Colburn v. Railroad

28 S.W. 298, 94 Tenn. 43
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 28 S.W. 298 (Colburn v. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colburn v. Railroad, 28 S.W. 298, 94 Tenn. 43 (Tenn. 1894).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

This is. an injunction bill, brought by two taxpayers of Hamilton County, to enjoin the delivery to the railroad company of certain bonds of the county issued to secure the building of a free wagon and foot bridge across the Tennessee River at Chattanooga, and to have' the bonds declared void and canceled.

The defendants, county of Hamilton and Chattanooga Western Railroad Company, demurred to the bill, and, on hearing, Special Chancellor W. L. Eakin overruled the demurrer, and made the injunction perpetual; but in the exercise of his discretion under the statute, granted an appeal, which was taken, and the county and railroad, company have assigned errors.

[45]*45Tlie facts, so far as necessary to be stated, are that, at the July term, 1893, of the Quarterly Court of Hamilton County, the defendant railroad company made a proposition to the Court, looking to joint action and co-operation in building a combined railway, wagon, and foot bridge across the Tennessee River, from Chattanooga to the west bank of the river, at what is known as Moccasin Bend. This proposition the Court rejected, but, in lieu, took action as follows:

The Court, by resolution, determined and resolved (reciting that it was a county purpose, and in the discretion, judgment, and opinion of the Court, to the best interests of the county and the public welfare) that it, for county purposes, would build a wagon and foot bridge between the points mentioned.

The resolution further recited that the cost of the bridge would exceed the amount which could be realized from special taxation during the period covered by its erection, and that, in order to build and pay for the same, it would be necessary for the county to issue $150,000 of its bonds, bearing-five (5) per cent, interest, and running twenty years to maturity, of the denomination of $1,000 each, and to be sold at not less than par.

The Court thereupon resolved, in substance, that if the defendant railroad company would, (1) in connection with its road and branches, construct a railroad bridge between the termini mentioned; (2) as a [46]*46part of said railroad bridge, and above the same, construct for the county, and for county purposes, a free wagon and foot bridge; (3) make the bridge abutments and approaches of size and strength, and according to plans approved by the county; (4) vest in the county the fee simple, unincumbered title to the railroad right of way, one hundred feet in width, for the distance of one mile from the north end of the bridge; (5) begin the work within six months, and finish it within three years, including a main line from Chattanooga to Middle Creek, and a branch from Middle Creek to the crest of Walden’s Ridge, twenty-five miles distant from Chattanooga; and a branch from the end of the bridge, along the north side of the river, to a connection with the Cincinnati Southern Railroad; (6) guarantee to continually maintain the foundation, piers, and other substructures of the bridge, so as to keep the county’s wagon and footway thereon safe, secure, and unimpaired; (7) allow any other railway to ’ use the bridge and five miles of the defendant’s railroad track, of main line, and (8) would carry, and require all other roads using , the bridge to carry, all coal and coke, from any point on the line, within twenty-five miles of Chattanooga, to any point in the city, or suburbs, at a freight rate of not more than twenty-five cents per ton; then, when all these conditions shall be agreed • to by the railroad company, the county would issue $150,000 of its bonds, and place the same in. the • First National Bank of the city [47]*47■within ninety days after the proposition of the eounty was accepted, to be delivered to the railroad company only when the bridge and lines of railway are fully completed, and the conditions of the contract met, and the bridge paid for by the railroad company, and properly tested, and, when so delivered, to be in full payment and satisfaction for the construction of the said free wagon and foot bridge built for the county, the railroad company to have an easement over the strips of land, vested under the agreement in the county, so long as the contract provisions were complied with by the railroad company, but not longer.

It was further resolved, that the contract instrument should be registered, and its conditions and provisions run with the road and bridge and right of way into whatever hands they might thereafter pass.

On the same day that this resolution was passed, the railroad company, in open Court, accepted its provisions in writing, and the Court thereupon passed a resolution authorizing the issuance of the bonds, and their delivery to the bank, and the County Judge and bridge committee were authorized and directed to see to the erection, on the top of the railroad bridge, of the wagon and foot bridge provided for in the resolutions and agreement.

The demurrer to the bill proceeds upon the idea, among others of less importance, first, that the contract thus entered into constituted a giving or' loaning of the credit of the county to the railroad with[48]*48out submitting the same to' a vote of the people of the county, contrary to the spirit and letter of the Constitution; second, that -it was an effort on the part of the county, without such election being held, to become a stockholder with the railroad company in the bridge and right of way; third, that there was .no public necessity for the bridge; fourth, that there was no public road to the bridge, on either side of the river; fifth, that it was beyond the pow.er of the county to be the joint owner in such manner of the bridge.

For defendants it is argued that such contract is authorized by and in conformity with the Constitution and general laws of the land; that the Chap-eery Court has no jurisdiction to inquire into the necessity, utility, or propriety of building a bridge, or its location, or time of erection, or as to the levy of taxes to pay for the same, because all these matters are exclusively in • the discretion of the County Court; that the contract is not prohibited by any statute, or the Constitution, and the acts relied on to sustain the contract are' constitutional, and the contract is not one giving or loaning the credit of the county to a railway, or becoming a stockholder therein.

Whether the arrangement ■ proposed to be entered into by the county is a judicious one, and for the best interest of the county, is not for this Court to inquire, but the question with us is simply one of authority to do what the county proposes to do, in the way it is attempting to do it.

[49]*49TTe think we need not consider many of the points raised and so ably argued by opposing counsel. 'W’e have been greatly aided by the very lucid, able, and exhaustive arguments made upon the points of law involved in the cause. The Constitution of 18T0, as well as that of 1834, provides that the General Assembly should encourage a well-regulated system of internal improvements, in order to develop the resources of the State and promote the happiness and prosperity of its citizens.

That the Legislature has authorized the several County Courts to build jails, courthouses, and bridges in certain events, and raise money to pay for the same, will not be questioned. This necessarily presupposes the power to contract a debt for such purposes; and it is insisted that the right to create a debt carries with it, by necessary implication, the right to issue an evidence of that debt.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.W. 298, 94 Tenn. 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colburn-v-railroad-tenn-1894.