St. Paul & Sioux City Railroad v. McDonald

25 N.W. 57, 34 Minn. 182, 1885 Minn. LEXIS 187
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 7, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 25 N.W. 57 (St. Paul & Sioux City Railroad v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Paul & Sioux City Railroad v. McDonald, 25 N.W. 57, 34 Minn. 182, 1885 Minn. LEXIS 187 (Mich. 1885).

Opinion

Dickinson, J.

It is understood, from statements made before the court at the time of the argument of this cause, that no objection has been made as to the propriety of the form of the action resorted to as a means of securing a determination of the matter in controversy, and therefore we do not consider it.

In the year 1881 the defendant McDonald, the auditor of Henne-pin county, caused the tract of land to which the issue relates to be assessed for taxation, and the ordinary proceedings to impose taxes [184]*184upon the land for that year were being carried forward when this action was instituted to restrain such proceeding, upon the ground that the property was exempt from taxation. After a trial of the cause, and upon findings of fact by the court, judgment was directed for the relief sought. A motion for a new trial, upon the grounds that the decision was not justified by the evidence and was contrary to law, was denied, and the defendants appealed.

The land is a part of the lands granted by congress and subsequently transferred to the plaintiff to aid in the construction of its line of road. These lands, as originally held by the corporation, were confessedly exempt from taxation. The only controversy is as to whether, through a transaction presently to be referred to, a portion of these lands, including the land in question, have been “contracted to be sold, conveyed or leased by said company,” within the proper meaning of that language, which, as found in Laws of 1865, c. 15, expressly limits the exemption from taxation. This issue is to be determined by the construction, intent, and effect of the transaction now to be stated.

In 1871 an agreement was executed in writing in behalf of the corporation, and under its seal, which, for the declared purpose of providing means for the payment of the debts of the company incurred in the construction of its road, provided for the issuing by the corporation of 24,400 shares of so-called “special stock,” of the nominal or par value of $100 each. This stock wa;s to be issued and delivered to each holder of the common stock upon payment of such sum as should be required by the company, each stockholder thus to receive the same number of shares of the special stock as he held of the common stock of the corporation. The special stock was not to entitle the holder of it to vote, or in any manner participate in the business, property, or management of the corporation, nor to receive any benefit or dividend from any of its property, except from the lands, as provided in the agreement. The holders of this stock were, however, entitled to receive a half-yearly “dividend” upon it of 3J per cent., payable from the proceeds of the sales of the lands specified in the agreement. William E. Marshall was designated in the agreement as trustee for the holders of the special stock.

[185]*185The agreement further provided that 400,000 aeres of the land grant should be set apart and appropriated to the payment of the specified dividends upon, and the final payment and extinction of, the amount of such special stock. An irrevocable power of attorney was made to E. E. Drake, authorizing him, as the attorney in fact of the ■corporation, to contract, sell, and convey these lands, or any of them, •at discretion, and to apply the proceeds to the payment of dividends due upon the special stock, and of the principal amount thereof. Provision was made for the election of trustees by the holders of the special stock, and such trustees were to have control of the lands so set apart. They were empowered at pleasure to remove all officers or agents employed in the management of the lands, and to appoint ■others; to remove the designated trustee and attorney in fact, and to appoint their successors; to determine at what rate and to what extent the special stock might be received in payment for lands at their appraised value, “and from time to time to alter or discontinue the sales and conditions for receiving the same; ” to control and direct the attorney in fact as to the price and manner of selling lands. Through such attorney they might grant rights of way for improvements, compromise claims, make releases, and generally do all such acts as the ■owners of the lands might do. Until such trustees should be chosen, however, the board of directors of the corporation was to have the power which was conferred upon such trustees. The declared intent of the agreement was further expressed to be that the special stock should be issued, based on the land, and the land sold by the attorney in fact, as trustee under the board of directors of the corporation, or the trustees to be chosen by the holders of the special stock, and the proceeds applied to pay dividends, and the surplus from time to time to be distributed to pay the principal of such stock.

By section 12 of this instrument it is provided that “when funds shall arise from the sale of lands sufficient to pay all dividends on said stock, and to refund to the holders the par value thereof, this agreement shall be discharged, and the stock hereby created considered can-celled, * * * and the lands remaining unsold, or funds arising from sales undistributed, whether of money or ehoses in action, shall belong to the St. Paul & Sioux City Railroad Company, or its lawful [186]*186assigns. It is further agreed that said St. Paul & Sioux City Railroad Company may at any time, after giving thirty days’ notice * * * of the time and place, redeem and retire any part or all of the stock issued under this agreement, by paying to the holders * * the par value of said stock, and the accrued dividend thereon; * * * and whenever all the said stock shall have been so redeemed, or funds shall have been deposited at a place for their redemption, to be approved by the trustees hereinbefore named, all the provisions of this agreement shall become void, and all of said lands, and the proceeds thereof, shall be discharged and free from the lien or incumbrance hereof as fully as if these presents had never existed.”

It is further stipulated in this agreement that the corporation shall not sell, mortgage, or incumber the lands, and that it will, “whenever required by said attorney, or by the trustee herein provided for, make such further writings, mortgage, or lien on said lands in favor of said stock, and for the benefit of the holders thereof, as may be devised, advised, or required to perfect and secure the holders thereof in the benefit of said lands as herein provided.”

The scheme of which the above outline has been given was carried into effect. The trustee named accepted the trust. Four hundred thousand acres of land were designated for the purposes set forth in the agreement, which included the tract of land in question. The special stock was issued to and taken by the holders of the common stock, share for share, as contemplated by the agreement; one dollar per share, the price fixed, being paid for the same. A part of the designated lands have been disposed of pursuant to the provisions of the agreement. The remainder, including the particular tract in question, are still held, as we understand, undisposed of, and affected only by the terms of the agreement.

There is no controversy as to the power of the corporation to issue the so-called special stock, to make the agreement referred to, and to impose such a charge upon, or make such disposal of, the lands as this agreement may be deemed to have accomplished. The contention is as to the effect, not as to the validity, of the peculiar appropriation which has been made of the land. The allegations of

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5 N.W.2d 499 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1942)
Sioux City & St. Paul Railroad v. Robinson
43 N.W. 326 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1889)
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42 N.W. 79 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1889)
Chauncey v. Wass
25 N.W. 457 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.W. 57, 34 Minn. 182, 1885 Minn. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-paul-sioux-city-railroad-v-mcdonald-minn-1885.