Ludlow v. Hurd

1 Disney (Ohio) 552
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedDecember 15, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Disney (Ohio) 552 (Ludlow v. Hurd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ludlow v. Hurd, 1 Disney (Ohio) 552 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

Storer, J.

Two questions are presented upon the pleadings in this case—

First: The authority of the railroad company to borrow money, and to mortgage their property to secure it?

Second: "What property passed by the conveyance to Ludlow?

Section 13 of the law of February 11, 1848, “ regulating railroad companies,” gives express power to every such [555]*555corporation “ to borrow money, not exceeding its authorized capital stock, at a rate of interest not exceeding seven per cent, per annum, and may execute bonds or promissory notes therefor, and, to secure the payment thereof, may pledge the property and income of such company.”

This provision, ■ so fully conferring - a right to borrow money, to issue bonds, and secure their payment by a mortgage upon the property and income of the company, dispenses with the necessity of discussing the question of corporate power, upon general principles. However doubtful it may have been regarded by courts of high authority, we are. saved the labor of examining conflicting opinions, as well as the effort to reconcile them.

"We must bbld the company was fully authorized to execute the mortgage referred to in the petition.

The second question involves the inquiry : “ What property passed by the description in the deed?”

In ordinary cases, this is to be determined by the intention of the parties, as indicated by their contract; and where, after a general grant of the principal thing, its incidents or appurtenances are not expressly reserved or excluded, the transfer will be held to cover the subject specifically granted, and all that is connected with it, as naturally dependent upon it, or that may be properly regarded as essential to its full enj oyment.

This is the rule afiirmed in Whistler’s case, 10 Co. 64 and 65, which is followed in all the modern cases, as in 6 Greenleaf, 436, Blake v. Clark; 1 Sumner, 492, United States v. Appleton; 11 Conn. 525, Parsons v. Camp; 18 Wend. 157, Van Wyck v. Wright, and in 20 Ohio, 401, 412, Morgan v. Mason, where it is said: “ Whatever is actually enjoyed with the thing granted as a beneficial privilege at the time of the grant, passes as parcel of it.” Therefore, everything belonging to the estate conveyed, as an incident or appurtenance, passes by the grant, and to this end the law gives, in all eases, a reasonable intendment to the grant.

The principle thus established is of universal application-in the transfer of real property; and though its origin dates [556]*556back to a very remote period, when the alienation of land was guarded with great jealousy, and then necessarily confined to a class of estates to which but few, if any of the appurtenances of modern times were incident, its application is none the less just or equitable.

The improvements in mechanics have introduced new modes by which the business of the world is not only performed, in its various departments, but essentially controlled in its results. Hence, the adaptation of steam power to locomotion includes not only the enjoyment of rights of way, but the construction of road-beds, and the consequent use of the various materials necessary to their fabric; the ownership, also, of engines, with their various appendages, rail cars, baggage and freight cars, are alike indispensable. It is equally necessary to the full enjoyment of the franchise conferred upon a railroad company, that the corporation should hold depots and depot grounds, machine shops, and other establishments for the manufacturing, as well as the repair of their engines and cars. The same power must be given, either expressly or by necessary implication, to own or rent suitable buildings to accommodate their different employees in the transaction of their daily duties, as bookkeepers, clerks, and cashiers, as well as furnishing a proper place for the directors to hold their meetings.

It must follow from the power thus given, that the company may provide furniture proper for their different offices, and which may well be included in, and pass by the name of corporate property, and which, though practically separate from, and forming no immediate part of the railroad, its appurtenances, franchises, or machinery, are still so closely connected with the proper management of the road, and the interest of the stockholders, as well as the creditors, that they can not be dispensed with and the purposes of the railroad be accomplished.

A corporate body, whose daily business is the transportation of passengers and freight, in whose capital stock large amounts are invested by every class, should be held to the [557]*557strictest accuracy in their accounts. Their receipts and expenditures can only be known when this duty is fulfilled to the letter; hence, the power to employ the most competent clerks, and the duty to provide all the necessary accommodations, to enable them to have an intelligent and careful supervision of the various transactions of every day. On no other theory can frauds be prevented, or, if committed, detected.

It is very clear, then, we must regard as appurtenant to, and necessary for the proper working of, a railroad, that all the species of property to which we have referred, should become a part of the road itself, essential, indeed, to its use; and, if denied, destructive to the purpose for which it was built.

There may be, unless we look carefully at the relations the several departments of a railroad bear to each other, no clear apprehension of their real identity, when the rights of the corporation are questioned. Ve may separate the appurtenance from the subject when real estate is conveyed, and there yet be a thing to be enjoyed, while its measure or extent'only is impaired or restricted; but, in a case like that before us, if one of the incidents essential to the successful operation of the road is withheld, the consequence may be irreparable injury to all concerned in the prosperity of the enterprise.

It was, without doubt, the intention of the company to pledge their whole available property," all they could legally call their own, of which they were then possessed, or might afterward lawfully acquire, for the security of the bondholders, on. the terms stated in the deed of trust; and if they could not, as a corporate body, be the owners of any other property than that connected with, incident to, or necessarily attached to the proper operation of the road, it would seem to follow that every portion of it that they might lawfully possess they might lawfully pledge.

- At common law, it is said an assignment will not convey title to chattels, except those “in esse ” at the time of the [558]*558transfer. This doctrine had its origin, we are told, in the determination, on the part of the courts, at an early period, “to prevent maintenance and the multiplication of contentions and suits, so that no possibility, right, title, or any other thing not in possession, could be granted or assigned to strangersand so strictly was it applied that a grant of land, where the vendor was out of the possession, was void. Co. Lit. 265, a. n. 1; 3 Mees. & Wel. 197, Mogg v. Baker; 5 Maule & Sel. 238, Robinson, et al. v. Macdonnell; 7 Adol. & El. N. S. 850, Gale v. Burnell.

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Related

Root v. Stuyvesant
18 Wend. 138 (New York Supreme Court, 1837)
Clark v. Trinity Church
5 Watts & Serg. 266 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1843)
Shepard v. Shepard
6 Conn. 37 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1825)
Parsons v. Camp
11 Conn. 525 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1836)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Disney (Ohio) 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ludlow-v-hurd-ohsuperctcinci-1857.