County of Leavenworth v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co.

25 F. 219
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 25 F. 219 (County of Leavenworth v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Leavenworth v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 25 F. 219 (circtwdmo 1885).

Opinion

Miller, Justice.

The county of Leavenworth, a municipal corpo-

ration of the state of Kansas, brings this bill in chancery against the Chicago, Bock Island & Pacific Bailway Company, a corporation existing under the laws of the states of Illinois and Iowa, and against other corporations and persons interested in the matter in controversy. There are in the case as submitted an original and amended bill, answers to these bills by the Bock Island Company, and replications; a large amount of testimony, consisting of records of other suits, documents, and transcripts of numerous papers, and many pages of depositions of witnesses; and the whole matter having been [220]*220very fully argued and considered, as far as I have time to do so, I proceed to give the views which, in my opinion, must govern the case. The history of the transactions out of which the controversy arises, may be stated as to its important elements as follows:

The Platte City & Port Des Moines Railroad Company was a corporation organized and existing under a special charter granted by the legislature of the state of Missouri, approved January 4, I860,’ for the purpose of constructing and operating a railroad, to commence at a point on the Missouri river opposite, dr nearly opposite, the city of Leavenworth, Kansas, and run thence north-easterly to a point on the state line between Missouri and Iowa, in the direction of Port Des Moines. The capital stock of this company was' fixed by its charter at $3,000,000, of which Leavenworth county, on or about April 2,1867, subscribed and paid for, at par, $300,000. The name of the company.was afterwards lawfully changed to the Leavenworth & Des Moines Railway Company, and later to the Chicago & Southwestern Railway Company. Such changes, however, were merely of name, and without prejudice to the rights of stockholders in such original company. This company was also authorized by law to build a branch road from some poiut on the main line to a point on the north line of Missouri, in the direction of Ottumwa, Iowa. On or about the twelfth day of May, 1869, a corporation was duly formed under the general laws of Iowa, and called the Chicago & Southwestern Rail-way Company in Iowa, for the ostensible purpose of building and operating a railroad from Washington, in Iowa, south-westerly, to meet the-road of said Chicago & Southwestern Railway Company, chartered in Missouri, at the state line between Iowa and Missouri. The capital stock of this Iowa corporation was fixed in the articles of incorporation at $3,000,000; and it was provided in said articles “that in the event of the consolidation of this corporation with the Chicago & Southwestern Railway in Missouri the company in which the two companies may be consolidated shall have the power to subject the said corporation to such amount of indebtedness or liability as the board of directors may deem necessary, not exceeding, however, six millions of dollars.” On the twentj'-fifth day of September, 1869, these two companies adopted articles of consolidation and became one company, under the name, the Chicago & Southwestern Railway Company, for the purpose of building a railroad from Washington, in the state of Iowa, to the Missouri river, in the state of Missouri, at a point nearly opposite to the city of Leavenworth, in the state of Kansas. In the proceedings which resulted in this act of consolidation the county of Leavenworth, as one of the stockholders in the Chicago & Southwestern Railway Company of Missouri, was represented by its duly-appointed agent, who gave his assent to the consolidation.

Although there are in both the original and amended bills some suggestions impeaching the validity of this consolidation, counsel for plaintiff, in the oral argument, made no such charge, and, as I un« [221]*221derstood, disclaimed such a proposition. On the first day of October, five days after this consolidation, the new company entered into a contract with the Chicago & Eock Island Eailroad Company, whereby it agreed to issue its bonds to the amount of five millions of dollars, payable 30 years after date, bearing interest at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum, for which coupons were to be attached to the bonds; the whole to be secured by a mortgage on its line of road from Washington, in Iowa, to the Missouri river. In consideration that the proceeds of these bonds should be placed in the hands of the Eock Island Company, and certain advaxxtages secured to that company by the. contract, in the way of connection and running arrangement between the two companies and their roads, the Eock Island Company agreed to indorse these bonds, and out of the proceeds of their sale to pay the interest on all of them until the new road was constructed and turned over to the company.

In pursuance of this agreement the Southwestern Company issued its boxxds to the amount of $5,000,000, and placed them in the possession of the Eock Island Company, and on the sixth day of October, 1869, made and delivered to defendants David Dows, Frederick S. Winston, and Calvin F. Burnes a deed of trust upon their entire line of road from Washington, in Iowa, to the Missouri river, to secure payment of these bonds and interest as agreed. The Eock Island Company indorsed the bonds, and sold them in open market, or paid them, with its guaranty on them, to the contractors who built the road. On the sixteenth day of August, 1871, articles of consolidation were signed between this Chicago & Southwestern Eailway Comjianv and another company organized under the laws of the state of Missouri by the name of the Atchison Branch of the Chicago & Southwestern Company, which was authorized to construct a road from a point on the east bank of the Missouri river opposite the city of Atchison, in the state of Kansas, to some point on the Chicago & Southwestern Eailroad between Plattsburgh and Caxnden Point, in Missouri. These articles of consolidation were duly filed in the office, of the secretary of state of the state of Missouri according to the law of that state; and it may be stated that, in all operations, contracts, and proceedings subsequent to that time, in which the Chicago & Southwestern Eailway Company is spoken of, or takes part, it is this second consolidated company that is meant.

The validity of this consolidation is assailed by plaintiff on the-ground that it is void by reason of its failure to conform to the laws of Missouri, and one-of the priixcipal issues raised in the case is on this proposition. The plaintiff in its prayer for relief asks that this supposed consolidation be declared null and void, and other important relief is founded on this asserted invalidity.

The road after several years was completed, and the money with which this was done was mainly raised by the sale of the bonds of the Southwestern Company, indorsed by the Eock Island Company, [222]*222and the Rock Island Company paid the interest on the bonds as it had assumed to do. The possession of the road as it became fit for use was taken by the Rock Island Company, so that when it was completed so as to be used from one end to the other, it was found in possession and use of that company, and so remained for two or three years afterwards. The Rock Island Company says in its answer that it paid the interest on the bonds out of the sale of the bonds themselves, according to the contract, until the road was finished, and after this it paid it out of its own money by reason of its obligation as guarantor or indorser of the bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-leavenworth-v-chicago-r-i-p-r-co-circtwdmo-1885.