Manning v. Atlantic & Yadkin Railway Co.

125 S.E. 555, 188 N.C. 648, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 148
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 3, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 125 S.E. 555 (Manning v. Atlantic & Yadkin Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manning v. Atlantic & Yadkin Railway Co., 125 S.E. 555, 188 N.C. 648, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 148 (N.C. 1924).

Opinions

CLARKSON, J., concurring. *Page 649 The plaintiff's material allegations, as they appear in the complaint, the exhibits, and the references, are substantially as herein stated. In 1852 the General Assembly incorporated the Western Railroad Company, which was authorized to build a railroad between the town of Fayetteville and the coal region in the counties of Moore and Chatham (Laws 1852, ch. 147); and at a subsequent session it passed an act under which the county of Cumberland and the town of Fayetteville each subscribed $100,000. Laws 1856-57, ch. 71. There were also individual subscriptions to the amount of $134,400. Under a later act the State donated to the enterprise more than $600,000, and in 1868 subscribed in bonds the additional sum of $500,000.

In 1879 the name of the Western Railroad Company was changed to the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railway Company, and the latter succeeded to all the rights, powers, privileges, immunities and franchises of the former, and was authorized to consolidate with the Mount Airy Railroad Company and to complete the roads. Public Laws 1879, ch. 67.

By virtue of an act passed by the General Assembly in 1883, there was a reorganization of the system, and the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railway Company was authorized to extend its main line from Wilmington through the central part of the State to the Virginia line and to build certain branch lines as provided in the act. Public Laws 1883, ch. 190. Under such authority, this company operated as its system, at the time it was sold, its main line, extending from Wilmington to Mount Airy, a distance of 284.28 miles; a branch line extending from Fayetteville to Bennettsville, South Carolina, a distance of 57.75 miles; four branch lines in North Carolina having a trackage of 34.15 miles; and certain sidetracks aggregating 27.17 miles. In the construction and equipment of the road, over $7,000,000 were spent — the State, towns, townships and counties having donated and subscribed more than $1,000,000 of this amount.

The South Carolina Pacific Railway, extending from Bennettsville, South Carolina, to the North Carolina line, was leased by the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railway for thirty years and was merged in it and operated as a part of its system, which constituted a continuous line from Mount Airy to Wilmington. All the franchises, privileges and rights of the latter company were held under its charter as an entirety, and as constructed it was an important artery of commerce, extending through the central part of the State from Mount Airy to Wilmington, and from Fayetteville to Bennettsville. Its western extension crossed the Norfolk and Western Railroad, running to Roanoke, Virginia, opening *Page 650 up the coal region of West Virginia and doing a large interstate and intrastate business, thus competing with the Seaboard, the Southern and the Atlantic Coast Line railroads.

On 1 June, 1886, the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railway Company executed to the Farmers Loan and Trust Company, of New York, as trustee, a deed of trust upon its property and franchise to secure bonds known as Series "A," Series "B," and Series "C," the aggregate amount of which was $3,054,000; and on 1 October, 1889, it executed to the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company, of Baltimore, as trustee, a consolidated mortgage on its property and franchise to secure an additional bond issue of $1,848,000. In March, 1894, default was made in the payment of interest, and the Farmers Loan and Trust Company brought suit in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of North Carolina to foreclose the first mortgage, and the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company was made a defendant, and, when it resigned its trust, William A. Lash was substituted as trustee and made a defendant to the suit. On the day the bill was filed in the Circuit Court, John Gill was appointed receiver of the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railway Company and took possession of its property. In the suit an attempt was made to force a sale of the property in division, and thereby to dismember the system, but the court refused to permit such sale, and ordered that the property be sold as an entirety. (The case was decided in the Circuit Court, 31 March, 1897. 82 Fed.R., 314.) In the complaint is an extended quotation from Judge Simonton's decision, which it is not necessary to repeat here. There was a rehearing; and on 15 June, 1897, Judge Simonton, adhering to the position that the mode of sale was within the discretion of the court, affirmed his former ruling. Among the reasons given for this mode of sale was the passage of an act amending section 698 of The Code. (Section 698 provided that a corporation created by or in consequence of a sale or conveyance of corporate property under a deed of trust should succeed to the franchises, rights and privileges of the first corporation; and the act of 1897 provided that the purchasing corporation should succeed to such rights, privileges and franchises only in case the first corporation (railroad) was sold as an entirety. Public Laws 1897, ch. 305.) From the decree of the Circuit Court there was an appeal to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, and the decree appealed from was affirmed on 3 May, 1898. Low v. Blackford, 87 Fed. Rep., 392. (Quotation omitted.) The effect was to direct the sale of the property of the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railroad Company as an entirety, thus giving effect to the act of 1897.

The commissioners appointed under a decree of the United States Court sold the property, at Fayetteville, on 29 December, 1898, and, as *Page 651 reported by the commissioners, H. Walters, V. F. Newcomer, Mitchell Jenkins, and Warren G. Elliott became the purchasers, at the price of $3,110,000, with $15,000 additional for the equipment. The purchasers were officers of the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad Company (now Atlantic Cost Line), and at their request the commissioners, on 31 January, 1899, executed a deed for the property as an entirety to the Atlantic and Yadkin Railway Company. This company was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly ratified on 23 February, 1899, the preamble reciting that in the deed conveying the property to them, and otherwise, under the statutes, of the State, the purchasers had declared themselves a corporation by the name of the Atlantic and Yadkin Railway Company, having elected officers and performed other acts as a corporation. (Excerpts from act omitted.)

It is alleged that on 13 May, 1899, the directors of the Atlantic and Yadkin Railway Company, contrary to the provisions of its charter and in violation of the decree of the Federal Court, undertook by resolution to dismember the property of this company, formerly owned by the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley Railway Company, by selling and conveying to the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad Company, whose name had then been changed to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, that portion of the Atlantic and Yadkin Railway Company lying east of Sanford and extending through Fayetteville to Wilmington, and from Fayetteville to Bennettsville, South Carolina, including the leasehold estate of the Bennettsville division. The resolution is made a part of the complaint. The Southern Railway Company acquired all the stock of the Atlantic and Yadkin Railway Company, and by virtue thereof became the owner of all that part of this railroad lying between Mount Airy and a designated point in Sanford, including all branches and sidetracks between these termini. It is alleged that in this way the dismemberment of the property was brought about.

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125 S.E. 555, 188 N.C. 648, 1924 N.C. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-v-atlantic-yadkin-railway-co-nc-1924.