Davis v. Central Rail Road & Banking Co.

17 Ga. 323
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1855
DocketNo. 60
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 17 Ga. 323 (Davis v. Central Rail Road & Banking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Central Rail Road & Banking Co., 17 Ga. 323 (Ga. 1855).

Opinion

By the Court.

Penning, J.

delivering the opinion.

These two cases were argued and decided together.' In each' is but a single question, and that is common to both. The Courts below, from which the cases respectively come, decided the Act of the General Assembly of the 20th February, 1854,. to define the liabilities of the several Rail Road Companies off this State, for injuries done to stock, &c. by their cars, &c. and to regulate the mode of proceeding in such cases, &c. to be unconstitutional. And those are the decisions assigned as error in this Court.'

Consulting convenience, I shall treat those decisions separately, beginning with that rendered in the case of Davis against the Central Rail Road & Banking Company.

The Court below held the Act aforesaid to be unconstitutional — was that decision right ? This is the sole question.

The Act declares, in substance, that the Rail Road Companies of this State, for injuries done by them, to stock, &c. shall be liable to be sued, in the counties in which the injuries may-have been committed.

This Act the Central Rail Road & Banking Company says,, violates both the Constitution of the State and that of the United States — violates the part of the Constitution of the-State, which is in these words: “ The Inferior Courts shall also have concurrent jurisdiction in all civil cases, except in cases respecting titles to lands: which shall be tried in the County wherein the defendant resides;” and violates that part of the Constitution of the United States, which is in these words [325]*325No State shall” “ pass any” “ laws impairing the obligation of contracts.”

And to show the Act to violate this part of the Constitution of the State, the argument of the Rail Road Company is as follows:

This part of the-Constitution, declaring that no person shall-be sued elsewhere than in the county in which he resides, declares, in effect, that the county in which a person resides is to be ascertained by the law of residence, in force at the time of the declaration i. e. at the time of the making of the Constitution.

That that law, therefore, is not subject to repeal or change by the Legislature.

That by that law, all Rail Road & Banking Corporations reside at the place where they keep their “ principal office.”

That when the Act aforesaid was passed, the Central Rail Road & Banking Company kept its principal office at Savannah, in the County of Chatham.

That, therefore, when the Act was passed, the Company, by that irrepealable law, resided in Chatham; and so, by the Constitution, was subject to be sued only in Chatham.

But that notwithstanding this, the Act of the Legislature aforesaid, says either this, I repeal that law which makes the-residence of a rail road corporation the place at which it keeps-its principal office; and henceforth, wherever such a corporation injures stock, &c. there I make its residence to be, and there-I make it suable.

Or this — I do not repeal that law; and yet, wherever such a corporation injures stock, &c. there I make it suable.

That whichever of these two things it is that the Act says, it does what the Constitution declares shall not be done.

And therefore, that the Act violates the Constitution.

This is the argument of the Rail Road Company.

In this argument, one of the propositions is, that by the law as it existed at the time of the making of the State Constitution, the place of residence of a Rail Road Corporation, is the place at which it keeps its principal office ; and this proposi[326]*326tion, it was insisted, is sustained by several decisions, and among them the decision of this Court, in the The Central Bank vs. Gibson, (11 Ga. R.)

Rut this is not the proposition which that decision goes to sustain. The proposition which that decision goes to sustain, is this: that if the charter of a bank says, the bank shall be established at a particular place, the charter, itself., means to say that the bank shall be a resident of this place. In other words, the decision is, that if the Legislature plainly says, a corporation’s residence is to be at a particular place, its residence is to be at that place. But it is not the decision, that if the charter of a bank says only, that the bank is to have its “principal office” at a particular place, the charter says, in effect, that the bank shall be a resident of that place, much less is it the decision that this is so, when the charter is the charter, not of a bank, but of a rail road. - Nisbet, J. who delivered the opinion, seeming to speak for himself alone, it is true, says that if the charter - had not determined the locality of the bank, he should have held it a resident for the purposes of a suit in the county in which was its place of business. But in what county is the place of business of a rail road ? Is the business of a common carrier done in a house ? What would have been his Honor’s opinion on this point, does not appear. This, however, is what his Honor says, when apparently speaking for the Court. However plausible the idea may be, that a corporation, an intangible entity, deriving its existence and all its functions from the Legislature, and possessing no personality, is ubiquitous within the limits of the State, in the absence of any designation of its locality; yet, in this case it has no application, because the charter of the Central Bank fixes its locality at Milledgeville — there, therefore, it is suable — there it is made by law commorant. It is an artificial person, resident by legislative enactment, at Milledgeville. The Charter provides “that a bank shall be established in behalf of the State of Georgia at Milledgeville, in said State, to be known and called by the name and style of the Central Bank of Georgia.” (Prince, 72.) This seems to be conclusive of this question.

[327]*327The provision in the charter of the Central Rail Road and Banking Company is this: “ The principal office of the said Company shall be located at Savannah, with subordinate offices or agencies at Macon and such other places as the board of directors shall determine, and all elections and meetings of stockholders shall be held at such principal office only.” This is not the same as would have been a provision, that the corporation “shallbe established” “at” Savannah.

And to say that a person’s office of business shall be at a particular place, is not necessarily to say that the person’s residence shall be at that place. There is a Statute which declares, that the Clerks of the Superior and Inferior Courts and of the Courts of Ordinary shall keep their offices, books and papers, at the-court house of their respective counties, or within one mile thereof: but did any body ever think that this was 'saying that the courthtouse, or some place within a mile of it, was to be the residence of those clerks ? On the contrary, the implication is, that though these Clerks may reside any where, they must keep an office at the court house. (Cobb’s Dig. 199.)

The proposition, then, is not established by this case.

Another of the cases which it was argued gave the proposition support, was that of the Louisville Rail Road Company vs. Letson (2 How.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ga. 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-central-rail-road-banking-co-ga-1855.