Attorney General v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad

Knowlton, C. J.

This is an appeal from a formal decree entered by a single justice in pursuance of a rescript from the full court. The decree is printed in connection with the former decision of this case in 198 Mass., at page 433. The only question open on this appeal is whether the decree properly conforms to the rescript. Lincoln v. Eaton, 132 Mass. 63, 69. Nashua & Lowell Railroad, v. Boston & Lowell Railroad, 169 Mass. 157,162. Humphrey v. Baker, 103 U. S. 736. Sewall v. Sewall, 130 Mass. 201. Attorney General v. Williams, 140 Mass. 329, 336.

The rescript ordering a “ decree for the informant ” was sent on May 8,1908. On June 9 the defendant filed a motion setting forth that it had “ parted with whatever interest in or control of any of the shares of the capital stock of any of the street railway corporations mentioned in the information it may have had,” except its interest in the shares of two corporations named, and moved “ that it be allowed to prove these facts upon the hearing of any motion by the Attorney General for a final decree.” This was not in the form of a motion for leave to file a supplemental answer, and it set up no such specific facts as should be set up if a party wishes to open a case for a new trial by reason of new matters of defense which have arisen since the trial and decision of the issues previously raised. Indeed, it does not state that the defendant ever had any interest in the stock in question, but refers only to “ whatever interest or control ... it may have had.” Such a motion was addressed to the discretion of the court, and the discretion was rightly exercised in denying it. The only relief asked for by the informant was an injunction compelling the defendant to comply with the statute by ceasing to hold or control, directly or indirectly, the stock referred to in the information. The decree was entered as of May 8, the date of the rescript, and it applies to the facts as they then appeared of record. If any question ever arises under it, compliance with the decree may be shown by the defendant as well by proving that it parted with all its interest in the stock before June 23, when the decree was actually entered, as by proving that it parted with it afterward.

D. Malone, (F. B. Grreenhalge with him,) for the plaintiff. J. ÜT. Benton, Jr., for the defendant.

A decree is always to be construed in reference to the facts stated in the bill and proved or admitted at the hearing. For its effect, it rests upon the averments of the bill, and it has no relation to matters not included in the litigation. The decree in this case is not an attempt to add to the force and effect of the statute a judicial order to restrain and guide the defendant in its future conduct, in regard to matters not made the subject of the Attorney General’s information, but only to direct and control the defendant in regard to matters stated and complained of in the information. It recites the main facts found by the master and established before the court, which are only the matters stated in the information, and then it states the order of the court, in the form of a decree for an injunction which requires the defendant to cease to hold the stocks referred to, or any of them, on or before the first day of July, 1909. Construing the decree in reference to the matters stated in the information and recited in the decree, it is difficult to see how the defendant can be in doubt in regard to the meaning of the order, or its own duty in the premises. It was entirely immaterial to designate and describe the defendant more particularly in the decree, either by calling it a corporation existing under the laws of Massachusetts, or by calling it a corporation existing under the laws of Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island. We see no possibility of doubt on the part of the defendant in regard to the conditions that must come into existence to constitute a performance of its duty to cease to hold or control, either directly or indirectly, the stocks referred to in the information.

The fact that the general language of the statute was used in. different clauses of the decree, and that it might seem to include forms of prohibited action which the defendant was not then in a position to take, in reference to these stocks, does not render the decree objectionable.

Decree affirmed.