Barnes v. Eastern Iowa Railway Co.

155 Iowa 721
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 19, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 155 Iowa 721 (Barnes v. Eastern Iowa Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnes v. Eastern Iowa Railway Co., 155 Iowa 721 (iowa 1912).

Opinion

Sherwin, J.

The defendant is an Iowa corporation,, organized for the purpose of building and operating a single-track, standard-gauge interurban railway thirty-two. miles long. For the purpose of building said railway, the defendant proposes to contract an indebtedness in the. sum of $700,000, evidenced by its bonds, which are to be secured by a trust deed on all of its corporate rights, franchises, and property. The plaintiff is -a stockholder in said railway company, and brings this action to enjoin the defendant from incurring said indebtedness, alleging that its proposed action is illegal under section 1611 of the Code, which limits the indebtedness of said company to $16,000 per mile, and for the further reason, as alleged, [723]*723that the proposed indebtedness exceeds two-thirds of the amount of the capital stock of said defendant. The defendant demurred to the petition on the ground that the facts pleaded did not entitle the plaintiff to the relief demanded, or to any relief whatever. The demurrer was sustained, and, the plaintiff electing to stand upon his petition, judgment was entered dismissing same, and plaintiff appeals.

i. Railroads: Indebtedness: statutes. The determination of the question thus presented involves . a consideration of sections 1611 and 2049 of the Code. The former section is in the chapter of the Code relating to corporations for pecuniary profit, and is as follows, so far as it is material 'here:

Sec.1611. Limit of Indebtedness.. Such articles must fix the highest amount of indebtedness or liability to which the corporation is at any one time to be subject, which in no case, except risks of insurance companies and liabilities of banks not in excess of their available assets, not including their capital, shall exceed two-thirds of its capital stock. But the provisions of this section shall not apply to the bonds or other railway or street railway securities, issued or guaranteed by railway or street railway companies of the state, in aid of the location, construction and equipment of railways, to an amount not exceeding sixteen thousand dollars per mile of single track, standard gauge, or eight thousand dollars per mile of single track, narrow gauge, lines of road for each mile of railway or street railway actually constructed and equipped.

Section 2049 is in the chapter relating to railways, and is in the following language:

Bonds Secured by Mortgage. Any railway corporation organized under the laws of the state may mortgage its property and franchises, in whole or in part, to secure bonds issued by it to pay or refund its indebtedness, to improve or develop its property, or for the purpose of effecting the object of its incorporation, to be issued in such amounts, run for such length of time, be payable [724]*724within or without this state, and bear such rate of interest, not to exceed the legal rate in the state at the time of issue, as the company issuing the same shall determine.

Eor the purpose of ascertaining the scope and intent of these two sections, it is necessary to look at their history. The Code of 1851 authorized the organization of private corporations, and fixed the limit of the indebtedness of such corporations to two-thirds of their capital stock. Title 10, chapter 43. This enactment was carried into the Code of 1860 as section 1153, which provided that “corporations for the construction of any work of internal improvement” must file articles of incorporation, and such articles must fix the highest amount of indebtedness or liability, “which must in no case, except in that of the risks of insurance companies, exceed two-thirds of its capital stock.” Section 1058 of the Code of 1873 authorized corporations for the transaction of any lawful business, including the establishment of ferries, the construction of canals, railways, bridges, or other works of internal improvement; and section 1061 limited the amount of indebtedness of such corporations, except insurance companies, to two-thirds of the capital stock. It will be observed that the Code of 1860 made such limitation apply'to all corporations engaged in any work of internal improvement, which would clearly include the construction of railways, and that section 1058 of the Code of 1873 expressly applied the limitation to corporations organized for the purpose of constructing railways. So there can be no question as to the intent to apply the limitation to corporations engaged in the construction of railways even prior to the enactment of section 1611 of the Code of 1897 which was originally enacted by the Twentieth General Assembly (chapter 22) and became effective April 2, 1884. Section 1611 expressly provides that railway or street railway companies shall not issue bonds or other securities in aid of the location, construction, and equipment of railways or street [725]*725railways to exceed $16,000 per mile. The appellee practically concedes that, if this section is to control, the judgment of the trial court is wrong.

But it is contended that 'section 2049- expressly authorizes an unlimited issue of bonds, and that the two sections are so antagonistic that one or the other must fall, and that section 2049, being the later enactment, should stand as the legislative will. We are unable to agree with the appellee’s contention. The limitation of section 1611 applies only to bonds issued for the location, construction, and equipment of the road, and the word “equipment,” as here used, evidently refers to the original equipment. Section 2049 authorizes the issuance of bonds to pay or refund indebtedness to improve or- develop property, or for the purpose of effecting the object of incorporation. This section, in our judgment, does not attempt to deal specifically with indebtedness incurred in the original construction of the road, or to open the door for an issue of bonds in excess of $16,000 per mile for the location, construction, and original equipment of the road. It provides for an issue cif bonds for a refund of indebtedness and the payment of debts, and for developing and improving its property. It is within the knowledge of .all men that, after the original construction of railroads, large indebtedness is often incurred in the operation of the road and in necessary repairs and improvements, and this, with other authorized indebtedness, is evidently what the law intended to provide for. Thus, if bonds are issued to the limit of $16,000 per mile for construction and original equipment, and the operation -and necessary development and improvement of the road thereafter occasions additional indebtedness, the entire indebtedness, or any part thereof, may be paid or refunded by secured bonds. This construction of section 2049 is in harmony with section 1611 and makes both sections effective. The sentence, “or for the purpose of effecting the object of its [726]*726incorporation,” does not, in our judgment, broaden the power and scope of the section. Considered with what precedes it, it relates only to the things necessary to be done to carry on the business of 'the corporation, and has no reference to the original construction of the road.

Wednesday, June 26, 1912.

We are of the opinion that the demurrer should have been overruled, and the judgment is, therefore — Reversed.

SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Beach v. Wakefield
107 Iowa 567 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 Iowa 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnes-v-eastern-iowa-railway-co-iowa-1912.