1. Where a decree of the district court dissolving a combination
violative of the Anti-Trust Act retains jurisdiction for the
purpose of making such further orders as may be necessary to
execute the decree, a subsequent order finally approving a specific
sale of property for that purpose exhausts the reserved
jurisdiction insofar as that sale is concerned, and cannot be
altered by that court upon the same facts and upon the application
of private interests after expiration of the term at which such
order was made. P.
269 U. S.
47.
2. An order approving a sale of the stock of a coal company
under a contract between the purchaser and a railroad company
owning the stock necessarily approved also a stipulation in the
contract saving from impairment an existing pledge of the coal
company's lands under the railroad's mortgage and an obligation of
the coal
Page 269 U. S. 43
company under the mortgage to pay a royalty upon coal mined by
it to the railroad's mortgagee. P.
269 U. S.
47.
3. Where a coal company, whose stock, owned by a railroad
company, was sold with the approval of the district court in
execution of a decree against the railroad, its mortgage trustee
and others, dissolving a combination as violative of the Anti-Trust
Act, afterwards, in the state court, sued the railroad and the
trustee for the purpose of avoiding obligations claimed under the
railroad's mortgage,
held that the decree of the state
court denying relief was
res judicata against the coal
company insofar a its personal and private right to be relieved of
such obligations was concerned. P.
269 U. S.
48.
4. One who has no interest of his own entitling him to urge
measure in execution of a decree dissolving a combination under the
Anti-Trust Act has no
locus standi to do so in the public
interest, that being the function of the United States. P.
269 U. S.
48.
5. A corporation which was not injured by such a combination,
and not party to the original decree dissolving it, and which is
controlled by a person who bought all it shares under an order of
the court made in execution of the decree, has no standing to
intervene for the purpose of ridding itself, and so, in effect, the
purchaser, of it obligations to other parties which existed at the
time of the sale and were recognized by the order which authorized
the sale. P.
269 U. S. 49.
Affirmed.
Appeal from an order of the district court dismissing the
appellants' petition in intervention seeking relief in a suit
brought by the United States under the Anti-Trust Act and in which
a decree had been entered for the dissolution of a combination of
railway and coal companies.
See 2-3 F. 295.
Page 269 U. S. 44
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
The suit in equity in which this is an appeal was begun by the
United States in the District Court for the Southern District of
Ohio, Eastern Division, against the Hocking Valley Railway Company,
five other railway companies, and three coal companies, and was
heard before the three circuit judges of that circuit. It was a
proceeding under the Anti-Trust Act to dissolve an illegal
combination of the defendants to monopolize the business of
transporting and selling coal from the coal fields of Ohio in
interstate commerce. Act July 2, 1890, c. 647, 26 Stat. 209, as
amended by Act Feb. 11, 1903, 32 Stat. 823, c. 544. A full hearing
resulted, March, 1914, in finding that the illegal combination
existed and a comprehensive decree radically dissolving the
combination.
United States v. Lake Shore & M S. Ry.
Co., 203 F. 295. The railroad companies were directed to part
with all their interests in the coal companies, and the business of
mining and selling coal was ordered to be separated from that of
railway transportation by the sale of the stocks of the defendant
coal companies held by the railway companies and the dissolving of
other relations which had made the combination possible and
effective. Jurisdiction of the cause was retained by the court for
the purpose of making such other and further orders and decrees as
might be necessary to the due execution of the decree and the
complete dissolution of the combination and monopoly therein
condemned.
The Buckeye Coal & Railway Company was not a party to the
original suit. All of its stock was owned by the Hocking Valley
Railway Company. Its property consisted of 11,000 acres of coal
land in the coal fields of Ohio, with an estimated deposit of
18,000,000 tons. In 1899, the Buckeye Company had pledged its coal
lands in a mortgage of the Hocking Valley Railway Company to the
Central Trust Company to secure $20,000,000 of the Railway
Company's bonds. In the same mortgage, the Buckeye
Page 269 U. S. 45
Company agreed to pay 2 cents royalty on each ton of coal mined
by it to the Central Trust Company, the mortgage trustee, to be
applied to the redemption of the bonds. The Buckeye Company was not
an obligor on the bonds. The Hocking Valley Railway Company, in
addition to the pledge of its railway property, the Buckeye coal
lands and the royalty, included in the mortgage also all the
capital stock of the Buckeye Company. Upon an intervening petition
of the original complainant, the United States, and after a hearing
to which the Hocking Valley Railway Company and the Central Trust
Company, the mortgage trustee, were parties, an order was made by
the court by which the capital stock of the Buckeye Company was
directed to be sold, freed from the lien of the mortgage, and
subject to the approval of the court. This order was made May 19,
1916. The Hocking Valley Railway Company then made a contract with
one John S. Jones, to sell him all the Buckeye Coal Company stock
for $50,000 under a contract by which it was agreed that the stock
sold should be released from the pledge of the mortgage. There was
an express stipulation that the contract was not to impair the
covenants of the Buckeye Company in the Hocking Valley Railway
mortgage in respect of the lands of the Coal Company or of the 2
cents royalty, except that the Hocking Company agreed that its
railroad property pledged under the mortgage should be first
exhausted before any recourse should be had to the coal lands of
the Buckeye Company. The contract of purchase was made subject to
the presentation of its terms to the court and its approval. On
October 5, 1916, the Hocking Valley Company reported the sale to
the court, reciting the contract. On November 10, 1916, the
district court, after reciting the report of the contract of
purchase and the dismissal of the appeal, and the tender of the
purchaser for examination, found the purchaser satisfactory and
approved the purchase. Jones took possession
Page 269 U. S. 46
of the stock and organized a new company, the Sunday Creek Coal
Company, which by exchange of stock succeeded to the ownership of
the coal lands of the Buckeye Company and that of other companies.
