Little Rock & Napoleon Railroad v. Little Rock, Mississippi River & Texas Railroad

36 Ark. 663
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 Ark. 663 (Little Rock & Napoleon Railroad v. Little Rock, Mississippi River & Texas Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Little Rock & Napoleon Railroad v. Little Rock, Mississippi River & Texas Railroad, 36 Ark. 663 (Ark. 1880).

Opinion

Harrison, J.

This was a suit in equity by the Little Rock and Napoleon Railroad company against the Little Rock, Mississippi River and Texas railway, and Jared E. Redfield —the president — and Dudley E. Jones, Sol. F. Clark, S. L. Griffith, C. F. Penzel, Elisha Atkins, John H. Reed and E. Winchester — the directors thereof, to enjoin the said Little Rock, Mississippi River and Texas railway from extending and building its railroad between the- city of Little Rock and the city of Pine Bluff.

The complaint, which was filed on the ninth day of February, 1880, alleged, in substance: that the plaintiff was incorporated by an act of the general assembly, entitled “an act to incorporate the LittleRock and Napoleon Railroad company,” approved January 12,1853, and granted, the right and franchise to build and operate a railroad from the city of Little Rock to the town of Napoleon; and that, in the exercise of said right and franchise, it at an expenditure of $150,000 surveyed and located the road, and cleared and graded part of the track between Napoleon and Pine Bluff and laid ties along the same.

That certain named persons afterwards, on the twenty-fourth day of November, 1868, under the provisions of the act of July 23,1868, entitled “ an act to provide for a general system of railroad incorporations,” which, however, it denied to have been constitutionally passed by the general assembly or to have become a law, associated themselves together as a corporation by the name of the Little Rock, Pine Bluff and New Orleans Railroad company, for the purpose of building a railroad from Little Rock to Pine Bluff', and from Pine Bluff' in a southeasterly direction to a point on the south boundary of the state, with a branch from Pine Bluff to a point on the Mississippi river near Napoleon — and the said company proceeded to build and put in operation the said branch from Pine Bluff to the Mississippi river — but that it never made any location or survey of the line between Pine Bluff' and Little Rock, or any part of its main line.

That the said branch road was built by said company on the located and established line of the plaintiff’ between Pine Bluff and Napoleon, which said company took possession of without the- consent of the, plaintiff, and the work already done upon it was used and appropriated in its construction.

That said company issued and' negotiated its bonds, and secured the same by a mortgage on its road, property and franchises; and default having been made in the'payment of the interest, Charles Main and other holders of its bonds, instituted suit against it in the circuit court of the United States for the eastern 'district of Arkansas, for foreclosure of the mortgage, and a decree of foreclosure and sale was rendered therein; and afterwards on the tenth day of December, 1875, all its property, including its i*oad-bed, line and franchises were sold under the decree; and that the purchasers thereof, and their associates, under the provL sions of the act of December 9,1874, entitled “ au act supplementary to an act entitled 4 an act to provide for a general system of railroad incorporation,’ approved July 23, 1868” (and which also it denied to have been constitutionally passed by the general assembly, or to have become a law), organized themselves as a corporation, by the name of the Little Rock, Mississippi River and Texas railway, with James E. Redfield as president, and D. E. Jones, S. F. Clark, S. L. Griffith, C. F. Penzel, Elisha Atkins, John H. Reed and E. Winchester as directors, and caused to be filed in the office of the secretary of state, the certificate of such organization required by said act. But that the said purchasers and their associates did not so organize themselves as a corporation within one year after the sale, and they did not file the certificate within six months after their attempted organization; and that they never did in fact become a.corporation.

That the said Little Rock, Pine Bluff and New Orleans Railroad company did not, as required by the act of July 23,1868, within two years after the filing of its articles of association in the office of the secretary of state, file therein a preliminary survey of its road, and an affidavit of three of its directors that five per cent, of the stock subscribed had been actually and in good faith paid to the directors, or either — and which five per cent, of the stock subscribed was never paid; and that it did not within five years after its incorporation expend in the construction of .the road ten per cent, of its capital stock; and other failures to comply with the provisions of the act were stated — whereby it was charged that it had forfeited its franchises, and had at the time of the decree and sale no corporate existence ; and no franchise whatever passed to the purchasers or to them and their associates.

That the said purchasers and their associates, for the reasons mentioned, were not a corporation, but that claiming to be a corporation by the said name of the Little Rock, Mississippi River and Texas railway, and to have the right and franchise to build and operate a railroad from Little Rock to Pine Bluff, and from Pine Bluff to a point on the Mississippi river near Napoleon, were then locating and building, as a part of their line, a railroad between Little Rock and Pine Bluff, upon or parallel to, and within a distance of ten miles of the line located and adopted by the plaintiff'. . ,

That the plaintiff was ready and able, and it was its intention tó immediately build and put in operation, its road between Little Rock and Pine Bluff; but if the said persons or the said Little Rock, Mississippi River and Texas railway, if it be a corporation, build their or its road, it would by its interference with the trade and business of the plaintiff’s road when completed, cause great and irreparable damage and injury to the plaintiff-, and as a continuing wrong give rise to a multiplicity of suits. And that the said Little Rock, Mississippi River and Texas railway was insolvent and unable to pay any damages that might be recovered against it.

The answer of the Little Rock, Mississippi River and Texas railway admitted that the plaintiff located that por-, tion of its road between Napoleon and Pine Bluff, and in the years 1856 and’ 1857 cleared and graded, at intervals, a small part of the track and placed ties along the same; but denied that it located or established any part of the line between Pine Bluff and Little Rock, or that it expended in the work anything like the sum of $150,000.

It alleged that there had been no election of officers or meeting of the stockholders of the company since 1857, and since that year no calls on subscriptions to stock had been made, and no efforts made to collect previous calls, and it had since then given up all attempts to build the road and abandoned its franchises; and in the - month of July, 1869, M. L. Bell, R. V.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ark. 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-rock-napoleon-railroad-v-little-rock-mississippi-river-texas-ark-1880.