Baltimore & Ohio R. R. v. Supervisors & Sheriff of Marshall County

3 W. Va. 319
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 3 W. Va. 319 (Baltimore & Ohio R. R. v. Supervisors & Sheriff of Marshall County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore & Ohio R. R. v. Supervisors & Sheriff of Marshall County, 3 W. Va. 319 (W. Va. 1869).

Opinion

Maxwell, J.

The Baltimore and Ohio railroad company was charged on the personal property books of the assessor for the first or upper district of the county of Marshall for the year 1864 with property of the value of 315,000 dollars, and w7as charged on the said books on account of the said property with a State tax for general purposes of the. sum of 945 dollars, and with a further State tax for the [322]*322support of free schools of the sum of 315 dollars, and with a county tax or levy of the sum of 6,331 dollars and 50 ■ cents, making in all the sum of 7,591 dollars and 50 cents. When the sheriff of said county was about to levy for and proceed to collect the said taxes so charged the said company obtained an injunction restraining him from levying for and collecting the said taxes. The case came on to be heard in the circuit court of Marshall county at the April term, 1867, of said court, when the court dissolved the injunction and dismissed the complainants’ original and amended bills so as to allow the said sheriff to proceed with, the collection of said taxes. But the said company not being satisfied with the decree dissolving the injunction has appealed to this court to have the case reviewed.

The petitioner assigns six different causes of error in the decree complained of, all denyiug in substance that the property of the said petitioner is liable for either the State or county taxes charged-on the said property.

The Baltimore and Ohio railroad company was chartered by an act passed by the general assembly of the State of Maryland on the 28th of February, 1827.

The 22d section of said act provides, “That if the said road shall not be commenced in two years from the passage of this act and shall not be finished within this State in ten years from the time of the commencement thereof, then this act shall be null and void.”

This Maryland charter was confirmed by the general assembly of Virginia with certain conditions and restrictions, not material to this case, by an act passed on the 8th day of March, 1827.

In 1836, 1837, 1838 and 1839 other acts were passed by Virginia authorizing conditional subscriptions to the work of the company, the act of 1838 also extending the time for the completion of the work in Virginia until the 4th day of July, 1843, upon the conditions mentioned in said act. The conditions mentioned in these several acts were never complied with, nor the subscriptions therein provided for, made, but the road was nevertheless completed in 1843 as far as [323]*323Cumberland. Tbe work upon the road in Virginia between Harper’s Ferry and Cumberland must have been done after the expiration of the time limited in the charter without any extension thereof, except the extension mentioned in the act of 1838, which never took effect, because it was de-pendant upon conditions never complied with.

In 1844-45 and in 1845-46 other acts were passed proposing terms and conditions upon which the company might complete its road through Virginia, but neither of these acts was accepted by the company.

On the 6th of March, 1847, another act was passed which was accepted by the company, and under -which the company completed its road through Virginia, subject to such parts of its original charter as. remain unaltered.

It is claimed here in behalf of the appellees that the act of March 8th, 1827, constitutes no part of the charter of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad company, but that the act of March 6th, 1847, and the general railroad law referred to in the last named act constitute the charter of said company for the reason that the road was not completed in the time named in the act of 1827, whereby the act became null and void, and for the further reason that if the said act did not become null and void it was entirely superseded by the act of 1847.

In the case of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad company vs. Gallahues’ adm’r, 12 Grat., 655, it was held that the Baltimore and Ohio railroad company was a Virginia corporation, by virtue of the act of March 8th, 1827, thus recognizing the existence of the wet. But it is claimed by the counsel for the appellees that this case is no .authority, because the effect of the 22d section declaring the charter null and void if the road was not completed in the time specified, was not considered by the court. This question could not have been considered by the court, because the act of 1827 had been accepted and the company ¡had become a corporation under it and had made its road as far as Cumberland before the passage of the act of 1847, so that although the charter was perhaps at the time of the. passage [324]*324of the act of 1847 forfeited, jet that question coaM onlj be raised by a proper proceeding in the name of the State against the company to judicially determine and declare the forfeiture and annul the charter. 2 Kent Com., 393; The King vs. Amery, 2 Term Rep., 515; Canal Company vs. Railroad Company, 4 Gill & Johnson, 1; Thomas vs. The People, 23 Wend., 535; Angell & Ames on Corporations, sec. 777; Crump, &c., vs. United States Mining Company, 7 Grat., 352.

Although a charter of am incorporated company may be forfeited, yet the government which granted the charter may not choose to enforce the forfeiture, and it seems that if the charter of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad company was in fact forfeited, as claimed by counsel, the State of Virginia did not choose to enforce such forfeiture.

It seems to me quite plain that the charter of 1827 has not become inoperative by reason of the section declaring it void if the road was not completed in the time specified.

Nor do I agree that the act of 1827 is wholly superseded by the act of 1847. The act of 1847 could not have been intended as a substitute for the act of 1827, but was intended to authorize the Baltimore and Ohio railroad company, which is recognized by the act itself as an existing company, to complete its road through the State of Virginia under the act of 1827, subject to the restrictions and upon the conditions imposed on the company by the said act of 184-7. Such must have been the view taken by the court in the case of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad company vs. Gallahue.

The question may be asked why was it that the company accepted the act of 1847 if its charter under the act of 1827 was not forfeited ? That the State had no power to impose on the company without its consent the act of 1847 is clear. But the reason why the company accepted the terms proposed in the act was probably because it was supposed that, if the company went on to complete the road under the ori-. ginal charter proceedings would be taken to vacate its «barter.

It is, however, not necessary to inquire for the reason', [325]*325why the company accepted the act of 1847, the fact exists that it did aeeept it and the effect is the same no matter what the reason for accepting it may have been.

The aet of 1847 having been-'accepted by the company, together with the aet ©f 1887, establishing general regulations for the incorporation of railroad companies, so &r as properly applicable, became parts of the charter of said company along with the aet of 1827, the aet of 1827 giving way to both or either-of the acts of 1847 or 1837 whenever inconsistent- with them or either of them.

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Bluebook (online)
3 W. Va. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-r-r-v-supervisors-sheriff-of-marshall-county-wva-1869.