It is conceded by counsel for the coal companies that the value of
the property of the railway that the value of the property of the
railway pay the bonds is far greater than the amount due on them so
that the lien on the coal lands is negligible.
In April, 1919, the coal companies brought a suit in a state
court against the Central Trust Company and the Hocking Valley
Railway Company in Ohio to quiet their title to the coal lands. The
Common Pleas Court of Ohio, after a full hearing, denied the prayer
and sustained the validity of the mortgage lien upon the coal lands
and the royalty. The decree of the Common Pleas Court was affirmed
in the intermediate appellate court and in the Supreme Court of
Ohio. The final disposition of the cause was on June 7, 1921. This
is pleaded herein by the Central Trust Company, trustee, as
res
judicata.
The coal companies on December 6, 1921, applied for leave to the
court below to file the intervening petition here the subject of
consideration. Leave was granted and the Hocking Valley Railway
Company and the Central Trust Company, parties, were required to
answer. The prayer is that they be enjoined from enforcing the
mortgage lien upon the coal lands of the Buckeye Company or the 2
cents a ton royalty. The ground urged is that the maintenance of
these two liens constitutes such a relation between the coal
companies and the railway company as to be a violation of the main
decree and the antitrust law, in that it furnishes a motive for the
railway company illegally to favor the coal companies in their
interstate transportation of coal to the selling markets.
Thereafter the United States, by leave, also filed a petition
against the same defendants in which, in the public
Page 269 U. S. 47
interest, it asked that the association between the railway
company and the coal companies be dissolved by cancelling the
liens, with or without compensation.
The petition of the United States and the petition of the coal
companies came on for hearing together. The district court denied
the petition of the coal companies on the ground, first, that the
order of November 10, 1916, approving the sale of the stock of the
Buckeye Company, was a final order, and the district court had no
power to alter it; and, second, that the decree against the two
companies in the state court was
res judicata. As to the
petition of the United States, the court conceded that, under the
reservation of the main decree, such an application could be made
to it for further relief to achieve the purpose of the main decree.
It said that the fact that the court had approved the sale of the
stock of the Buckeye Company indicated that the court had found
that the release of the liens was not essential to carrying out the
purpose of the decree, and did not involve such an association
between the railway company and the coal company as to interfere
with the effectiveness of that decree. But, while dismissing the
petition, it left opportunity open in its order to the United
States to apply for further relief in the matter if such an
association came to be used as a means of defeating the main
decree. The United States has not appealed from this order of
dismissal of its petition. The only appeal is that of the two coal
companies.
There is an embarrassment of reasons why the appeal of the two
coal companies should fail. Their intervening petition seeks to
vary or set aside the order of the district court which necessarily
approved not only the sale of the Buckeye stock, but also the
stipulation in the contract of sale that the pledge of the coal
lands and the 2-cent royalty should be unimpaired. That order was
made November 10, 1916. It was a final order in respect of the sale
approved.
Page 269 U. S. 48
The clause of reservation in the main decree, as the court below
said, was exhausted so far as that sale was concerned. All the
facts, including the contract of purchase, were then before the
court. No new ones have since been developed. The term has long
passed within which that order could be altered by the court which
made it.
Second, the validity of the covenants of the mortgage entered
into by the Buckeye Company was affirmed by the decree in the
litigation between the Hocking Valley Railway Company, the Central
Trust Company, the mortgage trustee, and the two coal companies,
appellants. This was
res judicata, so far at least as the
personal and private rights of the coal companies were
concerned.
Third, even if we assume that the United States might apply
under the reservation clause to the district court to direct the
cancellation of the mortgage lien on the coal lands, and the
covenant as to the royalty on a showing that they were being used
to continue the illegal combination condemned in the main decree,
it could only be done in the interest of the public represented by
the United States. The petition of the United States on this head
was denied by the court below, and the United States has taken no
appeal. The status of the two coal companies in the court below and
here is merely that of informers. Their attitude, if it is nicely
analyzed, seems to be that, unless the mortgage lien on their coal
lands to secure the railway bonds and the 2 percent royalty are
cancelled, they may be induced to enter a conspiracy with the
railway company by which the railway company will grant them
unlawful and discriminating favors in railway transportation to
enable them to increase the coal mined and the royalty to be
applied to redeem the bonds. They wish to have this temptation to
crime on their part removed, and incidentally have themselves
relieved from obligations which were recognized by the court as
valid and binding
Page 269 U. S. 49
in the judicial sale of the entire capital stock of the Buckeye
Company and which as against them have been adjudged valid by the
courts of Ohio. The United States, which must alone speak for the
public interest, does not appear with them on this appeal. They
have therefore no
locus standi. United States v.
Northern Securities Co., 128 F. 808.
Underneath all these reasons for dismissing the appeal is the
fundamental objection that these coal companies presented no case
upon their petition justifying their intervention. They were not
parties to the original suit. Their interest was not of persons who
had suffered by the original combination made the subject of the
main decree who might have had relief under the 16th section of the
amendment to the Anti-Trust Act Oct. 15, 1914, c. 323, 38 St. 737.
They were really put forward as intervening parties in the interest
of Jones the purchaser at the judicial sale of all their stock
through which he continues to manage them. His, and therefore
their, only claim to be heard at all must be based on the decree
confirming the purchase, part of the consideration for which as
approved by the court they now seek to impeach.
Decree affirmed.