Ogdensburg & Lake Champlain Railroad v. Vermont & Canada Railroad

6 Thomp. & Cook 488
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Thomp. & Cook 488 (Ogdensburg & Lake Champlain Railroad v. Vermont & Canada Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ogdensburg & Lake Champlain Railroad v. Vermont & Canada Railroad, 6 Thomp. & Cook 488 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1875).

Opinion

Learned, P. J.

This action was brought to obtain a decision from the court whether a certain lease, executed by the plaintiffs to the Vermont and Canada Railroad Company, was or was not void. The plaintiffs do not affirmatively allege that the lease is void, but they ask for a decision on this point, and a judgment that, if void, it be annulled, and they restored to their rights as before the lease was executed.

The defendants, the Vermont and Canada Railroad Company, demurred. The demurrer was sustained and the plaintiffs appeal.

The defendant, the Vermont and Canada Railroad Company, now move to dismiss the appeal, on the ground that, before and since the judgment on the demurrer, the plaintiffs accepted rent on the lease, and thus ratified it. The ground on which it is claimed that the lease is void is that it was one which the company had no power to make — ultra vires.

Without inquiring as to the effect which such a receipt of rent might have in some cases, it is enough to say that if the Ogdensburg and Lake Champlain Railroad Company had no power to make such a lease as the one in question, they had no power to ratify it by accepting rent. If it was beyond their corporate power to lease the road by a written instrument, then they could not make a void lease valid by receiving the rent upon it. This is not the case of an imperfectly executed contract, or one executed by a pretended agent.

The motion to dismiss the appeal shorild be denied, with $10 costs.

James, J., dissented.

Motion denied.

Note.—The following opinion delivered at special term in the foregoing action bears upon the question of service on non-resident corporations, and reaches a conclusion not in harmony with that in Barnett v. Chicago & Lake Huron R. R. Co., ante, page 358:

The complaint avers that the plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York; that since August, 1865, it has been the owner of a railroad extending from Ogdensburg to Rouse’s Point, and that it operated the same for public use up to March 1,1870; that in February, 1Í370, an agreement in writing was entered into between said plaintiff, under proper authority from its directors, with the Vermont & Canada Railroad Company and the managers and trustees of the Vermont Central Railroad Company, attested by its vice-president, and under the hands and seals of J. Gregory Smith, Benjamin P. Cheney and Joseph Clark, as trustees, receivers and managers of said road. That said railroads, defendants, had no corporate powers in the State of New York, nor any special recognition of corporate powers therein. That before making said agreement, the Vermont Central Railroad Company had become insolvent, and the defendants, Smith, Cheney and Clark, had, by the courts of Vermont, been appointed trustees, managers and receivers [490]*490thereof, and at the time of making said agreement, said Vefmont Central Railroad was insolvent and was held and controlled by or in the interest of said .trustees. That the. Central Vermont Railroad Company is a corporation created by the laws of Vermont, in November, 1872, with authority to assume and perform all the contracts of the trustees, managers and receivers of the Vermont Central Railroad Company and the Vermont and Canada Railroad Company, and that said Central Vermont Company claims to have succeeded to said agreement of 1870. That March 1,1870, said plaintiff, in pursuance of the aforesaid agreement, delivered the possession and control of its railroad to the said parties therein named, who received and still hold the same; and that said Central Vermont Company and John Schrier, claiming under said railroads, have exclusive possession and control of said Ogdensburg and Lake Champlain Railroad, receiving and enjoying its earnings. That all the defendants but Schrier are non-residents; that Schrier is superintendent and agent for the other defendants, and as such has the possession and charge of said road. That recently the claim has been set up by the people of the State of New York, through their attorney-general, that the aforesaid agreement of 1870 was beyond the corporate powers of the plaintiff, and was, and is, illegal and void; that the transfer under it, of possession of said road, with the right of operating the same as a public route of travel, was illegaLand unauthorized; and that such transfer and the cessation thereby and thereunder, for more than one year, - of the maintenance and operation of said road by the plaintiff itself, amounts in law to a suspension of the ordinary and lawful business of the plaintiff, and subjects it to a forfeiture of- its charter, etc., and that in January last, the people by their attorney-general commenced an action against this plaintiff, setting up the matters aforesaid and demanding judgment of forfeiture of its charter; which action is still pending. That from the time of making said agreement to the present the plaintiff has maintained its corporate organization, held elections, meetings of its directors, paid interest on its bonds and other current pecuniary obligations, and made dividends on its stock from moneys received under said agreement; that its road has been kept up and maintained for travel and transportation, and the public duties incident to the franchise have been performed and fulfilled by said defendants, and all the payments required by said agreement have been made. That said agreement of 1870 was entered into in good faith, upon the belief that parties thereto have the right so to do, and upon the advice of counsel upon whom they relied; that if the agreement be adjudged within the corporate powers of the plaintiff, and the surrender of possession and use of its road legal, the pecuniary result is not objectionable and plaintiff would be content therewith, but if said agreement was unauthorized or illegal, and subjects it to a forfeiture of its charter, it desires to be, relieved therefrom and restored to the possession of its road.

The court is then-asked to adjudge and determine whether said agreement and the transfer and delivery of possession ufider it, with its exclusive use, 'was unauthorized or beyond the corporate powers of plaintiff.

The defendants, the Vermont & Canada Railroad Company and the Central Vermont Railroad Company, appeared specially in the action for the purpose of objecting to the ju risdiction of the court, and for that purpose only, and each, severally, specially demurred to the complaint, because it appeared on the face thereof that the court had not jurisdiction of their persons.. The defendants, John Gregory Smith, BenjaminP. Cheney and Joseph Clark, sued as trustees, managers and receivers of the Vermont Central Railroad Company, and not otherwise made parties to the action, also appeared specially and solely for the purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction of the court, and severally demurred to the complaint, because it appeared on the face thereof that the court had not jurisdiction of the person of said defendants.

The defendant John Schrier demurred to the complaint, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against him,

Wm. M. Evarts and L. Hasbr.ouck, Jr., for plaintiff.

E. C. James, for defendant.

Jambs, J. As to all the defendants, other than Schrier, the only question now in the case is as to the jurisdiction of this court over the persons of said defendants, for without such jurisdiction it can render no personal judgment against them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Thomp. & Cook 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogdensburg-lake-champlain-railroad-v-vermont-canada-railroad-nysupct-1875.