Houston & Texas Central Railway Co. v. Texas

170 U.S. 243, 18 S. Ct. 610, 42 L. Ed. 1023, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1542
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 25, 1898
Docket406
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 170 U.S. 243 (Houston & Texas Central Railway Co. v. Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houston & Texas Central Railway Co. v. Texas, 170 U.S. 243, 18 S. Ct. 610, 42 L. Ed. 1023, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1542 (1898).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court. •

The Supreme Court of Texas held in Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company v. Texas, 89 Texas, 340, that, conceding that section six of article ten of the constitution of 1869 did .not repeal prior laws granting lands in aid of the defined lines of existing -railroad companies, the section did operate to cut off the right to earn lands by the construction of lines not authorized until after the, provision took effect. We have just considered that case, and expressed the opinion that the constitutional provision as thus enforced involved no infraction of the Constitution of the United States. *253 In the present ease the state courts have decided that although the Houston and Texas Central Railway Company may have had the right under legislation prior to the adoption of the constitution of 1869 to construct a road from its main line to Austin and to earn lands by such construction, yet that' the purchase by the company prior to 1869 of the Washington Railroad,- running from Hempstead on the company’s main line to Brenham in the direction of Austin, should not be treated as making that road part of the line the company was authorized to build; and that the extension from Brenham to Austin must be held to have been built as an independent line under the act of August 15, 1870, which, having been passed while the constitution of 1869 was in force, the company could not acquire any right to the land grant by the construction of road between the latter points. The question does hot arise in respect of lands for the twenty-five miles from Hempstead to Brenham, but in respect of lands allowed as earned for the distance from Brenham to Austin, for which the certificates were duly issued, and were located; and which have always prior to this suit been recognized as lands of the company, and have been sold as such. •

In other words, the state courts have applied to the road from Brenham to Austin the same rule laid down as to new lines authorized-to be constructed, for the first time, after-the constitution of 1869 was adopted. We cannot concur in this view, but,, on the contrary, are of opinion that the constitutional provision as thus enforced impairs the obligation of the contract between the State and the company and cannot be sustained.

The Houston and Texas Central Railway Company, then styled the Galveston and Red River. Railway Company, was authorized by it's act of incorporation not only to.construct the main line therein specified, but, by its second section, such branches as it should deem expedient; and by the fourteenth section of the special act of February 14,-1852, eight sections of land were granted to the company for every mile of railroad it should construct, no distinction being made between branch and main lines. ' By section 2 of the special act of *254 February 7, 1853, the company was empowered “ to make and'construct simultaneously with the main railway described in the original acts establishing said company, a branch .thereof toward the city of Austin.”

The general act of January 30, 1854, granted to all railroad companies constructing a section of twenty-five miles or more of railroad, sixteen sections of land for every mile of road so constructed and put in running order; though by section 12 it was provided that any company then entitled to a grant of eight sections of land per mile, which should accept the provisions of the act, should not be entitled to receive the grant thereby made .for any branch road; This company was then entitled to eight sections per mile, but the special act of January 23, 1856, supplementary to the several acts incorporating the company, expressly extended the rights, benefits and privileges óf the general act of January 30, 1854, to the company, subject to certain conditions not material to be enumerated, and with the limitation as to' branch lines that the company should “ yield all general branching privileges except such as are expressly granted by the provisions of its charter to certain points,” and requiring it to spend oh the branch only the money subscribed for the branch, and oh. the trunk only the money subscribed therefor.

By section two of the original act of incorporation' general branching privileges had been conferred, and by section two of the special act of February 7, 1853, express authority to construct a branch to the city of Austin. It would seem plain then that section five of the act of January 23, 1856, distinctly referred to the right to construct this particular branch, and so preserved it that the benefits of the act of January 30, 1854, were extended to that branch and its construction, and no other. In other words, all branching privileges except for the Austin line were yielded in accepting the benefits of the act of 1854, but as to that expressly authorized branch the right to construct it was preserved with the benefits accorded to its construction. The act of February 4,1858, repeated the assurance of the benefits of the act of 1854.

But it is said that by the sixth section of the act of 1856 *255 the right to repeal or modify the act of 1854 was reserved, and that by the second section of the act of 1858 the benefits of any general law inured only so long as such law remained in force. Bights to lands acquired before such repeal or modification would not, however, be affected thereby, nor is it important to specially discuss the operation of the constitution of 1869 in this regard, as the special act of September 21, ■1866, made a specific grant to the company of “ sixteen sections ■of land of six hundred-.and forty acres each of every mile of road it has constructed or may construct and put in running •order in accordance with the provisions of the charter of said company.” We think that this plainly applied to the construction of the Austin line as well as the main line of the •company. It applied to all lines constructed by the company in accordance with the provisions of its charter. And the right to construct the Austin line had been specifically conferred by the special act of February % 1853. The general branching privileges which the company possessed under -its original act of incorporation it had been required to surrender by the act of 1856, except such as were “ expressly granted by the provisions of its charter to certain points,” and Austin was a point to which the company was expressl-y authorized to build. So that the Austin branch was one of the lines •covered by the charter when the act of September 21, 1866, was passed, and the grant thereby made applied to'it. And there was ño reservation of a right to repeal of modify the act. . . ■

This legislation'secured' the construction of the branch to 'Austin, the capital of the State, an obvious necessity, and especially as that important point was then without any line •of railway Avhatever.

Counsel for the State contended that the. act granted lands for the construction only of the main line and not of the Austin line. , ■ The last clause of the third section of the act was: “ And said railroad company shall construct their.road in the-line heretofore prescribed- by ‘An act for the relief of the Houston and Texas Central Bail way Company,’ approved February the 8th, --1861.”

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Bluebook (online)
170 U.S. 243, 18 S. Ct. 610, 42 L. Ed. 1023, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-texas-central-railway-co-v-texas-scotus-1898.