Baltimore and Susquehanna Railroad Co. v. Nesbit

51 U.S. 395, 13 L. Ed. 469, 10 How. 395, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1472
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 19, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 51 U.S. 395 (Baltimore and Susquehanna Railroad Co. v. Nesbit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore and Susquehanna Railroad Co. v. Nesbit, 51 U.S. 395, 13 L. Ed. 469, 10 How. 395, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1472 (1851).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes before us from the District of Maryland, upon a writ of error to the court of Baltimore County, prosecuted .under the twenty-fifth sectio i of the Judiciary Act.

The facts from which the questions to be adjudged arise are the following.

The legislature of Maryland, by a law of the 18th of February, 1828, incorporated the plaintiff in error by the name and style of the Baltimore and Susquehanna Railroad Company, for the purpose of constructing a railroad from the city of Baltimore to some point or points on the Susquehanna River. To enable this company to acquire such land, earth, timber, or other materials as might be necessary for the construction and repairing of the road, the law above mentioned, by its fifteenth section, authorized the company to agree with the owners of the land and other materials wanted, for the purchase or use thereof; and in the event that the company could not agree with the owners, or that the owners were femes covert under age, insane, or out of the county, this section ^provided that a justice of the peace of the county, upon application, should thereupon issue his warrant to the sheriff to .summon a jury, who, in accordance with the directions contained in the same section of the statute, should value the damages which the owner or owners would sustain, and that the inquisition, signed and sealed by the jury, should .be returned by the sheriff to the clerk or prothonotary of his county, to be filed in court, and that the same should be confirmed by said court at its next session, if no sufficient cause to the contrary be shown.

The section further provides, that “ such valuation, when paid^ ,or tendered to the owner or owners of- said property, or to his, her, or their legal representatives, shall entitle the company to the estate and interest in the same thus valued, as *397 fully as if it had been conveyed by the owner or owners of the same; and thé valuation, if not received when tendered, may at any time thereafter be recovered from the company without costs by the said owner or owners, his, her, or their legal representatives.”

It appears that, under the authority of the statute above cited, an inquisition was (upon the application of the plaintiff in error) held by the sheriff of Baltimore County, on the 13th of December, 1836, upon the lands of the defendants in error as possessed by Alexander Nesbit in the character of trustee, and by Penelope D. Goodwin as cestui que trust, and the damages assessed by the jury upon that inquisition,.for the land to be appropriated, to the- use of the plaintiff in error, were to the said Alexander Nesbit nothing, and to the said Penelope D. Goodwin five hundred dollars; that this inquisition having been returned to the court of Baltimore County, the following order in relation thereto was made on the 24th.of April, 1837: “ Ordered, That this inquisition be ratified ana confirmed, no cause to the contrary having been shown.” Subsequently to this order of confirmation, it appears . that payment of the money assessed for damages to the lands of the defendants was not tendered by the plaintiff, nor any measure whatever in relation to this inquisition adopted by them, prior to the 18th day of April, 1844, on which last day the plaintiff by its agent tendered to the defendant Penelope D. Goodwjn the sum of $ 500, the principal of the damages assessed,, with $ 220.4$) as interest for seven years four months and 'five-days on the amount of that assessment, making an aggregate-of $> .720.42. In the mean time, between the date of the inquisition and the tender just mentioned, viz. at their December session of 1841, the legislature of Maryland passed a statute, by which they directed, “ that the Baltimore County Court should set aside the inquisition found for the Baltimore and Susquehanna Railroad Company condemning the lands of Penelope D. Goodwin of said county, and that the said court direct an inquisition de novo to be taken, and -that such proceedings be had as in cases where inquisitions in similar cases are set aside.” In obedience to the statute last cited, the court of Baltimore County, upon the petition of the defendants in error, presented to them on the 26th-of April, 1844, entered a. ride upon -the plaintiff in error to show cause, on the 11th day of May succeeding, why the inquisition should not be set aside, and an inquisition de novo directed as prayed for, and,, after hearing counsel for and against the application, did, on. the 13th of May, 1847, order and adjudge, that the inquisition! returned in that case be set aside, and that hereafter the *398 court will upon application of the petitioners provide for the taking of an inquisition de novo, according to law.

The court of Baltimore County is admitted to be the highest in the State in which a decision upon this matter could be had, there being no appeal allowed from its judgment.

The plaintiff in error insists, —

1st. That, its charter being a contract between itself and the State, the act ‘of 1841, having varied that contract without the assent of -the company, was a law impairing the obligation óf a contract, and .therefore unconstitutional and void.

2d. That, the. title to the land condemned having vested by the confirmation of the inquisition,’ and the tender of the money anterior to the judgment of the Baltimore County Court under the act of 1841, this act of the legislature is unconstitutional, because it divests vested rights, and in this way impairs the obligation of contracts.

In considering the two propositions here laid down by the plaintiff in error, the first criticism to which they .would seem to be obnoxious is this, that they assume as the groundwork for the conclusions they present, that which remains to be demonstrated by a fair interpretation of the legislative action which it is sought to impugn. For instance, with respect to the first proposition, admitting the charter of the plaintiff to be a contract, the reality and character of any variation thereof by the legislature must be shown, before it can be brought within the inhibition of the Constitution. So, too, with respect to the second charge, it must' certainly be- showif'Hhat there was a perfect investment of property in the plaintiff in error by contract with the legislature, and a subsequent arbitrary divestiture of that property by the latter body, in order to constitute their proceeding an act impairing the obligation of a contract.

The mode of proceeding prescribed by the fifteenth section of the charter of incorporation, for the acquiring of land and other materials for constructing the road, has been already stated. Let us now inquire by what acts to be performed by the company, and at what period of time, the investiture of such land and other property in them was to become complete,— what conditions or stipulations were imposed on the plaintiff in error as necessary to the completion of their contract. This will be indispensable in order to ascertain whether any variation of these conditions, amounting to an infraction of the contract, has been made by the Maryland legislature.

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Bluebook (online)
51 U.S. 395, 13 L. Ed. 469, 10 How. 395, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-and-susquehanna-railroad-co-v-nesbit-scotus-1851.