Alexandria Canal Railroad & Bridge Co. v. District of Columbia

12 D.C. 217
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 21, 1881
DocketNo. 4444
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 D.C. 217 (Alexandria Canal Railroad & Bridge Co. v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexandria Canal Railroad & Bridge Co. v. District of Columbia, 12 D.C. 217 (D.C. 1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hagner

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by the District of Columbia from the decree of the chancellor of the 12th of November, 1880, perpetually enjoining the Commissioners of the District and their successors from selling or advertising for sale the property mentioned in the bill of complaint on account of the several tax levies and assessments mentioned in the [219]*219case, and from setting up the said levies and assessments, or attempting to collect or enforce the same or any part thereof.

The property referred to is the bridge structure across the Potomac river from the city of Georgetown to Virginia. The right of the Commissioners of the District of Columbia to collect the taxes therein referred to is contested upon a variety of grounds set forth at large in the bill; and which will now be considered in turn.

First. It is insisted on the part of the Bridge Company that the property in question is exempt from taxation by express provision of law.

The Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company was incorporated by the State of Virginia in 1824, and by the State of Maryland in 1825. By the terms of these statutes the charter was not to become operative until the Congress of the "United States should give its assent to its provisions ; and this ratification and assent were expressed by the act of Congress approved March 8, 1825. Section 9 of the charter declared “ that the said canal and all other works aforesaid or required to improve the navigation thereof at any time hereafter, with all their profits subject to the limitations herein provided and to none other, shall be, and the same are hereby vested in the said stockholders, their heirs and assigns forever, as tenants in common, in proportion to their respective shares, and be forever exempt from the payment of any tax, imposition, or assessment whatsoever.”

By the 21st section of the charter it was further provided that the right to the waters of the Potomac for the purpose of any lateral canal which the States of Virginia or Maryland might authorize to be made in connection with the said canal, was reserved to the said States respectively; “that the Government of the United States should retain the power to extend the said canal in or through the District of Columbia on either or both sides of the Potomac river,” and that before the charter should take effect “ the Congress of the United States should authorize the States of Virginia and Maryland, or either of them, to take and con[220]*220tinue a canal from any point of the above-named canal, or the termination thereof, through the territory of the District of Columbia, or any part thereof, to the territory of said States, or either of them, in any direction they may deem proper upon the same terms and conditions and with all the rights and privileges and powers of every kind whatsoever that the company incorporated by this act have to make the Chesapeake and Ohio Canals

The eastern terminus of the canal route remained in Georgetown, until Congress, by the act of 26th May, 1830? incorporated the Alexandria Canal Company authorizing the construction of a canal from the line of the Chesapeake and Ohio canal in Georgetown, across the Potomac river, to a point on the river in or near the city of Alexandria. Under that charter a canal was conducted across the Potomac at Georgetown upon an aqueduct supported upon piers, built on rock in the bed of the river, and upon stone abutments. • The Alexandria Canal Company for many years operated the canal, until the 16th of May, 1866, when the Board of Public Works of Virginia, under authority of law, united with the city of Alexandria and with the Alexandria Canal Company, in a lease of the canal, its aqueduct, locks, banks, and all other, its" property, rights, and franchises, unto Henry H. Wells, Philip Quigley, William W. Dungan, their heirs and assigns, for ninety-nine years from that date. This lease and conveyance were ratified by act of the General Assembly of Virginia in the following year, and the lessees were thereby empowered to erect, build, operate, and maintain across the Potomac river, over the stone piers on which the acqueduct rested, a new aqueduct of wood, iron, or stone, and in connection therewith a bridge *of the same material for the passage of persons, animals, wagons, &o.

On the 27th of July, 1868, the assent of Congress was given to the construction by the said lessees of the bridge over the aqueduct and piers, for the passage of railroad tracks, persons and vehicles, and the act authorized the collection of tolls by the lessees from persons using the bridge.

[221]*221On the 13th of October, 1867, the complainants were chartered and became a body politic under the laws of the State of Virginia, by the corporate title of the Alexandria Canal Railroad and Bridge Company, and, after its incorporation the said Wells, Quigley, and Dungan, with the consent of the Alexandria Canal Company, conveyed all their rights as lessees to the complainants.

Is the property in question exempt under a proper construction of these statutes?

The exemption of all the property of the Chesapeake and Ohio canal by the original charter is ample and explicit. The legislatures of the different States, in an unmistakable manner, declared that the property of the canal should be forever free from the payment of any taxation, imposition or assessment whatsoever, and Congress assented to that exemption. But in our opinion this exemption cannot be properly construed as embracing the property of the complainants. It is an established principle that the power of taxation is the highest attribute of sovereignty ; that its existence will always be presumed ; that, wherever an exemption from taxation is claimed, the language surrendering the power must be clear and unmistakable ; that a State cannot strip itself of this most essential power by doubtful words ; that as its existence rests upon necessity and is inherent in every sovereignty, wherever on any fair construction of the legislation invoked, there is a reasonable doubt whether the claim for the exemption is made out, that doubt must be solved in favor of the sovereignty. In other words, that the language used must be of such a character as, fairly interpreted, leaves no room for controversy on the point.

Now plainly such is not the case in the present instance. The charter of the Alexandria Canal Company of May 30 in many particulars is copied from the original charter of the Chesapeake and Ohio canal, but in section 9 of the charter of the Alexandria Company, corresponding with section 9 of the original charter, the words of exemption from taxation are studiously omitted, although the rest of the section is literally copied. See 6th Stats, at Large, 422. There can [222]*222be no pretence that the exemption contended for is granted in express terms. And by the decisions of the highest courts of the country, the existence of a doubt on the point, settles in our opinion, this contention conclusively against the complainants. The most recent utterance of the Supreme Court on the subject was its opinion at the October term, 1880, in the unreported case of the Annapolis and Elk Ridge Railroad Company vs. The County Commissioners of Anne Arundel County. The railroad company was incorporated by an act of'the general assembly of 1837.

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Bluebook (online)
12 D.C. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexandria-canal-railroad-bridge-co-v-district-of-columbia-dc-1881.