Ramsey v. Edgefield & Kentucky Railroad

3 Tenn. Ch. R. 170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 170 (Ramsey v. Edgefield & Kentucky Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramsey v. Edgefield & Kentucky Railroad, 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 170 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1876).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

The Supreme Court having determined, by overruling the demurrer filed in this case, that tthe complainant was entitled to relief upon the facts disclosed in the bill, all that remains is to ascertain whether •those facts are satisfactorily established, and the extent of :relief consequent thereon.

The Edgefield and Kentucky Railroad Company, whose •southern terminus was in Edgefield, was organized by the .-subscription of nine or ten of the citizens, or property-holders, of Edgefield and its vicinity, to a sufficiency of its «capital stock to meet the requirements of the law. Of these .persons the principal subscriber was Dr. John Shelby, the largest owner of real estate in Edgefield, who subscribed $50,000. The larger part of the stock thus subscribed was /.afterwards transferred to a firm of contractors, who undertook to build the road. Dr. Shelby assigned to this firm :$46,000 of his stock, retaining $4,000, On August 23, 1855, Dr. John Shelby, and Samuel Watson as president of •the Edgefield and Kentucky Railroad Company, entered ■'into an agreement, in writing, by which it was recited that the said Shelby had this day subscribed $30,000 to the stock of the said company, and that it was agreed that said subscrip■tion might be paid in fifteen acres of land, valued at $2,000 per acre, to be laid off in an oblong square along the road, -■according to boundaries given, a deed therefor to be made ¿by Shelby to the company “ whenever it is run off and its [172]*172boundaries definitely located.” The agreement further recited that it was understood and agreed that the subscription then made “included the subscription of said Shelby now remaining unpaid on the books of the company.” It was further understood “that the Edgefield and Kentucky Railroad Company are to locate their depot on the said, fifteen acres.”

On March 12, 1856, at a meeting of the board of directors of said railroad company, Dr. Shelby being himself a, director, and present, this agreement was “ offered to, affirmed, and received by the board,-and ordered to be-entered on the minutes.”

On April 26, 1859, the land thus subscribed having been surveyed by the engineer of the company, and laid off by metes and bounds, a deed was drawn up conveying the-same in fee to the said railroad company, both the plat and deed designating that part of the ground to be used as a depot. This deed was signed in the name of Dr. John Shelby, by Washington Barrow as his attorney in fact, the said Barrow being the son-in-law of Dr. Shelby, and intrusted with the management of his business, the said Shelby being old and in feeble health. This deed, written on the same sheet of paper with the plat, was, with the plat, left by the said Barrow and the engineer and agent of' ■the railroad company with James H. Kendrick “for safekeeping, and not to be delivered until the said depot should be so located, and its erection so substantially commenced as would insure its completion.” Dr. Shelby was then alive,, but died shortly afterwards.

In the meantime the Edgefield and Kentucky Railroad' was built, principally with bonds issued by the state in aid of its construction. The company not being able to pay-the interest on these bonds, a receiver was appointed by the-state, who took possession of the road and ran it. After-wards the road was seized by the military authorities of the United States, and used by them. On June 20, 1866, the [173]*173board of directors of the company, by resolution reciting that the road had been recently surrendered to them by the United States authorities, directed their president, by instrument of writing, to assign and transfer to E. A. Fort and William Connell, in trust for the payment of certain debts named, and to indemnify the sureties who might pay the same, “ all uncollected stock remaining due upon the books of said company, not heretofore transferred, with power to collect the same.” The assignment was made accordingly.

On January 16, 1869, this bill was filed by the complainant Ramsey, as a judgment creditor of the Edgefield Railroad Company for a large amount, whose executions had been returned nulla tona, and also as a creditor by open account,'against the company, Fort and Connell as trustees, and the personal representative and heirs of Dr. John Shelby, to subject the said land, subscribed as aforesaid, to the satisfaction of the complainant’s demands; claiming, also, to be a beneficiary under the assignment of stock to Fort and Connell, and asking, in the event the stock of Dr. Shelby passed by that assignment, to have the trust ■executed, and to come in for a benefit under it.

The railroad company answered, admitting its liability to the complainant, and submitting to such decree as the court might make. The personal representatives and heirs of Dr. Shelby demurred to the bill, but this demurrer was, upon appeal, overruled by the Supreme Court. These •defendants have now answered, insisting mainly upon the statutes of limitations, and upon the ground that the establishment of a depot upon the land was a condition upon which the subscription was made, and that no such depot was ever erected. The railroad itself has been sold under proceedings instituted by the state, and is now owned by ■another company. ■

The statute of limitations, so far as the land is concerned, is not in the way of the relief sought. The land was to be ■conveyed whenever it was run off and its boundaries located, [174]*174which was not done until April 26,1859 ; since which time,, talcing out the period from May 6, 1861, to January 1, 1876, under the constitutional amendment and statute of 1865, the statute has not had the seven years’ adverse possession necessary to perfect the bar. Besides, although Dr. Shelby and Ms heirs have been in possession of this land all the time, using it as their own, there is nothing to show that this holding was not in strict accord with the contract,, which permits such possession until the company is in a. condition to demand a conveyance, namely, until the boundaries are located. ■ If the deed of Api’il 26, 1859, was the-deed of Shelby, he and his heirs held afterwards, not only under the original contract, but subject to the delivery of that deed according to the ter ins of the delivery to Kendrick. And whether that deed was the deed of Shelby or not, the possession of the land by Shelby and his heirs was subject to the rights of the company, and notice to the company was essential to make it adverse. Code, sec. 2768 ; Gudger v. Barnes, 4 Heisk. 570.

In this view, it becomes immaterial to consider whether Shelby did authorize the execution of the deed of April 26, 1859, or its delivery upon condition as an escrow. Aftei-all, the rights of the parties turn upon the terms of the contract of August 23, 1855. There never has been any adverse possession, within the meaning of the law, since that date, and there is nothing to show that the engineer of the company, who was the only person who seems to have had any thing to do with the transaction of April 26, 1859, had any power to change the original contract, or add a, condition not embodied in it.

The only question, therefore, in this connection is, Was the-erection of a depot a condition precedent to tlíe right of the company to demand a conveyance, or a condition subsequent, by the failure to perform which the estate would be divested ? And most clearly it was neither. The stipulation of the agreement as to the title is in these words : “ It is further [175]

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Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. Ch. R. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsey-v-edgefield-kentucky-railroad-tennctapp-1876.