State v. Morristown
State v. Morristown
Opinion of the Court
The relator is a corporation of ■this State chartered to build and operate a railroad from Morristown, in Hamblen County, to a connection with the Knoxville, Cumberland Gap and Louisville Railroad, in Grainger County* Tennessee.
As such, on March 18, 1890, it submitted to the Mayor and Aldermen of Morristown an application for subscription to the stock of said company, upon, the proposition to build a railroad from said town to a terminus or termini therein set forth. The application and proposition were as follows:
“Morristown, Tenn., March 18, 1890.
“ To' the Mayor and Aldermen of the town of Morris-town, Tenn.:
“We, the undersigned, desire to submit to your honorable body the following proposition: We will construct a standard gauge railroad from a point within 'the corporate limits of Morristown, in a north of west direction, to a point at or near Beau Station, and thence ' to a junction with the Knoxville, Cumberland Gap and Louisville Railroad at or near Cedar Eord, or to such a point on the •said railroad north of Clinch Mountain as our engineers may select, covering the best route and most advantageous connection with Cumberland ■Gap. Work of grading to commence at Morris-*241 town within sixty days from affirmative election in Morristown, upon condition that the town of Morristown subscribe $50,000 to the stock of this company, to be paid for in cash or six per cent, twenty or thirty year town bonds as hereinafter named, and provided further that the county of Hamblen subscribe the further sum of $25,000 to the stock of our company, and the county of Grainger subscribe the sum of $75,000 to the said stock, both of said sums to be paid in cash or in six per cent, twenty or thirty year county bonds. The payment of the cash, or the delivery of said bonds, to be made to us upon the completion of "the construction of the said road, viz.: When the last rail is laid connecting Morristown with the Knoxville, Cumberland Gap and Louisville Railroad. We shall ask a limit of time for the completion of this road not to exceed two years, the time to begin to run from sixty days from the day of the election to be held on the question of subscribing to said stock in the town of Morristown.
“As a first step toward getting these subscriptions, we respectfully ask that your honorable body submit the question of subscription to the qualified - voters of Morristown. Very respectfully,
“The Morristown and CumbeRland Gap R. R. Co.
“Per J. G. Martin,
“John P. Arthur,
“E. IT. Allison,
“ W. E. Scarritt,
“ W. Talbot Penniman,
“Incorporators and Board of Directors.”
The proposition was accepted by the Board, an election ordered and held, and the requisite majority duly voted “ for subscription.” The result was certified, and, in pursuance thereof, the Mayor was, by ordinance of the Board, duly authorized and instructed to subscribe for fifty thousand dollars of the stock of the railroad company, which he accordingly did.
The company began, and completed- the road to a point near Cedar Eord, one of the terminal* points indicated in the proposition, but not a point in Grainger County, and not the terminus according to profile and estimate submitted. Nor was the road built, beyond Bean Station, along or near the line indicated in the profile, and for which the survey and estimate had been made and filed. In other words, the proposition, unless profiles and estimate are to control, provided for two distinct, different, and remote lines, with terminal points at different and remote places on "the road with which connection was to be made, and in different counties, one (that indicated in the profile and estimate) being in a north or north-western direction from Morristown, twenty-five miles in length, the most immediate and advantageous route to connect with Cumberland Gap at a point in Grainger County, and the other a line in a south-western
If the profiles and estimates filed do not control, there was, therefore, two propositions embraced in the application — one for a road from Morristown to Cedar Ford, without profile, map, or estimate submitted, and one from Morristown to a point north of Clinch Mountain to a junction with the Knoxville, Cumberland Gap and Louisville Railroad, over a defined line twenty-five miles long, whose grading, embankment, and masonry, were estimated. If profiles aud estimate control, there was but one proposition, and the Cedar-Ford terminus not important, being a superfluous addition thereto.
So much has been stated here, in advance of statement of the controversy and issues in this case, for convenience in application when' these shall have been stated. The action is mandamus to compel defendant to pay cash for stock subscribed or issue twenty year six per cent, bonds therefor. The corporation defends upon the ground that the subscription was illegal, the application and submission to vote not being such as was legally,, authorized, and subscription by the Mayor therefore void.
The question in the abstract is very important, for though some provisions of both (Code and Act of 1887) are substantially similar, there is a difference in the powers conferred, the obligations imposed, and the rights secured under the two statutes. There is no power vested in municipal corporations under the Code provisions to issue bonds, and it has been expressly held that no such power is given or to be implied from Act of 1871 (now incorporated in M. & V. compilation as part of §1282), Code (T. & S.), §491a, to which the Act of 1881 (a further amendment, incorporated in same section of M.- & V. compilation) has, we hold, added nothing (Mayor and Aldermen of Pulaski v. Gilman et al., MSS., Nashville, 1880), while under the Act of 1887 express power is given to issue bonds running’ not more than twenty years, or pay subscription in cash. Under the Code provisions, not more than thirty-three and one third per cent, of subscription can be collected in any one year, while under the Act of 1887 no tax ex-
Among most important differences as to rights of parties, the Code provides that the collector shall give to each tax-payer a certificate of tax paid by him. This is made negotiable by delivery or assignment, and is receivable for freight and passage on the road one year after its completion, and convertible into stock of the railroad company on demand, at option of holder of such certificates, to the amount of one or moi'e shares. As a consequence of these rights thus secured to tax-payers, the obligation to so receive these certificates for freight, passage, and stock is imposed upon the railroad company.
