Macon & Birmingham Railroad v. Gibson

85 Ga. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 14, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 85 Ga. 1 (Macon & Birmingham Railroad v. Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Macon & Birmingham Railroad v. Gibson, 85 Ga. 1 (Ga. 1890).

Opinion

Bleckley, Chief Justice.

The Macon and Birmingham Railroad Company was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly passed in December, 1888. Acts of 1888, p. 164. The act provided, amongst other things, “ that said company shall have power and authority to survey, lay out and construct, maintain and equip a railroad from the city of Macon, in the county of Bibb, or from some point on the present line of the Georgia, Southern and Florida railroad, through the county of Bibb and through the following counties or such of them as said railroad company may deem fit, to wit, Houston, Crawford, Monroe, Upson, Pike, Meriwether, Troup and Heard, to some point on the State line of Alabama, by the most direct and practicable route, to be judged of by [12]*12them, aud in the direction of the city of Birmingham, Alabama.” Part of the statute law of this State in force when this act of incorporation was passed were two sections (1651,1682) of the code, as follows : “Persons are either natural .or artificial. The latter are the creatures of the law, and except so far as the'law forbids it, subject to be changed, modified or destroyed, at the will of their creator ; they are called corporations:” “In all cases of private charters hereafter granted, the State reserves the right to withdraw the franchise, unless such right is expressly negatived in the charter.” There is no such negative in the charter of this company. These provisions of the code have been construed by the Supreme Court of the United States in Railroad Company v. Georgia, 98 U. S. 359. That court, adjudicating upon a charter granted in 1863, said: “These provisions of the code became, in substance, a part of the charter. Railroad Company v. Maine, 96 U. S. 499. It is quite too narrow a definition of the word ‘franchise/ used in this statute, to hold it as meaning only the right to be a corporation. The word is generic, covering all the rights granted by the legislature. As the greater power includes every less power which is a part of it, the right to withdraw a franchise must authorize a withdrawal of every or any right or privilege which is a part of the franchise. So it was held in The Central Railroad & Banking Co. v. Georgia, 54 Ga. 401, and so it must be held now, especially in view of the statutory provision of the code, that private corporations are subject to be changed, modified or destroyed at the will of their creator.” The constitution of 1877 declares that no law making irrevocable grants of special privileges or immunities shall be passed; and that no grant of special privileges or immunities shall be revoked except in such manner as to work no injustice to the corporators or creditors of [13]*13the corporation. Code, §§5025, 5026. The company proceeded under its charter to locate its line of railroad through Upson county, but before it constructed any part of the same in that county, the General Assembly amended the charter by an act approved November 7th, 1889. Acts of 1889, p. 386. This amendment provided that, if the railroad runs through Upson county, and within five miles of the town of Thomaston, it shall run into and through the corporate limits of that town, or within one mile of the court-house, provided it shall not eost the company any more from where the road -crosses the five mile limit on the east of the town to the “Rogers property” than any other route within that limit; the cost is to be determined by two competent disinterested civil engineers, one to be selected by the company, and the other by the mayor of Thomaston, to locate the route proposed by the company within the five mile limit, and the route within the town or within one mile of the court-house, on a way which is equitable and just both to the company and the town ; these engineers are to estimate the cost of building such line, and if they fail to agree, they are to appoint a third disinterested competent civil engineer who shall decide and determine the matter; in estimating the cost of the respective routes, the safety and permanency of the road-beds, and keeping up the same, -are to be considered; whatever amount the estimate shows it will cost more to go through the corporate limits, or within one mile of the court-house, than the route proposed by the company within the five mile limit, shall be paid by the town of Thomaston, or the citizens thereof; upon refusal to pay the same, the company is released from building the road through the corporate limits, or within one mile of the court-house; a sum equal to such extra eost, if any, is to be paid into some solvent national bank of this State when the road [14]*14is built from the city of Macou to the five mile limit, subject to be checked out by the company when the road is built through the five mile limit. The* company refuses to accept this amendment or to comply with its terms. The citizens of Thomaston, or some of them, offer to comply on. their part, and insist upon compliance by the company. This difference gives rise to the present controversy.

1. The first question is, whether the State, through the legislature, could engraft this amendment upon the charter without the consent of the company, inasmuch as the original charter granted power and authority to construct and maintain a railroad through the county of Upson by the most direct and practical route, to be judged of by the company, with no condition whatever. The amendment certainly withdraws a portion of this broad franchise on certain conditions. As modified by the amendment, the charter still allows the company to select its own route at will through the county, if in so doing it should not bring the road within five miles of Thomaston. By bearing away from that town so as not to approach within the five mile limit, the company can render this amendment wholly inapplicable to its operations. This being done, the charter will be the same-with the amendment as without it. Only by approaching as near to Thomas-ton as five miles in locating and constructing its line, will any affirmative duty whatever devolve upon the company by virtue of the amendment. If such an alteration as this in the charter of a corporation cannot be made, it is difficult to imagine any material alteration that could be made; and of course, if the reserved power of changing, modifying and destroying will not embrace material alterations, the reservation is useless and worthless. No part of the company’s line in Upson county being yet constructed, none of the company’s [15]*15property is taken or destroyed by the amendment. A portion of the franchise to locate the line at will is withdrawn, and the amendment takes away nothing else; it simply resumes what the State could have withheld in granting the charter if the legislature had been so disposed. For this reason, if not for others, such cases as Detroit v. Detroit Company, 43 Mich. 140, are without application to the question before us. The authorities more directly in point are such as Tomlinson v. Jessup, 15 Wall. 454; Miller v. State, Id. 478; and Railroad v. Georgia, supra. Where an attempt is made to deprive a corporation of its property by amending its charter, doubtless the observations of Cooley, J., in Detroit v. Detroit Company, 43 Mich. supra, ought to be recognized as sound.

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Bluebook (online)
85 Ga. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macon-birmingham-railroad-v-gibson-ga-1890.