If you think following family trees can be a challenge, just
wait ’til you see the diagram of Wabash Railroad-related mergers in the late
1800s and early 1900s. Now, that’s
challenging.
Before moving onward to see what decision was reached in
Mary Kelly Phillips’ case against the Wabash Railroad, let’s consider that
organization’s financial condition at the time Mary filed her 1913 suit in Allen County, Indiana.
Recall, if you will, her claim of wrongful death for her
husband, Patrick Phillips, at the hands of his employer, the Wabash Railroad.
The lawsuit was actually filed against “Frederick
A. Delano and E. B. Pryor, receivers for the Wabash
company.”
We’ve already taken a peek at just who Frederic Adrian Delano was. Now, courtesy of some details discovered by reader “Intense Guy”
yesterday, we find that “E. B. Pryor” was most likely Edward Bailey Pryor—who did,
incidentally, raise himself up from his bootstraps, entering service with the
Wabash as a clerk in the auditor’s office, and finishing with a flourish as assistant
to the president, before moving on to become a director with the State National
Bank.
What Mr. Pryor did in the interim, after his service as
assistant to Wabash’s president and before
becoming president of the State National Bank, himself, is the span of time
that best suits our purposes now in the saga of Patrick and Mary Phillips. It
all goes back to that one phrase inserted with the details about the two
gentlemen named as defendants in Mary Kelly Phillips’ case: “receivers.”
Apparently, the Wabash Railroad Company, incorporated in
several Midwestern states in 1889, had entered receivership on December 26,
1911. Though this might be telling in that companies in the throes of financial
woes may tend to cut corners that end up being short-sighted in the long run,
only an examination of court reports could tell me that, now.
But we can guess, can’t we? I can’t help but wonder such
things whenever I hear tales of cutbacks that press each of the remaining
employees to the threshold of error or negligence.
There were certainly fingerprints of such financial woes
showing in other newspaper reports. A May 21, 1914, Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette article mentioned the arrangement of a special
session of Federal Court to be held in Fort
Wayne, in which of five cases against railroad
companies, two concerned the Wabash Railroad. Though the settlements in those
two cases, as reported in the June 10, 1914, Fort Wayne Sentinel, didn’t approach the amount sought by widow Mary
Phillips, the report clues us in to the fact that she was not alone in her
decision to seek redress.
Not only in lawsuits brought by widows, but in other
business dealings, the Wabash Railroad continued to run from its creditors.
With a new railroad depot just completed in Fort Wayne, unpaid contractors sought to
foreclose on construction liens. A question of the company’s ability to pay was
posed that same month by The Fort Wayne
Daily News’ editorial headline on June fifth, “Suppose They Do Not Pay?
Will the Creditors Sell the New Wabash Depot?”
...The Fort Wayne Builders’ Supply company this afternoon filed two suits against the receivers of the Wabash Railroad company, both complaints being to foreclose liens. The demand on one was $725 and on the other $900. Attorneys’ fees are asked in addition to the sums named. The complaints ask for an order of sale to be granted the plaintiffs.The liens are on the new Wabash depot here, and the question is what will happen if the plaintiffs are given the judgments they ask and the receivers do not pay. Will the plaintiffs sell the depot, and if so, who will want it and for what? These questions caused considerable comment in the office of Clerk Gerding when the complaints were filed.
Financial woes such as these make me wonder: even if Mary
Phillips were awarded the sum she sought, would she be able to wrest it from
the company? Even if the Wabash Railroad were the “Big Business” opponent
portrayed in this little family history drama, with multiplied solvency issues,
their giant adversarial image might turn out to be little more than a mirage.
Postcard, above right: the Wabash Railroad depot in Fort Wayne, circa 1920; in the public domain.
Postcard, above right: the Wabash Railroad depot in Fort Wayne, circa 1920; in the public domain.
Whether Mary Phillips won the case and whether she received what she was awarded doesn't matter really. She stood up. That's what counts.
ReplyDeleteWell, it mattered for her, I suppose ;)
DeleteHowever, Wendy, you are right. I'm glad to know my daughter has that kind of heritage to inspire her!
The men that became relievers were required to post $300,000 bond, which I presume would be used in any judgements against them? While looking for Mr. Pryor's priors... I noticed a number of suits against him and Delano, one was for serving liquor in a dining car while it was in a "dry" county. Seems like the two were nearly arrested over that. Such headaches.
ReplyDeleteThe Reading Railroad near me, when bankrupt and out of business - most of the train stations have been re-purposed, florist shops, restaurants, museums, lawyer offices, you name it.
Maybe $300,000 wasn't enough???
DeleteI did notice, however, that the Wabash Railroad was, about a year later, re-organized into a new entity and given the name Wabash Railway. I'd presume that signified they worked their plan and regained some sort of solvency.
I like that, Iggy: Mr. Pryor's priors. I'm sure he had an interesting personal history--as did Mr. Delano, no doubt.
Up here anyone with the Railroad Management would have been considered a crook. They charged towns for the rail track to be laid...perhaps they were rich in land and poor in actual money:(
ReplyDeleteSounds like the Monopoly game: land rich and cash poor. Maybe that's where that came from...
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