Sweeney v. Tennessee Central Railroad

118 Tenn. 297
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 118 Tenn. 297 (Sweeney v. Tennessee Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweeney v. Tennessee Central Railroad, 118 Tenn. 297 (Tenn. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Beard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The complainants are citizens and taxpayers of the city of Nashville, and they file the present bill, on their own behalf and on behalf of other taxpayers of that city, the purpose of which is to have declared void a subscription made by the mayor and city council of Nashville for $1,000,000 of the capital stock of the Nashville & Clarksville Bailroad Company, one of the constituents of the consolidated railway companies now known as the “Tennessee Central Bailway .Company,” and for a decree inhibiting the city’s use of its bonds or cash in payment of this subscription. The bill was dismissed on demurrer, and now, on appeal, the complainants are urging the same contentions decided against them in the court below.

[300]*300The first of these contentions, and the one most earnestly pressed, is that as a condition precedent to the city’s contract of subscription for this stock it was agreed that the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company should not issue more than $25,000 of bonds per mile for roads constructed or to be constructed, and that in violation of this condition the corporation had placed upon its property secured bonds amounting to $37,000 per mile.

Taking the bill and exhibit thereto, we find that on the 21st of June, 1901, the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, by its president, Mr. Jere Baxter, submitted an application in writing to Mr. J. M. Head, the then mayor of Nashville, asking for a subscription to the capital stock of that corporation by the mayor and city council of Nashville in the sum of $1,000,000. This application as originally filed with the mayor was as follows:

“Nashville, Tennessee, June 21, 1901.
“Hon. Jas. M. Head, Mayor of the City of Nashville:
“The Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Tennessee, proposes to construct a standard-gauge steam railroad from, a point within the corporate limits of the city of Nashville, Tennessee, connecting with the tracks of the Tennessee Central Railroad Company, or those of the Nashville Terminal Company, and crossing the Cumberland river by a bridge, to be constructed either by the Nashville & Clarksville [301]*301Railroad Company or by the said terminal company, to a point within the limits of the city of Clarksville, Tennessee, and beyond the latter point in a northwestern direction to a point in the county of Montgomery, Tennessee, at the State line between the States of Tennessee and Kentucky, the same to be authorized to issue stock at the rate of $25,000 per mile of completed and' acquired road, and five per cent, first-mortgage bonds at the rate of not exceeding $25,000 per mile of completed and acquired road, and respectfully asks a subscription to its capital stock by the mayor and city council of Nashville in the sum of $1,000,000 upon the following terms and conditions:
“First. Construction of said line of railroad to be commenced at Nashville within six months from the date of subscription, and completed from that point through the county of Davidson within twelve months, and to the city of Clarksville within twenty-four months, from date of subscription. Delays caused by injunction or bona fide litigation are not to be counted as part of any said periods.
“Second. No part of the subscription to become due and payable unless and until the said railroad company shall have constructed and put in operation, within the time fixed in this application and substantially in the direction and on the lines as shown on the plan or map which is attached hereto, that portion of its railroad located within the county of Davidson, and upon the completion and operation of that portion of [302]*302tire road one-lialf of the said subscription shall become due and payable, and npon its payment the said railroad company shall issue and deliver to the said mayor and city council of Nashville an equal amount of certificates of its capital stock. -
“Third. The balance of the subscription shall be due and payable when the entire line of railroad from Nashville to Clarksville shall have been constructed and put in operation, and upon said payment certificates for an equal amount of the capital stock of said railroad company shall be issued and delivered to said mayor and city council of Nashville.
“Fourth. Payments for said stock may be made by said, mayor and city council of Nashville, either in cash or its 20-year coupon bonds, bearing interest at four per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually, as the said mayor and city council of Nashville may elect.
“Fifth. The expenses of the election to be held under this application to be paid by the Nashville & Clarks-ville Railroad Company, and the amount thereof will be deposited with the city treasurer within five days after the election is ordered.
“Attached to, and made a part of this application is a plan or map, certified-by the chief engineer of the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, showing the general direction of the line of its roads; and it declares that it will locate and construct its said railroad substantially in accordance with said plans or map be[303]*303tween the said cities of Nashville and Clarksville, and substantially as stated in this application.
“You are respectfully asked to call a special meeting of the hoard of mayor and city council of the city of Nashville and submit this application to it for its consideration as provided by law, to the end that it may determine whether an election by the qualified voters of the city of Nashville shall be held to determine whether or not the subscription shall be made.
“This application is made under and in accordance with the provisions of Acts 1887, p. 57, c. 3, of the general assembly of the State of. Tennessee.
Respectfully,
“Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, [Seal.] By Jere Baxter, President.
“Attest: W. B. Eastman, Secretary.”

A number of communications thereafter were exchanged between Mr. Baxter, as president of this company, and Mr. Head, the mayor of the city, one purpose of which, on the part of Mr. Baxter, was to disclose for the full information of the citizens of Nashville the plans of himself and associates in regard to the buiding of the new road and its consolidation with other lines of railways, controlled by the same parties, which ran east of Nashville. It is unnecessary to set out these communications, as they in no degree reflect light on the particular point now being considered. It is sufficient to say that this correspondence led in some degree to a change in or an amendment of the original application. [304]*304This amended, application was in the same langnage as was the original, except that paragraphs 2 and 3 were so amended as to read as follows:

“Second. • No part of the subscription to become due and payable unless and until the said railroad company shall have constructed and put in operation within the time fixed in this application, and substantially in the direction and on the line as shown by the map

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Bluebook (online)
118 Tenn. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweeney-v-tennessee-central-railroad-tenn-1906.