Quincy Railroad Bridge Co. v. County of Adams

88 Ill. 615
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 88 Ill. 615 (Quincy Railroad Bridge Co. v. County of Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quincy Railroad Bridge Co. v. County of Adams, 88 Ill. 615 (Ill. 1878).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Breese

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of debt, brought to the Adams circuit court, by the county of Adams, plaintiff, and against the Quincy Railroad Bridge Company, defendants, to recover a tax assessed against the capital stock of the bridge company for the year 1874, for county purposes. There were two special counts and the common counts in the declaration, to which the defendants pleaded seven pleas: 1. Nil debet. 2. Nul tiel corporation as to the bridge company. 3. That it is a corporation created and existing under the laws of this State and of the State of Missouri, and not otherwise. 4. That defendant is a corporation created for the purpose of constructing and maintaining a railroad bridge over and across the Mississippi river, under the laws of Illinois and Missouri, the said river forming a boundary between these States, and that the corporate powers and existence of the defendant company are under and by virtue of the laws of this State only in part. 5. That no proper demand was ever made for the supposed taxes prior to the commencement of this suit. 7. That the collection of this tax was heretofore enjoined by an order of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois in a suit therein, in which one Nathaniel Thayer was plaintiff, and Edwin Cleveland, then the collector of Adams county, and this bridge company, were defendants, which order is still in force. The court sustained a general demurrer to these special pleas. Leave was given to amend the seventh plea, which was done by setting out more fully the injunction allowed by the circuit court of the United States, and to this amended plea a general demurrer was sustained by the court. The cause then proceeded to trial, which resulted in a judgment in favor of the county for the amount of taxes claimed. To reverse this judgment the bridge company appeal, and make the point that appellants are not a company or association incorporated under the laws of this State in the sense or spirit of the law authorizing the taxation of capital stock.

The demurrer to the special pleas clearly presents this question, and it has been argued elaborately and ably by counsel: Are appellants a corporation so created under the laws of this State as to bring it under the operation of the fourth clause of section one of the Revenue act of 1872 ?

The first section provides that the property named in this section shall be assessed and taxed, except so much as in this act may be exempted: First, all real and personal property in this State. Second, all moneys, credits, bonds or stocks, etc. Third, the shares of capital stock of banks and banking companies doing business in this State. Fourth, the capital stock of companies and associations incorporated under the laws of this State. Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 857.

Appellants give the history of the creation of their company, by which it will be seen that by an act of the General Assembly of this State, approved February 10, 1853, and renewed by act of February 15, 1865, the Railroad Bridge Company was incorporated. By an act of the legislature of the State of Missouri, date not given, the “ Quincy Bridge Company ” was incorporated, the object and purpose of both these incorporations being to construct and operate a railroad bridge across the Mississippi river at Quincy, in this State, such object not being attainable by either company separately or by virtue of the authority thus granted by either State, the river being a common boundary, and the territorial line of neither State extending beyond the main channel of the river. Appellants say, in order to render either of these charters available, it became necessary to consolidate the two companies, and to secure for the company thus consolidated the consent and approval of each of said States, and the permission of the government of the United States to throw a bridge across one of its navigable rivers.

On November 20, 1866, articles of agreement were entered into by these two companies thus incorporated, one by this State, the other by the State of Missouri, to consolidate, and such articles, duly filed and recorded in the office of the Secretary of State of this State, effected the consolidation of these two companies, and such consolidation was approved and legalized by the General Assembly of this State by an act, approved February 6, 1867, entitled “An act to legalize the Quincy Railroad Bridge Company, and to facilitate and encourage the construction of a railroad bridge over the Mississippi river at Quincy.” The first section of this act recognizes the consolidation of these two independent companies and their origin, and refers to the articles of consolidation on file in the office of the Secretary of State of this State, and the name and style of the Quincy Railroad Bridge Company was bestowed upon it, and there was conferred upon it all the rights, powers, privileges and immunities which were granted to the railroad bridge company by the act incorporating the same in 1853, and renewed in 1865.

The consolidation of these companies is expressly recognized, and by the second section the company, as now existing, is fully recognized after the consolidation as a corporation. What is wanting to make appellants a corporation created by the laws of this State, we are unable to see.

But it is said by appellants, this corporation, although it derived some of its powers and in part its corporate existence from this State, derived an equal part from the sovereign State of Missouri, and therefore they are not a corporation created under the laws of either State. To this it is answered, and we think satisfactorily, that the legislatures of this State and of Missouri can not act jointly, nor can any legislation of the last named State have the least effect in creating a corporation in this State. Hence, the corporate existence of appellants, considered as a corporation of this State, must spring from the legislation of this State, which, by its own vigor, performs the act. The States of Illinois and Missouri have no power to unite in passing any legislative act. It is impossible, in the very nature of their organizations, that they can do so. They can not so fuse themselves into a single sovereignty, and as such create a body politic which shall be a corporation of the two States, without being a corporation of each State or of either State. As argued by appellee, the only possible status of a company acting under charters from two States is, that it is an association incorporated in and by each of the States, and when acting as a corporation in either of the States it acts under the authority of the charter of the State in which it is then acting, and that only, the legislation of the other State having no operation beyond its territorial limits. We do not, and can not, understand that appellants derive any of its corporate powers from the legislature of the State of Missouri, but wholly and entirely derived from the General Assembly of this State. Consequently they are embraced in the first section of the Revenue act, above cited.

It is argued by appellants, that the framers of the Revenue act of 1872 did not intend to include them in the general designation of “ companies or organizations incorporated under the laws of this State,” and this is apparent from the fact, that within a year after that law went into effect the legislature provided, in explicit terms, for the taxation of the property of the class of corporations to which their company belongs.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Ill. 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quincy-railroad-bridge-co-v-county-of-adams-ill-1878.