McLeod v. Burroughs

9 Ga. 213
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1851
DocketNo. 45
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 9 Ga. 213 (McLeod v. Burroughs) 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
McLeod v. Burroughs, 9 Ga. 213 (Ga. 1851).

Opinion

By the Court.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

The construction which we feel constrained to give to the charter under which the complainants claim, to wit: the Act of 1806, as to the mode of measuring the distance, will control this [215]*215cause. According to that mode of measurement, the defendant’s ferry and proposed bridge at Fort Argyle, are not within the prohibited limits: this is conceded. Being conceded, the complainants can, on no account, be entitled to the injunction. We are consequently relieved from the necessity of considering those other interesting questions brought to our notice in the assignment, and discussed with such affluence of learning, and labor of research on both sides. The fifth section of the Act of 1806 provides, that it shall not be lawful for any person or persons, at any time or times, to build any bridge, or keep any ferry on the river Great Ogeechee, within five miles, either above or below the said bridge, which is hereby exclusively vested in the said Joseph Hill, his heirs and assigns.” The complainants, who claim under Joseph Hill, aver in their bill that the defendants keep a fqrry, and propose to erect a bridge on the Great Ogeechee, at Fort Argyle, within five miles of their bridge, erected under the grant to Hill, and ask an injunction. The controversy is this: shall the distance of five miles be measured in a right line from the bridge of the complainants to the ferry of the defendants, at Fort Argyle, or shall the line of measurement pursue the meanderings of the river ?

[1.] In 1841, and long after the erection of the complainant’s bridge under the Act of 1806, the Legislature passed a law in which it is declared, generally, that where exclusive privileges have been granted within prescribed distances on rivers, such distances shall be measured on the stream; and this Act is invoked by the defendants, as authoritatively settling the mode of measurement in this case. The Act of 1841 is a declaratory Act. The charter to Hill was accepted, and his bridge built under its protection before the Act of 1841. The rights of the complainants, whatever they may be under that charter, had vested before the Legislature had declared its meaning; that is, before they had enacted what should be the mode of measurement of distance in all such cases. It was insisted in the argument, that before a judicial construction has been given to a law, the Legislature may declare its meaning. This may be true, as applicable to a general law, where no individual rights have al[216]*216ready vested under it. It is not retroactive, because no one is affected by it. It becomes a new rule, and, like any other law, is obligatory upon the Courts and the people. It is not my purpose to say, that in no case can the Legislature rightfully pass a retroactive law; nor do I find it necessary to advert to the distinctions which obtain upon this subject, further than to refer to the rule as settled by this Court in Wilder vs. Lumpkin. In that case we hold, that “ a legislative exposition of a doubtful law is the exercise of a judicial power-, and if it interferes with no vested rights, impairs the obligation of no contract, and is not in conflict with the primary principles of our social compact, it is in itself harmless, and may be admitted to retroactive efficiency; butif rights have grown up under even a law of somewhat ambiguous meaning, then the universal rule of our system — indeed of the English system of government, and of other systems which approximate to free government — applies. That rule is, the Courts declare what the law is, the Legislature declares what the law shall be.” 4 Geo. R. 212. The Act of 1806 is a contract between the grantee, Hill, and the Legislature; both parties are-bound by its stipulations ; what its meaning is, is for the Courts to determine. The grantee proceeds to invest under it according to his understanding of its provisions. He does so at the peril of a different construction by the Courts; they can only act where a case is made. But he is not subject to the peril of legislative constructions; if he were, then charters and grants would be but a mockery. Who would accept a charter if it was subject at all times to legislative construction; that is to say, subjectto be impaired by law? No sane man, or half-witted, set of men. The power to sit in judgment upon his own contracts by one of tire parties, is no where conceded under any system of free government; that would be an enormity at which justice revolts. The Legislature cannot impair the obligation of its own contracts. In our construction, therefore, of the Act of 1806,, we lay out of view altogether the declaratory Act of 1841.

[2.]. The argument,, which it is admitted outside of the courthouse, is- very strong in favor of the construction of the 5th section of the Act of 1806, claimed' by the plaintiffs in error, i& [217]*217drawn from the topography of the river and its banks between Hill’s Bridge and Fort Argyle. It was stated in the argument, that the Great Ogeechee River, in passing from Fort Argyle to Hill’s Bridge, instead of running in a direct course, makes a considerable curve, and that the distance between these two points, in a 'direct line, is less than five miles, whilst the distance, if measured on the stream, is about ten miles. 'It was iarther stated, that for several miles above Hill’s Bridge — perhaps as much as five miles — the river is impracticable for bridge or ferry, in consequence of impassable swamps on its southern bank. From these facts, it is argued that Hill required no protection from competition within five miles measured on the stream; nature protected him within that distance, and therefore he asked for none. The argument goes farther, and assumes that the topography of the country being known to the Legislature, it is presumed that they acted in reference to it, and therefore when they gave Hill an exclusive right within five miles, they meant to say within five miles measured in a right line. Now, all these tilings may be true, and, if true, make a strong equitable case for the complainant. But can we assume that the Legislature acted, in the grant to Hill, with reference to the peculiar condition of this stream? with reference to its mean derings or its marshes? Whilst the fact may be as stated, that the course of this stream is not direct, and that its southern bank is lined with an impassable morass, yet it is not apparent to us, and cannot be made so, that these things were present to the mind of the Legislature, and that they passed the Act of 1806 with reference to them. ■ It is true that Courts, in construing a Statute, will sometimes, in order to ascertain the mischief which it proposes to remedy, consider the circumstances which gave rise to it. Perhaps it was competent in this case for the Court below, in its construction of this Act, to have received evidence to inform its mind as to these facts, and thus derive aid in arriving at the intention of the Legislature. There is no evidence on the record that it did, and no such evidence, as to the topography, comes to us for our aid, if indeed the consideration of it, which I do not assert, would be, in this case, legitimate. In interpreting the Act, we therefore ex-[218]*218elude the peculiarities of this stream, which I have stated to have been recognized in the argument. If the protection sought by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ga. 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcleod-v-burroughs-ga-1851.