People Ex Rel. Schurz v. Cook

148 U.S. 397, 13 S. Ct. 645, 37 L. Ed. 498, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2242
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 3, 1893
Docket139
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 148 U.S. 397 (People Ex Rel. Schurz v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Schurz v. Cook, 148 U.S. 397, 13 S. Ct. 645, 37 L. Ed. 498, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2242 (1893).

Opinion

Me. Justice Jackson,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The present writ of error is prosecuted to review and reverse this judgment, on the ground that the decision of the Court of Appeals, in enforcing the provisions of the law of 1886 against the relators, plaintiffs in error, and requiring of them the payment of one-eighth of one per centum upon the amount of the ¡capital stock of the company sought to be incorporated, as a condition precedent to the filing of the certificate and becoming a body politic and corporate under the name of the Western .New York and Pennsylvania Railway Company of New York, impaired the obligation of a contract made and entered into between the State and the several corporations and mortgagees thereof, to whose rights, properties and franchises the plaintiffs in error, under the foreclosure proceedings aforesaid, had succeeded. Their claim is that, under and by virtue of the provisions of the laws of 1874, as amended in 1876, embodying the alleged contract with the State, they are entitled to be incorporated, and cannot lawfully be required to pay any tax to the State before becoming a corporation, *405 and acquiring the right to exercise corporate functions and franchises. The act of 1874, as amended in 1876, is by its caption entitled “An act to facilitate the reorganization of railroads sold under mortgage, and to provide for the formation of new companies in such eases.” The provisions of the statute, so far as material to this case, are the following:

“ In case the railroad and property connected therewith, and the rights, privileges and franchises of any corporation, except a street railroad company, created under the general railroad law of this State, or. existing under any special or general act or acts of the legislature thereof, shall be sold under or pursuant to the judgment or decree of any court of competent jurisdiction made or given to execute the provisions [or] enforce the lien of any deed or deeds of trust or mortgage theretofore executed by any such company, the purchasers of such railroad property and franchises, and such persons as they may associate with themselves, their grantees or assignees, or a majority of them, may become a body politic and corporate, and as such may take, hold and possess the title and property, included in said sale, and shall have all the franchises, rights,’ powers, privileges and immunities which were possessed before such sale by the corporation whose property shall have been sold as aforesaid, by and upon filing in the office of -the secretary of State, a certificate, duly executed under their hands and seals, and acknowledged before an officer authorized to take the acknowledgment of deeds, in which certificate the said persons shall describe by name and reference to the act or acts of the legislature of this State under which it was organized, the corporation whose property and franchises they shall have acquired as aforesaid, and also the court by authority of which such sale shall have been made, giving the date of the judgment or decree thereof, authorizing or directing the same, together with a brief description of the property sold, and shall also set forth the following particulars:

“ 1. The name . of the new corporation intended to be formed by the filing of such certificate.

“ 2. The maximum amount of its capital stock and the number of shares into which.the same is to 'be. divided, speci *406 fying how much of the same shall be common and how much preferred! stock, and the classes thereof, and the rights pertaining to each class.

“ 3. The number of directors by whom the affairs of the said new corporation are to be managed, and the names and residences of the persons selected to act as directors for the first year after its organization.

“ 4. Any plan or agreement which may have been entered into pursuant to the second section hereof.

“ And upon the due execution of such certificate and the filing of thé same in the office of the secretary of State, the persons executing such certificate and who shall have acquired the title to the property and franchises sold as aforesaid, their associates, successors and assigns, shall become and be a body politic and corporate, by the name specified in such certificate; and shall become and be vested with and entitled to exercise and enjoy all the-rights, privileges and franchises which, at the time of said sale, belonged to or were vested in the corporation which last owned the property so sold or its receiver.”

Now it is contended by plaintiffs in error that the State having, by and under these provisions of law, agreed to give to the purchasers of railroad properties and franchises acquired under foreclosure proceedings, not merely the right to hold, use and operate the same, but also to confer on them the corporate capacity necessary for that purpose, this latter branch of the contract is violated when the State thereafter either refuses to confer such corporate capacity, or imposes any condition upon the purchasers’ right to be and to become a body politic and corporate. Upon this theory the claim is made that the tax imposed by the ’aw of 1S86, which was held by the state courts to apply to their case and to' the corporation they proposed to form, impaired the obligation of the contract, and was, therefore, unconstitutional. This claim was disposed pf by the New York Court of Appeals, speaking by Peckham, J., as follows :

“We think' it also plain that, under the reorganization acts above mentioned, when the purchasers at the foreclosure sale *407 undertake to reorganize under those acts, and for that purpose to file in the secretary’s office a certificate, upon the filing of which they become a body politic and corporate, the corporation thus formed is a new and entirely different one from that whose property and franchises the purchasers may have bought under the 'foreclosure proceedings. It is true that the corporation about to be formed by the filing of the certificate has, by force of the statute, when formed, all the rights, franchises, powers, privileges and. immunities which were possessed before such sale, by the corporation whose property was sold; but that does not make the corporation the same by any means. The right to be a corporation, which the old corporation had, was not mortgaged and was not sold, and did not pass to the purchasers; and they only obtain such a right upon filing the certificate mentioned, and they then obtain it by direct grant from the State, and not in any degree by the sale and purchase of the franchises,etc., of the old corporation.

“ The last ground argued by counsel is, we think, equally untenable. There has been no violation of any contract. These mortgages, it is true, were all executed and' the bonds issued-long prior, to the passage of the tax act of 1886, already mentioned. The franchises of the corporations were duly mortgaged under the provisions of state laws, by which it was provided that purchasers at foreclosure- sales under such mortgages could, upon compliance with the law, file certificates and become incorporated bodies.

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Bluebook (online)
148 U.S. 397, 13 S. Ct. 645, 37 L. Ed. 498, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-schurz-v-cook-scotus-1893.