Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Palmes

109 U.S. 244, 3 S. Ct. 193, 27 L. Ed. 922, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 968
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 19, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 109 U.S. 244 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Palmes) 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
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Palmes, 109 U.S. 244, 3 S. Ct. 193, 27 L. Ed. 922, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 968 (1883).

Opinion

Me. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

After reciting the facts in the foregoing language, he said:

The exemption from taxation, created by the 18th section of the Internal Improvement Act of Í855, is, in every respect, similar to that which was declared in Morgan v. Louisiana, 93 U. S. 217, to be not assignable. No words of assignability are used by the legislature of the State in the language creating it, and, from its nature and context, it is to be inferred that the exemption of the property of the company was intended to be of the same character as that declared in reference to its capital stock and to its officers, servants and employees, and that all alike were privileges personal to the corporation or to individ *251 uals connected with, it, entitled to them by the terms of the law. This exemption, therefore, did not pass from the Alabama and Florida Railroad Company to the Pensacola and Louisville Railroad Company by the conveyances which passed the title to the railroad itself, and to the franchises connected with and necessary in its construction and operation.

This conclusion is confirmed by the 18th section of the act of February 4th, 1872, amending the charter of the Pensacola and Louisville Railroad Company. That section recites that the. last-named company having become assignee of the Alabama and Florida Railroad Company, and of its franchises and property, which corporation was exempt from taxation for a limited period, the said Pensacola and Louisville Railroad Company and its property, now owned or hereafter to be acquired, shall also be exempted from taxation during the remainder of its said period.” Here the original exemption is declared to be the privilege of the Florida and Alabama Railroad Company, the particular corporation to which it was granted, and the necessity for conferring it by a new legislative grant upon the assignee of the property and franchises of_the original corporation, rests upon the implication that the exemption did not pass to it by the assignment between the parties. And the further inference is equally necessary, that the exemption transferred or created in the new company by the terms of the legislative grant, is identical in its character as a personal and unassignable privilege to the new grantee,, with that it had when it belonged to the first company.

But the 2d section of the act of February 27th, 1877, incorporating the Pensacola Railroad Company, authorized and' empowered it to acquire, by purchase, and assignment, all the property, rights, franchises, privileges, and immunities of the Pensacola and Louisville Railroad Company, and upon completion of such purchase and assignment, declared that the former should be deemed, in law and in equity,, to be fully invested with and entitled to all the said property, rights, franchises, privileges, and immunities as though the same were originally granted to or acquired by the said Pensacola Railroad Company.

*252 It is claimed that this language is broad enough to cover the assignment and transfer of the immunity from taxation granted to’ the Pensacola and Louisville Railroad Company by the 18th section of its charter. And we are of this opinion. The language is comprehensive and unequivocal, and the word immunity is apt to describe the exemption claimed. • It admits of no doubt, we think, if the Pensacola and Louisville Railroad Company were entitled to this exemption, and if the legislative grant of authority to .make and accept this assignment of it was valid and effective, that the right to be exempt from taxation according to its terms passed to the Pensacola Railroad Company. But it must ,be borne in mind that it must be taken to have vested in the latter, if at all, precisely as it had in the former, that is, as a personal privilege. The,assignment in the particular instance, based upon the express authority of a new'enactment, did not impart to the immunity the quality of general assignability to other successors in the title to the property, and franchises, claiming only under a conveyance between the parties.

The title of the plaintiff in error, therefore, to the exemption claimed, must be supported by some other authority. This is claimed to be found in the general power, given by the 13th section of its charter, to the Pensacola and Louisville Railroad Company to lease or sell to or consolidate with any other railroad company in or out of the State, which power passed with others to the Pensacola Railroad Company by the 2d section of its charter. But a¿3 we have already seen, and as was decided in Morgan v. Louisiana, 93 U. S. 217, and Wilson v. Gaines, 103 U. S. 417, the exemption from taxation does not pass by virtue of a conveyance of the railroad and its franchises, which -was all the Pensacola Railroad Company could pass under that authority, but-requires for its transfer some particular and express description, indicating unequivocally the intention of - the legislature that it might pass by an assignment. That does not exist in this case, gnd the exemption claimed by the plaintiff in error fails because it was not and could not be transferred to it, under the law, by the Pensacola Railroad Company.

It is sought to avoid this conclusion by converting the *253 question into one of pleading. It is said that the bill alleges, as a matter of fact, that the exemption passed to -and vested in the complainant belojv, and that the truth of the allegation is admitted by the demurrer. But this is matter of law; the documents of title are exhibited with the bill and constitute part of the record; and we take judicial notice of their legal effect. A fact impossible in law cannot be admitted by a demurrer. In Wilson v. Gaines, 103 U. S. 417, it was inferred in the face of a demurrer, claimed to be an admission of a contrary allegation, that the sale did not pass any rights of property not described as within the lien of the mortgage.

~We have thus shown that the claim of the plaintiff in error to the exemption alleged fails, because the Pensacola Railroad Company, if it possessed it, had no power to convey it. It will appear, on further examination, that it fails for a distinct and deeper reason, namely, because the Pensacola Railroad Company was itself not entitled to any such exemption. That company was incorporated by the act of February 27th, 1877, which undoubtedly did purport to grant to it, as assignee of the Pensacola and Louisville Railroad' Company, in terms sufficiently broad, the immunity from taxation, which, by the 18th sec..of the act of February 4th, 1872, was expressly declared to be granted to the latter.

Both the statutes, however, were passed by the general assembly of Florida, acting under the Constitution of that State, which went into effect in 1868.

Article XII., sec. 1, of that Constitution, is as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 U.S. 244, 3 S. Ct. 193, 27 L. Ed. 922, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-palmes-scotus-1883.