State ex rel. Glenn v. Mississippi River Bridge Co.

35 S.W. 592, 134 Mo. 321, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 191
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 26, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 S.W. 592 (State ex rel. Glenn v. Mississippi River Bridge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Glenn v. Mississippi River Bridge Co., 35 S.W. 592, 134 Mo. 321, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 191 (Mo. 1896).

Opinion

RobiNSON, J.

This is a suit under the statute to recover taxes assessed for state, county, municipal, and township purposes, by the county court of Pike county for the year 1889, on the Missouri portion of the railroad bridge and approaches at Louisiana, Missouri.

Previous to the first trial of this cause in the lower court, the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company, upon its own application, was made a party defendant, and filed its answer setting out a state of facts that it claimed made it the real party in interest, and the one to whom the property should have been assessed. It then claimed the use of the entire bridge property under and by virtue of a perpetual lease executed to it, by the Mississippi River Bridge Company at the time of the construction of the bridge. That by said lease in perpetuity, the entire bridge across the Mississippi became the property of the railroad, and a part of its line of railroad from Chicago in the state of Illinois to Kansas City in the state of Missouri, and that by the terms and conditions of said lease, the defendant, the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company, became responsible to the defendant bridge company for the payment of all taxes and assessments, state, county, and municipal, which might be lawfully assessed against the bridge company, and that the Chicago & Alton Railroad was in the exclusive possession, use, and control of said bridge, and that it, in connection with its main and leased line of railroad, was used solely for railroad transportation. It was further contended upon the first hearing, that the bridge in question was neither owned by a joint stock company, nor was it a toll bridge, but that it should be taxed merely as a part of its railroad line.

On the issues as then made the trial court, at its first hearing, found for the defendants, on the theory [326]*326that the bridge property was improperly assessed, and should have been treated for taxation as a portion of the line of the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company.

The case on reaching this court was reversed and remanded, and in the opinion then rendered, reported in'the 109 Mo. 253, it was decided that the bridge was subject to be taxed as the property of the Mississippi River Bridge Company under section 7755 of the revenue laws of 1889; that the mere fact that the bridge was built for railroad trains to pass over and upon, and was used exclusively as and for a railroad bridge, did not entitle it to be assessed as railroad property unless it was in fact owned by the railroad company. And in construing the lease from the Mississippi River Bridge Company, to the defendant Chicago & Alton Railroad Company, made in perpetuity in terms, this court then held, that by reason of the defeasance clause of the lease, the bridge, and not the railroad company, still held the paramount legal title to the property, subject only to the lease of the railroad, and was subject to be assessed as such under section 7755 and not as railroad property; that whether a toll bridge or not, under the authority of State ex rel. v. Railroad, 89 Mo. 103, such corporations as the Mississippi River Bridge Company are intended to be embraced within the term joint stock companies.

When the case was first before this court on appeal the sole and only question presented was as to the authority of the assessment; that is, that the bridge property was not subject to the tax imposed. No challenge was then made, as now, as to the irregularity of the assessment by the state board of equalization and the levy by the county court.

The case on the issues thus presented being decided against this appellant (then respondent) was sent back to be retried in accordance with the opinion then [327]*327delivered, when the defendants filed an amended answer, setting up substantially the same facts which had been relied upon by the defendant Chicago & Alton Railroad Company on the first .trial to show its right and interests in the premises, to which opinion reference has been made for the ascertainment of the facts as then and now plead, and as disclosed by the testimony on that branch of the controversy, and, in addition, defendants now claim that the bridge with all its property belonged of right to the Louisiana & Missouri River Railroad Company, subject to whatever rights, if any, the Mississippi River Bridge Company had to its exclusive possession, and that by reason of an agreement between the Louisiana & Missouri River Railroad Company and the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company, the latter had such an interest as to make it a necessary party still.

And it was further alleged that, under the act of congress authorizing the location and construction of the said bridge, the Mississippi River Bridge Company had no right or authority to do any of the said work except as the agent and servant of the Louisiana and Missouri River Railroad Company. That the defendant, the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company, furnished all of the money for the building of the bridge and that the same had not been repaid to it nor was it in any way indemnified for its outlay until some years thereafter when three thousand shares of stock in the said bridge company (being the entire amount of stock issued by the bridge company) was turned over to the defendant railroad company, and that on the same day the said bridge company executed and assigned to the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company seven hundred bonds of the par value of $1,000 each and that said railroad company is now the sole owner and holder of all the bonds issued by said bridge company. It admits the exist-[328]*328enee of the bridge company as a corporation and still claims the entire use', occupation, and control of the bridge under and by virtue of the lease executed by the said bridge company to the Chicago & Alton Bailroad Company in perpetuity.

The amended answer set up in addition to the above the further fact that the taxes sued for were not legally assessed and 'levied for the reason that the assessment and levy of taxes designated in plaintiff’s petition as “Bond and Interest Tax” “Buffalo Township Tax” and “For City of Louisiana and other Municipal purposes” is void for the reasons that before the pretended levy thereof neither the circuit court of Pike county or the judge thereof in vacation had made an order directing same to be levied and assessed, and that the assessT ment and levy of the taxes designated in plaintiff’s petition as “For City of Louisiana and other Municipal purposes” is illegal and void for the further reason that the city council of said city failed to certify, on or before the tenth day of March, 1889, to the county court of Pike county, a statement of the rate per cent levied by said city on all property therein for municipal purposes for that year.

The additional facts set up in the amended answer for the purpose of showing equitable rights and claim upon the bridge property by the defendant railroad company do not change the relation of the parties, nor affect the question so decided by this court upon the former hearing, as will hereinafter be shown.

The question as to the ownership of 'the bridge property (which under our revenue law determined the party to whom it must be assessed), was sought to be shown to be in the defendant the Chicago & Alton Bailroad Company by reason of -a lease in perpetuity to it from the Mississippi Biver Bridge Company. This court on that appeal, after stating all the facts [329]

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W. 592, 134 Mo. 321, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-glenn-v-mississippi-river-bridge-co-mo-1896.