State v. Centreville Bridge Co.
State v. Centreville Bridge Co.
Opinion of the Court
The material features of this case,.so far as they are necessary to present the question we. propose to-examine, may be thus stated. The defendants were created a body corporate under the authority of an act of the Legislature,, passed the 7th of January 1S35, for the purpose-of building a> toll bridge across the Cahaba river, within one mile of the totvn. of Centreville, and were authorised to demand and. receive toll, according to- the rates prescribed in the act. On the 6th day of March 1848, another act was passed, entitled an act to amend an act, passed the 7th of January 1835, entitled an act to incorporate the Centreville Bridge Company, which is in the following language: “Whereas it has been represented to this-Legislature that in consequence of a want of subscription of' stock to an amount sufficient to the construction of the bridge-contemplated to be built by said act, the contract of said company has been duly assigned to Jacob. Maberry, who has constructed the same in a manner greatly advantageous to the public ; therefore, be it enacted, that all the rights, privileges and powers, vested by the above recited act in said corporation, be, and the same are hereby vested in Jacob Maberry, his heirs and assigns, for the period prescribed in said act, with power to-collect the same tolls prescribed in said act, and to do such other acts, and be liable to the same penalties prescribed therein ; provided that nothing herein contained shall be so construed as to affect any suit or suits, now pending in favor of or against said Company.” Previous to the passage of the above recited act, the State had filed a qiio warrmto against the Bridge Company for a supposed forfeiture of their charter, and the Company now insist on this act as- a bar to this suit.
Although the Company might have been liable to a forfeiture of their privilege, yet as they assigned it to Maberry, and the State ratified the assignment and vested in him the same privileges, possessed by the Company under the original charter, “nothing can be attained by the further prosecution of this suit.” We think it clear that the act of 1848 vested in Maberry all the rights and privileges, contemplated to be given to the Company by the act of their incorporation, and these privileges he holds as his own, and not liable to be taken from him for any cause of forfeiture that may have existed against the Company. The State surely never intended to give him those rights, in
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.