Court Opinion

ID: 7945008
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:19:18.232205+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:52.890967
License: Public Domain

Grant, C. J.
(after stating the. facts). The most important assignments of error are grouped by counsel for defendant under two heads.
1. It is insisted that the contract between the City of Niles and the St. Joe River Traction Company was ultra vires, both as to that company and the consolidated company, and also that the consolidation was not authorized by the statutes of Michigan then in force. Defendant acquired, by the act of consolidation, all the franchises, rights, and property of the St. Joe River Traction Company, and thereby became obligated to pay all its debts and liabilities. It cannot in this proceeding assert the invalidity of its own organization. Shadford v. Railway, 130 Mich. 300. The contract between the city and the St. Joe River Traction Company was not ultra vires. The precise point urged is that under its charter it had no authority to extend its road into the city of Niles. Its declared purpose in its charter is not alone to construct a street railway from the State line between Michigan and *382Indiana to the city of Benton Harbor, but also to make any connections' or extend any spurs into any part of that county and certain other counties. The city of Niles is situated in Berrien county. Furthermore, this defense is not available, as no notice was given of it under Circuit Court Rule 7. Wachsmuth v. National Bank, 96 Mich. 427 (21 L. R. A. 278).
2. It is insisted that the contract with the St. Joe River Traction Company depended for its validity upon the consent of the railroad commissioner to a grade crossing over the tracks of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Company, and, as this was not obtained, the contract became impossible of performance, without consideration, and void. That provision of the ordinance upon this subject is as follows:
“Grantee agrees to prosecute diligently its application to secure a grade crossing over the tracks of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Company on Front street; and it is agreed that if the right to make such crossing is not granted and the tracks on Front street not constructed as above required within one year from the acceptance hereof, then all rights under this ordinance shall cease, if the council of the city of Niles so direct, and this ordinance shall terminate and be void.”
There are three answers to this claim:
(a) The South Bend & Southern Michigan Railway Company, in its contract with the city of Niles, had agreed to pay a certain part of the cost of paving the street as a consideration for the granting of a franchise. The street had been paved, the amount agreed upon, and that company had already paid two-fifths of the amount. The agreement by the city to release the South Bend & Southern Michigan Railway Company from further payment, and on the part of that company to surrender its franchise in Front street, the granting of the franchise to the St. Joe River Traction Company in the street, and the assumption of the obligation on the part of the trac* tion company to pay this portion of the payment, appear *383to be a part of the same transaction. The obligation on the part of the South Bend Company was transferred to, and assumed by, the traction company. It is a fair presumption from this record that the city released the one upon' the assumption of the obligation by the other. There was therefore a complete novation. Section 3 of the franchise to the St. Joe Traction Company reads as follows:
“ Inasmuch as Front street from Main street to the tracks of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Company is now paved with brick, and the South Bend & Southern Michigan Railway Company had agreed to pay a part of the expense thereof, which amount has been heretofore determined and agreed upon, and whereas said South Bend & Southern Michigan Railway Company has now surrendered all rights in and to said street, grantee agrees that it will pay four-fifths of the entire amount so agreed to be paid by said South Bend and Southern Michigan Railway Company and agrees to pay the same with interest in three equal annual installments on July 1, of each year A. D. 1905, A. D. 1906, and A. D. 1907.”
The agreement to pay was unconditional, and did not depend upon the future construction of a street railway upon Front street, or securing the right to cross the railroad track at grade. The South Bend Company had made an absolute agreement to pay a certain amount, and had paid a part as agreed. The traction company agreed to pay four-fifths of this expense. Why it was four-fifths instead of three-fifths is not explained by the record. It may have been a mistake in writing four-fifths instead of three-fifths, but we have no evidence by which to determine that there was a mistake.
(b) If the payment of this amount was conditional upon obtaining permission from the proper authorities to cross the tracks of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Company bn Front street at grade, and the failure to obtain such permission, this record, as the learned circuit judge found, fails to show such diligent *384prosecution. All the record shows is a petition to the railway commissioner asking permission, and that a time and place be named, and notice thereof “given to your petitioner when and where all parties interested in such crossing may be heard.” There is no evidence that there was any hearing or any production of evidence or any denial on the part of the commissioner. The court properly found “that no proof has been shown denying the right to make the crossing.” The burden of proof was upon the St. Joe River Traction Company and its assignee to show that it had performed the contract. The record only shows that such permission was not obtained.
(c) The agreement was not that, upon inability to obtain a crossing at grade, the contract should be absolutely void. The court found that permission to cross the tracks of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Company was not necessary to make the franchise valuable, because the track could pass under the Michigan Central Railroad track without crossing the other, and that therefore there was no physical impossibility of performance. We are not concerned with the reasons why they did not agree that the contract should be absolutely terminated upon the failure, after diligent prosecution, to obtain a grade crossing. It is sufficient to know that they did not make such a contract, but did agree that the failure to obtain this crossing and to construct the tracks within the time prescribed should operate to make the contract void only at the option of the city of Niles. Until the city has exercised that option the defendant, as assignee of the traction company, retains its right to construct a railway thereon. It placed the sole power to declare the contract ended in the city of Niles. I see no objection to the validity of this provision.
3. It is urged that the court should have found that there was no acceptance of the ordinance shown by the St. Joe River Traction Company. A written acceptance was served upon the city. It was signed in the name of the St. Joe River Traction Company, by its president and sec*385retary, and the seal of the corporation attached. This made a prima facie case of acceptance. Kirkpatrick v. Eastern Milling & Export Co., 135 Fed. 144.
4. The errors assigned, upon the omission to find certain facts, become immaterial to consider, in view of the fact that they arise upon the articles of association of the various companies which were introduced in evidence, were a part of the record, and have been considered by us, as they were by the circuit judge, in arriving at our conclusions. We see no occasion to. discuss the question further. No material findings were made without evidence to support them.
The judgment is affirmed.
Montgomery and Hooker, JJ., concurred.