State of Florida v. ANDERSON

91 U.S. 667, 23 L. Ed. 290, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1422
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 13, 1875
Docket3, Orig.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 91 U.S. 667 (State of Florida v. ANDERSON) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Florida v. ANDERSON, 91 U.S. 667, 23 L. Ed. 290, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1422 (1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill in equity filed by the State of Florida (by its’ attorney-general), on behalf of the said State and-of the trustees of'the- internal-improvement fund of the State, against. *670 Daniel-P. Holland and Edward C. Anderson and others, citizens of Georgia. Sherman Conant, the Marshal of the United States for the Northern District of Florida, is made a formal. defendant by reason of having in his hands an execution at the suit of some of the other defendants.

The subject-matter of the suit is a line of railroad in Florida extending from Jacksonville westwardly to Quincy about one hundred and ninety miles, with a branch from Tallahassee to St. Mark’s of twenty-one miles. It consists of three divisions, originally built and owned by different companies. The first division, from Jacksonville to Lake City, was built and owned by the Florida, Atlantic, and. Gulf Central Railroad Company; the second, from Lake City to Quincy, by the Pensacola and Georgia Railroad Company; and the branch, from Tallahassée to St. Mark’s, by the Tallahassee Railroad Company. These companies were chartered in 1858 ; and after the passage by the State legislature, Jan. 6, 1855, of a certain act entitled “ An Act to provide for and encourage a liberal system of internal improvements -in this State,” they severally availed themselves of its provisions, and issued bonds .which were duly guaranteed by the trustees of the internal-improvement fund created by the act. This fund consisted, of the five hundred thousand acres of public- lands which became vested in the State under the grant made by Congress for the purposes of internal improvement by the act of Sept. 4, 1841 (5 Stat. 455), and of some fifteen millions of acres of swamp and overflowed lands granted by act of Congress of Sept. 28,1850, to enable the State to construct the necessary levees and drains to reclaim the same. 9 Stat. 519. By the internal-improvement act of Jan. 6, 1855, above referred to, these lands and their proceeds were constituted a distinct and separate fund, to be called “ The Internal Improvement Fund of the State of Florida,” and were vested in the governor of the State, the comptroller, treasurer, attorney-general, and register of State lands, and their successors in office, in trust to dispose of the same, and invest the proceeds, with power to pledge the fund for the payment of the interest on the bonds (to the extent of $10,000 per mile) which might be issued by any railroad companies constructing roads on certain lines indicated by the act. The *671 companies, after completing their roads, were to pay, besides interest on .their , bonds, one per cent per annum on the amount thereof, to form a sinking fund for the ultimate payment of the principal. The act declared that the. bonds should constitute a first lien or mortgage on the roads, their equipment and franchises; and, upon a failure on the part-of any railroád company accepting the act to provide the interest and the payments to the sinking fund as required thereby, it was made, the duty of the trustees to take possession of the railroad and all its property, and advertise the .same for sale at public auction.

In the management of the fund the trustees were, to- fix the price of the lands, having due regard to -their location, value for agricultural purposes, &c., and make such arrangement for drainage of the overflowed lands as in-their judgment might be most advantageous to the fund and the settlement and cultivation of the land ;• and they were directed to encourage actual settlement and cultivation- of the lands by allowing preemptions under such rules and regulations as they might deem advisable, but not more than one section of land to any one settler. Other duties of a public character in relation to the lands were devolved upon the trustees by subsequent enactihents;

' At the elo'se of the war, the railroads were in a dilapidated condition; and, the companies having failed to pay the interest and the instalments due to the sinking fund on their bonds, the roads were seized and sold by the trustees under the provisions of the act. The first section, from Jacksonville to. Lake City, was sold in 1868, and the purchasers procured an act of incorporation under the name of “ The Florida Central Railroad Company.” The other two sections were sold on the 20th of March, 1869, for an amount equal to the principal of the outstanding guaranteed.bonds issued on them; and, the purchasers being allowed the privilege of paying the purchase-money by delivering the bonds at their par value, nearly $1,000,000 of them were thus surrendered and cancelled. But a balance of about $472,-000 remained unpaid. By some contrivance of the purchasers-(which both the complainants and E. C. Anderson and his associates agree in characterizing as fraudulént), this balance • was not paid at all, but was only formally settled by inducing the agents -of the trustees to accept a check for the amount, *672 upon the receipt of which .they delivered to the purchasers a deed for the property which had been executed for that purpose and placed in their hands, and the purchasers possessed themselves of the road. This check was never paid. Anderson and others, defendants, or represented in this cause, hold upwards of $800,000 of the still outstanding guaranteed bonds of the Pensacola and Georgia and Tallahassee Railroad Companies, which the purchasers failed to deliver up, besides $108,-000 which are in dispute.

The purchasers of the Pensacola and Georgia and Tallahassee Railroads, and their associates or assigns, applied to the legislature of Florida for a new charter, which was granted to them with the name of ‘í The Tallahassee Railroad Company; ” but after a few months, having procured another charter with, enlarged powers, creating a corporation by the name of “ The Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile Railroad Company,”a they consolidated their interests with that company as early as May- or June, 1870, and have ever since been known under that designation. It is conceded by Anderson and the other bondholders, and is clearly the result of the evidence in the case, that this company, whilst it succeeded to the rights of the purchasers at the trustees’ sale, received the property subject to the vendor’s lien for the payment of the balance of the purchase-money due on that sale. An adjudication to this effect has been made against the company in the suit in Duval County Circuit Court, hereinafter referred to.

The act which incorporated the Jacksonville, Pensacola, and Mobile Railroad Company authorized that company to consolidate and acquire all the roads before mentioned, and to extend the same from Quincy westward to the western boundary of the State in the direction of Mobile; and, with a view to aid the company in the completion of this work, the same act, as amended by an act passed Jan. 28, 1870, authorized the governor of the State to loan to it the bonds of the State to an amount equal to $16,000 per mile, in exchange for an equal .amount of first-mortgage bonds of the company. In order to secure the principal and' interest of the company’s bonds, it was declared that “ the State of Florida shall, by this act, have a statutory lien, which shall be valid' to all intents and pur *673

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Bluebook (online)
91 U.S. 667, 23 L. Ed. 290, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-florida-v-anderson-scotus-1875.