Commonwealth of Virginia v. State

32 Md. 501, 1870 Md. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 20, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 32 Md. 501 (Commonwealth of Virginia v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth of Virginia v. State, 32 Md. 501, 1870 Md. LEXIS 55 (Md. 1870).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

After a persistent and successful struggle of more than forty years with many disasters and innumerable difficulties, the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company has at last received from its tolls and revenues a surplus over and above its ordinary expenses, applicable to the payment of its preferred or lien creditors. Under the pi’oceedings in this cause a part of this surplus has been paid into Court, and the immediate question now to be decided is, to whom shall this fund be paid ? Inasmuch, however, as there is a confident and apparently well-founded expectation that there will hereafter be large and increasing revenues annually accruing, to be applied to the same purpose, all parties in interest desire an adjudication by this Court of the priorities of the several classes of creditors of the Canal Company, not only to the fund now to be distributed, but to such future earnings. Most of the questions that will necessarily govern future distributions, arise and must be decided in order to settle the proper disposition of the present fund. We shall, therefore, address ourselves to the decision of these priorities. The several classes of claimants, parties to this proceeding, and who are contesting priorities and preferences inter sese as well as against the State of Maryland, are:

1st. The holders of obligations or bonds to the amount of $56,896.48, issued to such of the creditors of the former Potomac Company as came in and accepted the terms offered by the resolutions of the Canal Company in 1834, for a portion of their several claims as then agreed upon.

[528]*5282d. The holders of what are termed “Repair bonds,” to the amount of $200,000, issued in 1849, guaranteed by the State of Virginia, due on the 1st of July, 1869, and bearing coupons for semi-annual interest.

3d. The holders of what may be termed “Preferred construction bonds,” to the amount of $1,699,500, issued under the Maryland Act of 1844, ch. 281, due thirty-five years after date, with coupons for semi-annual interest, $300,000 of which were also guaranteed by Virginia.

The State of Virginia, having paid as guarantor part of the over-due coupons of each class of bonds, and being also assignee of the claim of Selden, Withers & Co., for payment of other coupons of the Preferred construction bonds, is complainant in the cause. The State of Maryland, the largest and most generous creditor of the Canal Company, has, by an Act of her Legislature, consented to be a party to the bill and submits her rights to the adjudication of the Co,urt. All the legislation of Congress, of Virginia and of Maryland, chartering and aiding this corporation, is referred to and made part of the bill and answers.. The necessities, resources, revenues, loans and financial condition of the Canal Company, from time to time, as set forth in the annual reports of its several presidents, with accompanying documents, are also spread upon the record, giving to the Court all necessary information to enable it fully to understand the important questions it is called upon to decide. A detailed statement of what is thus disclosed, constituting as it does a familiar part of the legislative, judicial and financial history of the State, is unnecessary and could not be given without protracting this opinion to an inordinate length. We shall content ourselves, therefore, with only such reference thereto as is essential to a fair understanding of the several legal points that have been argued and arise for decision.

1st. The holders of the obligations issued to the creditors of the Potomac Company assert for their rights, an absolute priority over all other claims. The argument for this pre[529]*529ference, in which there is most force, is that by its charter, and as a fundamental condition thereof, the Canal Company was bound and assumed the obligation to pay the claims of these creditors, in the mode prescribed by»the 12th section of the Act of 1824, ch. 79. It is unquestionably true, that the assent of the Potomac Company, with the transfer of its property, rights and franchises, was essential to, and made a condition upon which the Canal Company obtained its corporate existence, and the provisions in the charter of that company in favor of the stockholders and creditors of the former company, could not be abrogated or impaired, without their assent, by any subsequent acts of the Canal Company, or even by any legislation conjoint or separate on the part of Congress, Virginia or Maryland. It is also true, that by such transfer the Canal Company received substantial and most valuable property, rights and privileges, and may be regarded as having held them clothed with a trust in favor of these creditors, to be performed in the mode specified in its charter. If these creditors, therefore, were now standing upon the terms of the charter, expressly or substantially executed, and had done nothing which could be fairly construed as a waiver or abandonment of the privileges thus secured to them, the preference now claimed could not be successfully resisted. But it was clearly competent for them to waive any lien or priority thus existing and protected, and if they have done so by accepting different terms, and another and different security for their debts, they have lost their preference by their own act, and can have no just cause of complaint. It becomes important, then, to ascertain what the charter of the Canal Company gave them, and what they have accepted and received. The 12th section of the Act of 1824, ch. 79, makes it the duty of the Canal Company, so long as there shall be and remain any creditor of the Potomac Company, who shall not have vested his demand against the same in the stock of the Canal Company, (which the Act enables him to do) to pay such creditor or creditors annually, such dividend [530]*530or proportion of the net amount of the revenues of the Potomac Company, on "an average of the last five years preceding the organization of the” Canal Company, “as the demand of such creditor or creditors at this time, may bear to the whole debt of $175,800.” By this, the sum of $175,800, the supposed aggregate amount of debts, is made the basis on which the dividend is to be apportioned. The net average revenues for five years being ascertained, it is easy to calculate what per cent, this would pay on the sum stated as the total amount of debts, and the same per cent, must necessarily be paid on the amount due the creditors respectively. Smith vs. Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Co., 14 Peters, 47. Thus, if the net average revenue should be ascertained to amount to three per cent; on $175,800, then each creditor was to receive an annual payment of three per cent, on the entire amount of his claim, thereby making a permanent investment of his debt at an interest of three per cent. This was the extent of the responsibility assumed by the Canal Company, and no lien or preference was given to these creditors beyond the express terms of this contract or obligation.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Md. 501, 1870 Md. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-of-virginia-v-state-md-1870.