could not, with its own resources and credit, comply with the terms of that act?"
"Q. In making the agreement which you participated in with the United States, what did you count upon to enable you to carry out the agreement with the United States."
"A. The cooperation of the security holders of the Central Pacific and of the Southern Pacific Company."

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