Houston v. Jefferson College

63 Pa. 428
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 Pa. 428 (Houston v. Jefferson College) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houston v. Jefferson College, 63 Pa. 428 (Pa. 1870).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered, January 3d 1870, by

Thompson, C. J. —

These three bills, relating to the same institution, and involving considerations common to each, were argued together, and as they can be most satisfactorily disposed of together, we now propose to do so.

The first of them raises the question whether the contract of scholarships between the complainants and others, and Jefferson College, did not interpose a constitutional barrier to any legislative grant of authority to the trustees of the college, to surrender its former charter and accept a new one, by which the college was eventually removed from Canonsburg to Washington, in the same county.

The second is by the trustees of Jefferson College, in which the same question is raised by them; and

The third is by some of the members of the board of trustees of Washington and Jefferson College, in which they complain of the defendant, that its trustees are, under the pretence of authority conferred by the Act of 26th February 1869, about to violate the provisions of the Act of 4th of March 1865, by which Washington and Jefferson College was authorized to provide for the instruction of the senior, junior and sophomore classes at Canons-burg, and students in the freshman class, and in the scientific and preparatory departments, and the department of agriculture and art at Washington; and in disregard thereof, about to unite all the classes at Washington, and to remove thither the library and other movable property of the college, and to sell or dispose of its real estate, charging that such intended acts and doings would be, and are, in contravention of the rights, duties and obligations [437]*437conferred by the Act of the 4th of March 1865, referred to. Each of these cases was set down, and all heard together on bill and answer. The argument took a wide range, and counsel had an attentive hearing, such as the magnitude of the seeming consequences of a determination of the controversy demanded. The questions presented, however, were not numerous or complex; and notwithstanding the possible discontent which may for a time follow the displacement of an ancient and cherished institution of learning, if the law require it we must so determine. We do not make the law.

A question to be answered in passing on the merits of the first of these bills is, could Jefferson College surrender its charter, with the consent of the legislature, and accept a new one,“'consolidating it with another institution or college of the same nature and kind, without the assent of the holders of scholarships in the college ?

The general right of a private corporation to surrender its franchises, may possibly have exceptions, but undoubtedly it is the rule. This is generally described as an inherent right, which would necessarily defeat any attempt by legislation to enforce upon a corporation qualities of perpetuity. Such a thing would be impossible in the nature of things. Corporations, like individuals, die by the decay, or loss of their vital functions, and this effectually defies authority, to render them perpetual. A surrender of a franchise is the voluntary death of the corporation, and is one mode by which it may cease to exist: 19 Johns. 474; 8 Pet. 881. If anybody ever did dispute the right of a corporation to surrender its franchises of its own mere motion, it is not likely that such a contest about the question could be long maintained, where both parties, the state and the corporation, the grantor and grantee, consent to it, absolutely, or on condition. This I take to be incapable of dispute, and the history of this college will show that this is just what has transpired in its case. It is undisputed in the pleadings.

But independently of this mutual consent, there is in the Act of the 15th January 1802, the original act of incorporation of Jefferson College, a reservation of a right to do all that was done by the legislature by the Act of 1865. In the 18th section of the original act it is provided “ that the constitution of the college hereby and herein established, shall be and remain the irrevocable constitution of said college for ever, and the same shall not be altered by any ordinance, or by-law of the trustees, nor in any other manner than by an Act of the Legislature of the Commonwealth.” In The Commonwealth v. Bonsall, 3 Wh. 559, a provision like this was held to be a good reservation of the right by the legislature, to change and alter the charter of the corporation of the “Public School of Germantown.” The reservation in [438]*438that act of incorporation, was in the same words almost, as those used here — there is not a shade of difference in their meaning, and but a single literal difference. Granting the rule to be that a private charter of the date of 1802, could not be changed by the legislature without the assent of the corporators, or by virtue of the right reserved; that such charters stood on the footing of contracts, we have no difficulty, for there is not only assent here, but a sufficient reservation of the right to sustain the action of the legislature in the enactment of 1865. So far as that act is concerned, nohody objected to its passage, nor to what was done under it, in consolidating Washington and Jefferson Colleges into one body. The holders of the scholarships now complaining, made no objection, and we must presume them to have been satisfied. What was done was not done in a corner, and they do not allege they were uninformed of it. Thus the surrender of the charter of Jefferson College, and the acceptance of the new one, may strictly be said to have been with the assent, in point of fact, of the trustees, the legislature, and the scholarships. This is an assent of every interest to the new organization, and ought to silence all complaints by any person having a legal right to complain or interfere.

But in order to meet the objection of the holders of scholarships in the Jefferson College, directly on the merits of their objection, which is, that these contracts are impaired by the Acts of 1865 and 1869, let us consider it and see whether there is anything sound in it. If I understand it, it is supposed that these scholarships are impaired in value by the establishment of Washington and Jefferson College at the town of Washington, some seven miles distant from Canonsburg, under the authority of the Act of 26th February 1869. It may be noticed that these scholarships are, as stated in the certificates, for the endowment of Jefferson College. This designation does not alter the matter. They are contracts for tuition in consideration of a pre-paid subscription, and are to be interpreted as ordinary contracts. This is their effect, no more and no less.

By the Act of March 1865, Washington and Jefferson Colleges were consolidated under a new charter accepted by both. The legislature was careful in granting the new charter, to avoid the very question now introduced, and to do entire justice to the holders of certificates and scholarships, and others, provided as follows: “ and all the several liabilities of said two colleges, or corporations, by either of them suffered or created, including the scholarships heretofore granted by and now obligatory upon each of them, are hereby imposed upon and declared to be assumed by the corporation hereby created, which shall discharge and perform the same, without diminution or abatement.” The whole and entire of these contracts are thus saved in their identity and [439]*439integrity.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Pa. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-v-jefferson-college-pa-1870.