BTo such provisions are made in the Act of 1887. To say nothing, therefore, of any minor differences in the two acts as to method and forms of application, etc., the most material difference exists in the powers conferred, obligations imposed, and rights secured under the two statutes. To guard against any confusion, to prevent any misconstruction or controversy as to these powers, rights, and obligations vested, acquired, and imposed under propositions for county or municipal subscriptions, the Legislature expressly provided in the latter statute, that it was not intended to prevent subscription under the former, but was an additional method or plan under which they could be made (§16); and further expressly provided that, “before any county shall make any subscription under the
The language is itself mandatory, but, taken in connection with its obvious purpose, admits of no other construction than that it was intended to be mandatory, and we so hold.
Nothing could better illustrate the correctness of that view than the present case. Some substantial conformity to both Acts (as was expected by the Legislature might result), gives room for 'the ablest and most ingenious arguments to show that it might be held to have been made under either or both. This question was not intended to be left to intendment, to confusion, inference, or strained construction. Both statutes are plain in their provisions, and are intended for observance in mandatory particulars; and, if application is made under the latter for the special advantages it gives over the former, it must be so set forth in the application. But both upon its face and according to the actual facts proved as to intent, if such could be looked to, it was made not under the Act of 1887, but under the Code provisions. The application was not by the president
Of course, we are not meaning that directors are not in a proper sense officers, or that the Code application under Act of 1887 might not be made by them, but it is clear that it might be so made under Code, while the Act of 1887 seems to contemplate proposition from an officer or agent constituted as president; and, doubtless, if that Act had been in ’ view in making this application, a further organization and election of president, manager, or other authorized agent of like character would have appeared, and such application been submitted by him to the Mayor, instead of by the body of 'directors, without an official head or managing officer, to another body of men, the Board of Mayor and Aldermen, as was done, and as was manifestly authorized by the Code. But it is useless to discuss these minor questions, to show by argument that it was not made under Act of 1887. The fact that construction could possibly make the provisions of the application answer the requirements of both statutes, only more strongly sustains the construction that application should “ set forth ” in express terms, that it was made under the latter law, if it was thus intended, so that rights should be settled under the one or
The application then being under the Code, the question is, Was the subscription, valid, and can it be enforced? That statute does not admit of but one construction. The termini of one route must be given, not alternately of two. Of course an absolute point of termination may not be essential, but the substantial termini of one line so definite that it must have been surveyed and substantially located, and the termini designated and line so defined as to approximate its general direction accurately enough for an estimate of the grading,
If the law could be evaded by submitting along with such location and estimate, an alternative proposition for a' different route, without either survey, definite location, or estimate, it is obvious that it would be a matter of ho consequence whether it was the one or the other, for just as in this case a survey, location, and estimate of one line between two points would be filed with suggestion of another not so located, surveyed, or estimated, and when thesubscription was voted the latter might be adopted. The law would, therefore, serve no purpose except as a cloak to conceal the real intent of construction.
We think it plain that such a proposition could not be submitted, or, if Submitted .in such form, could bind the corporation voting for subscription, only if the surveyed and estimated route was in fact adopted and constructed, in which event the alternative proposition might be treated as surplus-age, and if line was in fact built as located, the municipality might be estopped to say that along with a valid proposition had been submitted an alternative invalid one. Just as if it had voted for a proposition to pay cash or issue bonds, and was not vested with power to issue bonds, yet, if the subscription was otherwise valid and work
In' this case the road was not constructed upon the line surveyed, estimated, and designated. It follows, therefore, that the defendant cannot he compelled to pay its subscription' or to issue bonds therefor. Had the application been under the Act of 1887 a like result would follow under the reasoning on the alternative proposition. Neither statute contemplates such a thing, hut both require substantial designation of a single line with two — not three — termini.
It is argued, however, that whether the subscription was valid or invalid, the road was built for Morristown, where it now lies; that it was a long time under construction, and that the Board of Mayor and Aldermen, and the people of the corporation knew that it was being so constructed, and that large sums of money were being expended on the faith. of the subscription, and the corporation is now estopped to deny its liability.
To this there are several answers. The road was not built for Morristown, but for the company. Morristown was but one of the subscribers to its stock, and stands in the relation merely of a stockholder resisting collection of subscription upon the ground of its invalidity, and whether it might be estopped from insisting, as it does among other things, that the company was chartered to
If the law, strictly construed, authorized the ■contract, it can be enforced, otherwise not, as between the parties, and there is no question here ■except as between the company and its subscriber. Ho bonds having been issued, of course, no question of innocent holder is involved.
Thei’e are other questions in the case which have been ably argued, and well merit discussion,
The judgment of the Circuit Judge, refusing peremptory mandamus, is affirmed with cost.
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