Lemuel H. Arnold v. Sarah B. Ruggles

1 R.I. 165
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedSeptember 6, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 R.I. 165 (Lemuel H. Arnold v. Sarah B. Ruggles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lemuel H. Arnold v. Sarah B. Ruggles, 1 R.I. 165 (R.I. 1837).

Opinion

Durfee, C. J.

The first question presented to the Court by the statement of facts and arguments of eoun *166 sel is, are the shares of stock in the Washington Bridge Society to be considered as of the real or personal estate ? In other words, are they property that passes to the heir directly, or to the executor or administrator ? . The society is a corporation, and, as a corporation, it is in law a person capable of owning both real and personal estate. To create a body corporate, the law recognizes a number of persons associated for a particular purpose as a whole, as an entirety ; and this whole or entirety it recognizes as a single person, having in law, for particular purposes, the capabilities of a natural person. And this person, thus constituted, it considers as immortal and as distinct from any of the natural persons, which go to constitute its present form, as the mind or will of the natural person is distinct from the hand or the arm.— This ideal person may have an absolute estate in fee simple — a title unconditional, carrying with it everything appurtenant thereto ; but what it thus has or owns, no other person can at the same time have or own. It is not even the trustee of any one, so far as the title is concerned. But the corporation of itself consumes nothing and may acquire much, and of these acquirements it may be a trustee and its members the cestui que trust, among whom those acquirements should be distributed.

There can be no doubt but that this bridge and the lands and tenements owned with it, are the real estate of this ideal or legal person. We make no question, whether the proprietors on each side of the stream granted lands to the corporation or not; it is enough, for the present purpose, that to the State alone belonged the right and power to construct a bridge across a navigable river, and that the soil, over which that navigable river flowed, belonged to the State for that purpose, and that *167 the State granted this right, power, and interest, to this legal person. There can be as little doubt but that the right of taking toll — -a right, granted at the same time, exercisable over and in this real property and wholly dependent on it, must also he regarded as savoring of the realty, and, therefore, as a real franchise in the corporation. But all this was the absolute and unqualified property of the 'corporation, made so by the grant, and of •no other person or persons whatever. But if this be so, the question still is, what are these rights or interests denominated shares in the stockholders ? They are not carved out of the absolute title of the corporation, they do not in any way limit or encumber its interest in the realty. The shareholders have not even the usufruct of the realty, until it has been reduced by the corporation to money or personalty. If all or either of these were to join in one action for any wrong done to the estate of the corporation, they could not be known in, a court --of law, as having -any interest in it. In a legal sense, therefore, the real property of the corporation is as distinct from the shares of the stockholders, as the corpora^ •tion itself is, as a legal person, distinct from the shareholders as natural persons. Every one of and all these natural persons may transfer their shares, and yet the corporation subsist and its title to its property remain undisturbed.

What then are the shares, if they are not parts of the property of the corporation ? A right to vote and a right to a dividend of the profits of the whole concern of the corporation, real and personal, when struck, together with corresponding liabilities is all that makes up or. com ■stitutes what is commonly called a share. Is a share, then, thus made up, to be deemed real estate, or as *168 necessarily partaking of the realty ? A share must pass one way or the other, as an entire thing. It cannot be resolved into the elements, of which the estates of the corporation consist, and a part pass to the heir and a part to the executor, without destroying it and with it the whole concern. It is an entirety and must be either real or personal. And which is it ? It will not do to make the property of the corporation a criterion, for the property of almost every corporation is more or less mixed. We must make the share itself, — those rights, which constitute its beneficial interests, the criterion. — • Its right then to receive a dividend of the whole concern, whether real or personal, is the interest, by which it is to be judged. But suppose the profits arise wholly from tolls, which we have already said savor of the realty, does that necessarily make the dividend a part of the realty. We think not. It is the corporation, that demands the toll, and it is the passenger, that pays it. It is toll in exaction and in payment — but when in the treasury of the corporation, it is then but money, blended with other funds arising from other sources and all subject to future distribution, in the shape of dividends. — » If a shareholder bring his action for his dividend, he would claim by the order of distribution, and, unlike an action for rent, no question, as we believe, could arise in reference to the title to the realty.

The mode of taxation affords a good criterion to determine the nature of property. The power of taxation is a sovereign power. It ascertains the character of every thing that it touches. But if the shares of the individual stockholders, in turnpikes, railroads, canals and bridges, passing through different towns, as they do, are to be deemed real estate and taxed in the' several towns *169 as shares, such tax cannot under our present system, be enforced. It is quite evident, under our pre'se'nt system, this real estate cali be taxed only as the property of the corporation.

Neither does the legislature, either in public or private acts, regard theih as other than personal property. We have examined a number of acts of incorporation, and have found hut two instances, in which shares were expressly declared to be personal property, and in those two instances — the Lonsdale and Scituate manufacturing companies — that declaration was made necessary by the singular provision, that the shares should be trans • ferred in the same manner as real estate.

Bank property is both real and personal, yet no one doubts that a bank share is personal property, and it is so either from the nature of the thing itself, or by legal implication, and not from any express provision of the charter. We have seen no bank charter which contains any such express provision. The charter, granted 1791, incorporating the Providence Bank, contains this provision : “ That the directors may, at all times, know the proprietors of the bank, no sale or conveyance, whatever, of any share in the bank shall be deemed good, but such as may be entered on the bank books.” The charter of the Bank of Khode-Island, granted 1795, provides that the stock or shares shall be transferable only at bank, in a form prescribed by the directors. We have examined other bank charters, that contain equivalent provisions, but, as far as we have examined, no charter expressly declares that the shares are to be deemed personal property.

We believe this will generally be found true, also, of Turnpike and Bridge companies incorporated. We say

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 R.I. 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemuel-h-arnold-v-sarah-b-ruggles-ri-1837.