Silliman v. Fredericksburg, Or. & Charl. R. R.

27 Va. 119
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 3, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Va. 119 (Silliman v. Fredericksburg, Or. & Charl. R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silliman v. Fredericksburg, Or. & Charl. R. R., 27 Va. 119 (Va. 1876).

Opinion

Anderson J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

By section 1, of the act of assembly of the 21st of February 1872 (Sees. Acts of 1871-’72, ch. 114, p. 91) the charter of the Fredericksburg, Orange and Charlottesville Railroad Company is extended for a period •of five years from the first day of March 1872, for the purpose of enabling the company to complete the railroad, and to extend the same.

For that purpose, and to pay certain debts, the said company, by section 2, is authorized and empowered to borrow a sum of money, not exceeding twelve hundred thousand dollars, and at a rate of interest not exceeding seven per cent, per annum; and to secure the money so borrowed, to issue coupon or registered bonds, in such sums as the directors may deem best; and the president and directors are authorized and empowered “to execute a lien on all the property, rights and franchises of said company, existing at the time of the execution of such lien, and which may [125]*125thereafter he acquired by said company,” to secure the payment of moneys so borrowed and the interest accruing thereon: and said company may sell bonds at less than par.

By section 5, it is provided, that if the said company shall fail to complete the said railroad from the town of Fredericksburg, as far as Orange Court-house, with a single track, of the quality and capacity therein described, and the depots therein mentioned, on or before the 1st day of May 1878, “the company shall forfeit to the State of Virginia, their corporate franchises and rights, together with their railroad track, road bed and all work and materials thereon, and other property, to hold the same as a trustee for the benefit of herself, the corporation of Fredericksburg and other private stockholders of the original Fredericksburg Railroad Company, according to the respective amounts of the stock in that company originally subscribed and held by them.”

Section 6 limits the power of the company in the issue of bonds, until after the road is fully completed -to Orange Court-house, to $600,000.

Section 7 provides that this act shall not be in force until the said company shall file in the office of the board of public works their acceptance of the same and its conditions, signed by the president and secretary of the company, with the common seal of the company affixed thereto. This condition, it is admitted by the pleadings, was complied with by the company.

On the first day of [November 1872, the said company executed a mortgage or deed of trust, conveying all its property, real and personal, rights and franchises, to secure the payment of principal and interest' of its bonds for $700,000, which the company deter[126]*126mined to issue. And for default in payment of interest, or principal, for ninety days after demand, the upon the written request of the holders of not ^ess ^an twenty-five per cent, of the bonds then outstanding, is required to sell. The bill alleges that bonds of the aggregate par value of only $480,000 were issued; and that of them the plaintiffs became the purchasers, and the owners, of $323,000, secured by the mortgage.

The material question we are to consider is: Is the mortgage subject to the conditions of forfeiture prescribed by the said 5th section of the act of assembly?

The court is of opinion, that the railroad company, upon accepting the amendment and extension of its charter upon the terms of the said act of assembly, became immediately invested with authority to execute its bonds, and a deed of trust or mortgage upon its franchises and corporate rights, and upon the railroad track and road bed, and upon all its property, real and personal, to secure the payment of said bonds, principal and interest; but subject to its liability to the forfeiture of its said franchises and corporate rights, and its entire property, if the railroad was not completed from Fredericksburg to Orange Court-house on or before the 1st of May 1873, as prescribed by the 5th section of the act. Though the authority to execute the bonds and the mortgage, in favor of the company, and the condition of forfeiture in favor of the state, are contained in different sections, they are both parts of the same act, and in fact constitute one contract; and must be taken and construed together as parts of a whole, so that, if possible, effect be given to the whole and to every part.

If the act should be construed as investing the company with the right to alien or mortgage all its fran[127]*127chises, rights and property, free from the right of the state to a forfeiture of the same, if the road was not completed within the prescribed time, the 5th would be wholly inoperative. It gives no security to the state that the money authorized to be borrowed would be faithfully applied to the completion of the road, or that the road would be completed within the time limited, which seems to have been the cardinal object of the legislature in confirming the charter of this company and in extending and enlarging its franchises. What assurance could it give ? The very property which is to be forfeited to the state, by the company on its failure to comply with the condition, becomes vested in others by the mortgage, and leaves nothing for the state. For it is very evident that the foreclosure of the mortgage by sale would leave nothing for the equity of redemption upon which the forfeiture could operate. But the idea that only the equity of redemption was to be subject to forfeiture is repugnant to the very terms of the act, which require the forfeiture, not of the equity of redemption, but of the identical subject which the 2nd section authorized to be conveyed in trust or mortgage. Such an idea is also incompatible with the last clause of the section, which provides that upon such forfeiture the State of Virginia shall have right to enter upon and take possession of said railroad track, road bed, &e., and hold the same as a trustee for the benefit of herself, the corporation of Fredericksburg, and the other private stockholders; which she could not do if the forfeiture was subject to the mortgage, and the railroad track, road bed, and all the property had been conveyed to others, and were liable any hour to be sold toward satisfying the mortgage. Taking both sections together, they must be construed to give [128]*128to the company the right to mortgage the property, subject to the state’s right of forfeiture, in ease the road is not completed by the time specified. It is evident that the company so understood it. Ho further evidence is needed, that it was so understood by both the company and the legislature, than the terms of the act of assembly of 26 March 1878, extending the time for the completion of the road, and the acceptance of that act by the company.

This construction gives effect to both sections; not to 2nd section as fully and effectually as it would by the omission of the 5th section. But that was not intended. The legislature did not intend to grant the privilege, except with this restriction. If the company did not regard it as beneficial they were under no constraint to take it. They must have regarded it as conferring a benefit, or they would not have accepted it. It is true the restriction if it were known (and the company was bound in common honesty to make it known) would embarrass the sale of the bonds. They could not be sold at all perhaps if thrown upon the market.

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27 Va. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silliman-v-fredericksburg-or-charl-r-r-va-1876.