International & Great Northern Railway Co. v. State

12 S.W. 685, 75 Tex. 356, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1095
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1889
DocketNo. 6874
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 12 S.W. 685 (International & Great Northern Railway Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International & Great Northern Railway Co. v. State, 12 S.W. 685, 75 Tex. 356, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1095 (Tex. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

This proceeding was brought by the State through the Attorney-General under the act regulating proceedings in quo warranto, and the purpose of the proceeding was:

1. To have declared a forfeiture of the company’s charter and wind up its business.

2. To have a decree withdrawing from the company’s property the immunity from taxation given by the Act of March 10, 1875.

On hearing the court below found that the facts proved did not justify ■a forfeiture of the company’s charter, but that the facts relied upon for that purpose were sufficiently shown to authorize a decree declaring the company’s property no longer exempt from taxation.

A judgment was entered accordingly by the District Court for Travis County on June 21,1888.

Appellant gave notice of and perfected an appeal in proper time, and both parties filed assignments of error, but the record was not filed at any branch of this court until April 3, 1889, when a motion to dismiss the appeal was filed by the State.

This court was in session at Austin when the judgment was rendered,, [372]*372and on the first Monday of October following convened at Tyler, where a term was held, and then convened at Galveston, where a term was held, after which it convened at Austin again on the first Monday in April, 1889.

The ground of the State’s motion to dismiss was that the appeal was not prosecuted to the term pending when the judgment was rendered, nor to the succeeding term held at Tyler.

The motion was overruled, but without any written opinion, and the State now seeks a revision of so much of the action of the court below as refused to forfeit the charter of the company, and to sustain the other part of the judgment.

The statute regulating appeals from judgments rendered in proceedings on information in the nature of quo warranto provides that “all such appeals shall be prosecuted to the term of the court in session, at either branch, or to the first term to be held, if not in session, after judgment has been rendered in the District Court;” and it has been held, in accordance with this and other provisions of the statute showing a legislative intention that such cases should be speedily disposed of, that there must be a substantial compliance with the statute.

The act prescribes the cases in which informations under it may be prosecuted, and its other provisions must be held to apply only to such proceedings as are contemplated by it.

So much of the act as it will be necessary to consider is as follows:

“ In case any person shall usurp, intrude into, or unlawfully hold or execute, or is now intruded into, or now unlawfully holds or executes any office or franchise, or any office in any corporation created by the authority of this State, or any public officer shall have done or suffered any act which by the provisions of law works a forfeiture of his office, or any association of numbers of persons shall act within this State as a corporation without being legally incorporated, or any incorporation does or omits any act which amounts to a surrender or a forfeiture of its rights and privileges as a corporation, or exercises powers not conferred by law, * * * the Attorney-General, or district or county attorney of the proper county or district, either of his own accord or at the instance of any individual relator, may present a petition,” etc.

There are but two parts of this statute which can have any application to the question raised by the motion to dismiss, and to the State’s right now to have revised so much of the decree as refused a forfeiture of the charter of the company.

If the State attempted to do something through this proceeding not contemplated by the statute, then its provisions regulating appeals as to such a matter can have no application; but in so far as the proceeding was contemplated by and in pursuance of the statute its provisions regulating appeals must be applied.

[373]*373That part oí the statute which declares that an information may be filed and heard “ in case * * * any incorporation does or omits any act which amounts to a surrender or a forfeiture of its rights and privileges as a corporation,” and that in case the corporation be adjudged guilty the court shall declare a forfeiture of the corporate franchise, is that on which the proceeding was based, and properly based, in so far as a forfeiture of the charter of the company was concerned; and if the State desired to appeal from the judgment in so far as adverse to it, then it should have complied substantially with the statute, and not having done so, we are of opinion that it can not now have a revision of any matter permitted by the statute to be adjudicated under the terms and restrictions therein found.

We will notice the grounds on which the motion to dismiss the appeal was overruled, for it is intimately connected with the main question involved in this appeal.

It was not believed that the statute on which the proceeding is based authorized so much of it as sought to have a decree declaring that the exemption of appellant’s property given by the Act of March 10, 1875, and compliance therewith should cease to exist, and that for this reason the provisions in regard to appeals could not affect appellant’s right to prosecute its appeal under the general laws applicable thereto.

It would hardly be contended if the State’s officer, in a proceeding properly instituted under the statute to forfeit the charter of the company, had joined with that a proceeding to try the company’s title to its lands, railway, rolling stock, and other property, that the latter would be governed by the statute in question as to time or mode of prosecuting an appeal.

To be governed by the particular statute the proceeding must be one authorized and contemplated by it, for it is only because it was thought that the best interests of all in reference to such matters would be sub-served by most speedy determination of the litigation, that a different rule to that applied in other cases as to time within which appeals should be prosecuted was prescribed.

The “rights and privileges” contemplated by the clause of the statute before referred to are evidently such as result from the fact of incorporation—the right and privilege to be a corporation, and to exercise the powers necessary to the consummation of the purposes for which corporate existence is given—“rights and privileges as a corporation,” and not such rights and privileges in relation to property as may be vested in a corporation or an individual by contract or legislation. Morgan v. Louisiana, 93 U. S., 223; Railway v. Miller, 114 U. S., 185.

The character of right conferred by the Act of March 10, 1875, in so far as it exempted appellant’s property from taxation for a fixed period, will be considered in another connection, and it is sufficient now to say [374]*374that it is not embraced in the term “rights and privileges as a corporation.”

That part of the statute which declares that information may be filed “in case any person

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W. 685, 75 Tex. 356, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-great-northern-railway-co-v-state-texapp-1889.