Augusta & Summerville Railroad v. City Council

28 S.E. 126, 100 Ga. 701, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 29, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 28 S.E. 126 (Augusta & Summerville Railroad v. City Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Augusta & Summerville Railroad v. City Council, 28 S.E. 126, 100 Ga. 701, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 132 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Lumpkin, Presiding Justice.

The Augusta & Summerville Railroad Company was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly, approved [704]*704March 20th, 1866, “for the full term of thirty years.”' The charter declared that the company was incorporated for the purpose of 'building and using, with 'the consent of the City Council of Augusta, a horse railroad from a designated point within the limits of the city to a point, or points, outside of the same. The city council, both by ordinances- and by a special contract in writing, granted to the company, “'their successors and assigns, for and during the term, of their charter,” a right of way through and over the streets of the city.. There is nothing in the charter with, reference to any renewal or extension of the sanie beyond the period of thirty years. The ordinances and contract above referred to were subsequently ratified and confirmed by another -act of the General Assembly, which, among' other things, declared that they were “not liable to be repealed by the City Council” of Augusta. One of these-ordinances purported generally to authorize the construction of street railways in Augusta, but -an inspection of it shows that it was intended ¡to relate exclusively to this, particular company. The second section of this ordinance provided that “the cars and carriages of -this company, running on said railways, turnouts and switches and sidings [viz: those the company had been authorized to construct], shall be'entitled to the right of way over their said tracks,” and prohibited teams -and vehicles from obstructing ohe free passage of the company’s cars. In the special contract, between the city and the company, it was stipulated that the city would “forever” keep this section in force.

Prior to the year 1868, the South Carolina Railroad' Company was in possession of and using a railway track which had been laid longitudinally in Washington street in the city of Augusta, claiming the right to do so under ordinances adopted by, and contracts made with, the city council. This track affords the only existing means by which a connection between some of the railroads running into Augusta can he made with other railroads en-[705]*705tering file city, So as ito facilitate tine transaction of through, business. On March l&tb, 1868, itihe city council adopted an ‘ordinance taiTtihorizing itihe Augusta & Summerville Railroad Company ito olbtiain from the Soulth Oarolina Railroad Company “a lease for thirty years” of the track above mentioned; and, in pursuance of this ordinance^ a contract was entered into between these -two companies,, by the'terms of which the Augusta & Summerville Rail road Company was to have the use of that track “for the term of their charter.”' In 1869, the Columbia & Augusta Railroad Company, when nearing the completion of its. road, petitioned the city council for leave to enter the city.. An ordinance was adopted on April 27th of that year, ra citing that if the street railroad tracks were sufficient, “then the said Columbia & Augusta Railroad must arrange with said street nailroad company [meaning the Augusta & Summerville Railroad Company] for this purpose.” This gave rise to a controversy between the South Carolina Railroad Company, on the one side, and the city council and the Columbia & Augusta Railroad Company, on the other, which was adjusted and settled by a tripartite agreement, by the terms of which the city council guaranteed to the two railroad companies “the free use in perpetuity of the track now on Washington street, in said city of Augusta, with steam or other power, at the option of each company.” Subsequently, .and in pursuance of the ordinance of April 27th, 1869, a contract was entered into between the Columbia & Augusta and the Augusta & Summerville Railroad Companies, under which the former gained the consent of the latter to use the Washington street track, the control of which the Augusta & Summerville Railroad Company claimed under its etoinlteiaelt with the city council and the lease from the South Carolina Railroad Company. The South Oarolina & Georgia Railroad Company and the Southern Railwlay Company, which arle .apparently the legal successors, respectively, of the South Carolina Rail[706]*706road Company and the Columbia & Augusta Railroad Company, are parties to the present litigation, insisting that the ordinances and contracts of the city council, under and by virtue of which the use of the "Washington street track for •transferring cars propelled by steam locomotives was acquired by their predecessors, are valid, lawful and binding upon .the city.

On November 13th, 1889, the General Assembly passed an act to continue in force the charter of the Augusta & Summerville Railroad Company. This act recited that the •original 'act of 'inooaporiaitioin Would expire on the 20th day of March, 1896, and provided .that it “he continued of force from and after Itihe exptinaltilon (thereof for (the full term of fifty additional years, with all the powers and privileges given in said act not restricted hereby.” Among the restrictions thus indicated, it was declared that “nothing in tin's act contained shall have 'the effect ar he construed to extend or continue in force” the several acts .amending the company’s charter, which had .been previously enacted, nor the several ordinances which the City Council of Augusta had adopted with aiefetLieinee to this company, mlor the special contract between the council .and the company; and also, that “this act -is not intended, nor shall it be construed to extend to said corporation any exclusive rights or privileges to the use of the streets of the city of Augusta, but the right to use .any and all of said streets shall be subject to the consent of and on such conditions as may be prescribed by the city council of Augusta.” This act further declared that the company might, “at .any time, 'by a majority vote of -the stockholders, surrender their present charter before tbe expiration thereof and accept this new charter, with all its privileges and liabilities.” There was never any direct action by the stockholders accepting the act of 1889 as the company’s charter, but the company did formally apply to and obtain from the Oity Council of Augusta valuable privileges and franchises, the application, reciting that it [707]*707was made trader and by virtue of this act. Subsequently, the company sold out -to another corporation its various lines of railway, its rolling-stock, equipments of all kinds, and its •entire business as an active earner. It retained, however, .a nominal dominion over the track it had leased from the South Carolina Railroad Company, and, without running ■any trains or oars of its own 'thereon, derived a very large annual income therefrom by exacting tolls from the steam railroad companies. This the Augusta & Summerville Railroad Company continued to do until the day upon which its original charter expired. Before that day, it applied to and obtained from the secretary of State a certificate purporting to be a renewal -of that charter and the various acts amending the same, save only the act of 1889, which was not mentioned in the application, the company assiuning the position ithlaft ilt ihald never accepted the same amid was in no way affected by its enactment.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.E. 126, 100 Ga. 701, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/augusta-summerville-railroad-v-city-council-ga-1897.