New Orleans & Carrollton Railroad v. City of New Orleans

34 La. 429
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1882
DocketNo. 8342
StatusPublished

This text of 34 La. 429 (New Orleans & Carrollton Railroad v. City of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Orleans & Carrollton Railroad v. City of New Orleans, 34 La. 429 (La. 1882).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Fenner, J.

This important controversy, involving interests of vast magnitude, turns upon the construction of certain legislative acts creating and defining the corporate rights of plaintiff. The City contends that the corporate existence of plaintiff, together with all its rights and franchises, to operate the railroad known by its name, expire in 1883, under the terms of its original charter, passed on February 9th, 1833, which provided that “ the duration of this charter ‘is limited to fifty years.” The plaintiff contends, on the other hand, that, for the purposes of operating said railroad, its corporate existence was extended for twenty-five years longer, viz: to 1908, by virtue of the 22d Section of an Act of 1835, amending said original charter, which provided, “ that the railroad and all its fixtures, shall become the property of the State at the expiration of seventy-five years from the date of its charter.”

[433]*433We say, by virtue of tliis Section, because, though other legislative acts and municipal ordinances are invoiced in support of plaintiff’s claim, they all hinge upon plaintiff’s interpretation of this Section.

The State, acting simply through her Attorney General, without any special legislative direction, intervenes, and substantially joins the plaintiff in the case. We deem it proper to remark that, while the action of the Attorney General, in intervening herein for the protection of the State’s interests, as he views them, is highly proper and commendable, and while we are greatly indebted to him for his very able presentation of the rights of the State under the law, yet his intervention raises no new or different issues, and leaves us under the duty of deciding the case precisely as we should have done had the intervention not been filed.

We mean to say that the State is not here by any authority competent to bind her by any assent to the claims of plaintiff, as presently urged, in virtue of which it might be said, (and is said in the Attorney General’s brief) that the charter of plaintiff, being a contract between the plaintiff and the State, to which they are the only parties, and these parties agreeing as to the scope and meaning of said contract, the City, as a third person, has no right to question such construction. Such an assent could only be given by legislative action, and the very question which we have to determine is whether that assent has been so given. This question must be settled by an examination of the legislative acts on the subject, and not, certainly, by the allegations of this intervention.

We think the learned Attorney General will admit the correctness of this view, and that the contrary position assumed in his brief, will not be insisted on.

The primary and fundamental question in the case is, what is meant by, and included in the terms, the railroad and all its fixtures,” as used in the 22d Section of the Act of 1835. If, as contended by the City, that expression did not cover the railroad between New Orleans and Carrollton, but referred exclusively to the railroad between Carrollton and Bayou Sara, contemplated and provided for by the Act of 1835, there is, of course, an end to the pretensions of both the State and the Company, which are founded exclusively on the contrary interpretation of that phrase.

The purposes of our exegesis will be subserved by' collating and bringing together as closely as possible, shorn of extraneous matter, all the provisions and expressions of the several legislative acts which immediately bear on the question.

The Act approved February 9,1833, provided that certain persons therein named, with their associates and successors, “are hereby created [434]*434a body corporate, under the name of the New Orleans & Carrollton Railroad Company," etc., (Sec. 1); fixed the amount and mode of payment of its capital, (Sec. 2); and providedfor the administration of its affairs by directors, (Sec. 3).

The 4th Section provided, “ that the said corporation is hereby invested with all the powers necessary for the construction and repair of a railroad, " therein described, and being the present railroad from New Orleans to Carrollton.

The 5th Section provided for the conventional acquisition, or forced expropriation of lands necessary to the road, with the proviso, “ that the said railroad shall not pass in any part of the City or its incorporated suburbs, without the permission of the Mayor and City Council of New Orleans.”

The 6th Section conferred power to place on the railroad such kinds and variety of rolling-stock as it may deem necessary, and regulated rates of charges, and provided that “the said road, with adits works, improvements and profits, and all the machinery of transportation used on said road, are hereby vested in said Company, incoiporated by this Act, and their successors; and the shares of the capital stock of said Company shall be exempt from the imposition of any tax or burthen of this State, during the space offime years."

Section 8 provided, “ that the duration of this charter is limited to fifty years. That if said railroad shall not be commenced in one year from the passage of this Aet, and shall not be in operation in three years therefrom, then this Act shall be null and void."

The other Sections have no bearing.

The Aet of 1835, is entitled, “ An Act to amend the Act to incorporate the New Orleans & Carrollton Railroad Company.”

With the exception of Section six, which is evidently out of its proper place in the Act, the first ten Sections are exclusively concerned with provisions: fertile enlargement and mode of subscription and payment of the shares of capital stock; for the constitution and regulation of certain banking privileges conferred upon the corporation, and for other matters mainly pertinent to those particular privileges, and which have little if any bearing on the questions now at issue.

The Sections which affect the present issue are Nos. 11,12,13,14, 15, 19, 20, 22 and 23.

Section 11 provides, “that during the space of thirty years from the passage of this Act, the Company is hereby invested with the exclusive right and privilege of constructing- and using a railroad, which said railroad shall commence at the termination of the railroad described in the original Aet of Incorporation of said Company, and constitute a continuation thereof, and shall run to the town of Bayou Sara, etc. * * * And [435]*435the road authorised by this Act, with its lateral roads, shall consist of as many sets of tracks, etc. * * * And if the said road shall not be commenced in two years from the opening of thp books of subscription for the said additional capital stock, or shall not be finished and completed within six years from such commencement, then this Act and all the extended powers, rights and privileges herein granted to said Company shall be utterly null and void, saving and reserving, however, to said Company, the rights, privileges and provisions of their charter, as heretofore existing.

Section 12: “That, in case said railroad, thus to be constructed, in continuation of said originally contemplated railroad, shall run upon any public road, the said Company shall be bound to construct a new public road, * * * and shall be bound to fence both sides of

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34 La. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-carrollton-railroad-v-city-of-new-orleans-la-1882.