City of Clinton v. Cedar Rapids & Missouri River Railroad

24 Iowa 455
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 12, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 24 Iowa 455 (City of Clinton v. Cedar Rapids & Missouri River Railroad) 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
City of Clinton v. Cedar Rapids & Missouri River Railroad, 24 Iowa 455 (iowa 1868).

Opinion

Dillon, Ch. J.

1. Railkoad: legislative authority. The city of Clinton asks for the injunction upon substantially two main grounds: • tat i • & 1. Ihat the defendant, by its articles of incorporation, is not authorized to build the proposed road from Lyons city to Clinton city; but only to build a road from Cedar Rapids westward to the Missouri river. 2. The common council of the city of Clinton having refused to give its consent'to allow any of the streets of the city, or any portion of such streets, to be used by the defendant for the purpose of building its road thereon, the railroad company has no right thus to use the streets, and the city has the right to enjoin it from so doing.

It is necessary to a full understanding of the important questions arising on this appeal to refer to the legislative history of the proposed road.

In May, 1856, congress granted to the State of Iowa lands to aid in the construction of certain railroads in the State. In July, 1856, the general assembly of Iowa conferred upon a corporation known as the Iowa Central Air Line Railroad company, a certain portion of these lands, to aid in the construction of a railroad from lyons city, north-westerly to a point of intersection with the main line of the Iowa Central Air Line railroad, near Maquoketa; thence on said main line, running as near as practicable to the forty-second parellel, across the State to the Missouri river.

The Iowa Central Air Line company having “ wholly failed to perform ” the conditions of the grant to it, the general assembly of the State of Iowa, on the 17th of [465]*465March, 1860 (Special Acts, 1860, p. 29), resumed the lands which had been conferred upon that company.

On the 26th day of the same March, the general assembly, having thus resumed these lands, conferred the same, subject to certain conditions, upon the defendant in the present suit, viz., the Cedar Rapids and Missouri River Railroad company. Special Acts, 1860, p. 40.

This latter company had been organized in 1859, under the general incorporation act, for the purpose of building a road “ to commence at or near Cedar Rapids, on the Cedar river, and to run thence westerly, as nearly as practicable or expedient, on the forty-second parallel, across the State to the- Missouri river.”

Meanwhile, that is, between 1856 and 1860, another company, viz., the Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska Railroad company, had, unaided by any grant, and with a rapidity at that time unexampled, built and put in operation its road, from the city of Clinton to the city of Cedar Rapids, a distance of about eighty-two miles. Meanwhile, also, the city of Clinton, only about two miles distant from the city of Lyons, sprang into existence, the child of the railroad of which it was the initial point on the Mississippi.

Thus matters stood at the session of the general assembly of 1860.

Lyons, though named in the act of congress of 1856 making the grant of lands to the State, as the commencement point of the road to be built on the forty-second parallel, and also thus named in the grant by the State to the Air Line company, was as yet without any road.

The defendant, the Cedar Rapids company, asked to have the lands, which had been resumed a few days before, conferred upon it. This the general assembly did (Special Acts, 1860, p. 40), upon certain conditions. As applicable to the present controversy, those conditions [466]*466are set forth in section six of the act, and are as follows :

Sec. 6. And it is further expressly provided, that the said company [the defendant herein] shall build, or cause to be built, before the 1st day of January, 1861, a railroad of .like guage and equal in quality to the Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska railroad, from Pearl street, in Lyons city, to a point of intersection with the said Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska railroad, within the corporate limits of Clinton city, with such switches and side tracks as the business of the said town of Lyons may require, and to operate the same by running passenger and freight cars of the same class with those used by the Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska railroad, in close connection forever with all regular trains at any time run on said Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska railroad, without any unnecessary delay at said point of intersection; and the charge per mile for freight and passengers shall never exceed the regular charges on the Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska railroad ; the intent and meaning of this section being to secure to the citizens of Lyons the same privileges and benefits of a railroad connection that are enjoyed by any other place on said Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska railroad; and it is hereby expressly provided, that no lands shall be certified by the governor to said Cedar Rapids and Missouri River Railroad company until they have complied with the requirements of this section.” Acts, 1860, § 6, p. 43.

This section has been copied in full, because each of its parts bear unmistakable testimony to the earnest and anxious purpose of the legislature to secure to Lyons city the benefit of a railroad connection by means of the grant of these lands, in the diposition of which it had, so to speak, such an equity.

By the act of congress of June 2,1864, the time for [building this road from Lyons to Clinton was extended.

[467]*467"We are now prepared to examine the objections made by the city to this act of 1860, and to the right of the defendant to build the road in controversy.

I. It is urged, that, at the passage of the act of 1860 (Special Laws, 1860, p. 40), the defendant was incapable of accepting the grant or complying with its conditions, nor did it have the power to do so until it amended its articles of incorporation in 1867, nearly six years after the statute had expired by limitation.”

The defendant was duly incorporated in 1859, with power to build the road from Cedar Rapids to the Missouri, and, of course, it had power as such corporation to accept the grant. But the principal point of objection is, that by its articles of incorporation, as they originally stood, and as they continued to stand down to 1867, the defendant had no legal power to build the road from Pearl street, in Lyons, to Clinton city, as required by the sixth section of the act of 1860. .

A sufficient answer to this objection is, that the time for building this road.was extended as above shown; and before this suit was brought, the defendant had amended •its articles of incorporation so as to give it, in terms, the power to build the very road mentioned in section six of the act of 1860.

It is thus seen that the defendant is authorized by law to build the road in question. Therefore the alleged ground for the injunction, based upon such want of authority, fails.

2 _con8tl_ tutionai law, II. It is next claimed by the counsel for the city, that the act of 1860 (Special Acts, 1860, p. 40), “ so far as it undertook to authorize the building of a par-^cu]ar raj]road, is in conflict with the thirtieth section of article three of the Constitution, and therefore void.”

The section of the Constitution referred to, after [468]

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Bluebook (online)
24 Iowa 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-clinton-v-cedar-rapids-missouri-river-railroad-iowa-1868.