Tennessee Bond Cases Stevens v. Memphis & C. R. Co.

114 U.S. 663
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 1, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 114 U.S. 663 (Tennessee Bond Cases Stevens v. Memphis & C. R. Co.) 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
Tennessee Bond Cases Stevens v. Memphis & C. R. Co., 114 U.S. 663 (1885).

Opinions

MR. Chief Justice Waite

delivered the opinion of the court. After stating the facts as above recited, he continued:

The question which lies at the foundation of all these suits is, whether the statutory lien with which the • State of Tennessee was invested, upon the.issue of its bonds to railroad companies under the internal improvement act of Eebruary 11, 185-2, and the several.acts amendatory thereof, bound the property of the company to which the issue was made for the payment of the bonds so issued, and the interest thereon, to the several holders thereof, or only to the State; for, if to the State alone, it is conceded the lien has been discharged, and is no longer operative. The precise point of the inquiry is, for whose benefit was the lien created? Was’it the State, or the bondholders, or both the State and the bondholders ?

The lien which was vested in the State was as security for the payment by the company of “ all of said bonds issued to the company, as provided in this act, and for the interest accruing on said bonds.” This is the language of the provision for the final lien which was to attach on the completion of the whole road, to “ all the property owned by the company, as incident to, or necessary for, its business.” § 4. To whom this payment was to be made is nowhere stated in express terms. .In the absence of anything to the contrary, the implication would undoubtedly be that it must be to the holder of the bond, as be was the person to whom the bond, as a bond, was payable ; but if, on an examination of the whole statute in the ■light of surrounding circumstances, and interpreting it with reference to the subject matter of the legislation, it appears that' the intention was to secure only a payment to the State of the debt incurred by the company on the loan of the bonds, there is nothing in the language employed to express the legis-[686]*686lativo will which necessarily extends .the operation of the statute beyond what is required to give effect to such an intention. It may be that the legislature used the phrase “ payment of the bonds and the accruing interest thereon ” to express the idea of “payment to the State for the bonds,” and, if it did, the statutory lien will stand only as security for such a payment.

The liability of the companies to the bondholders, if any there be, rests alone on the statute, which contemplated loans by the State of its own bonds to the several companies in aid of the public works they were respectively engaged in constructing. The bonds were to be “coupon bonds of the State of Tennessee.” This implies State bonds with coupons for interest attached, in the ordinary form then in use, whereby the faith of a State of the United States was pledged for their payment. Such must have been the understanding of all parties at the time, for the bonds actually issued were of that kind, and on their face bound only the State. The law made no provision for naming, either in or upon a ’bond, the particular company in whose favor it was'issued. Neither did the bonds themselves, as issued, contain, by indorsement or otherwise, any obligation whatever on the part of the companies. They were State bonds, pure and simple, “issued in pursuance and by authority of an act of the General Assembly of said State, passed February 11th, 1852.” They were not even made payable to the companies to which they were respectively issued, but went on the market as coupon bonds of the State of Tennessee, payable to the bearer thereof, and apparently nothing else. In this form they were bought and sold by dealers and investors in public securities. So that the point to be determined from an examination of the statute, is, whether a State, when lending its own bonds and taking back security for their payment, intended to protect those who might afterwards become the holders of the bonds against the consequences of its own repudiation or inability to pay, or only to indemnify .itself . against loss by reason of the loan of its credit' to those who were engaged in constructing its great works of internal improvement. To say the least, the strong presumption is that, in such a transaction, the purpose of a State would be to pro[687]*687tect itself,- and not to secure its own pledge of faith to the bondholders by a mortgage from those to whom its credit was loaned!

Such being the subject matter of the legislation, we proceed to inquire what the payment was which the State intended to secure by the statutory lien with which it was to be invested. It was to be a payment. This implies a debt from him -who pays to him who is to receive, and that when the payment is complete the debt will be discharged. It is not claimed that a borrowing company was to incur two debts by accepting a loan under the statute, one to the State and the other' to those who might become the purchasers or holders of the borrowed bonds. The obligation was to pay the bonds once, not twice, and the payment was to be made at the time and in the'. way provided by the law. "Who then became the creditor of the borrowing company when it incurred its debt for the borrowed bonds? "Was it the State or the bondholders?

Much stress was laid in the argument on the provision in § 3, “ that so soon as the bonds of the State shall be issued . . . they shall constitute a lien,” etc.; and it was insisted that, as the bond constitutes the lien, and the lien is but an incident of the debt, the lien must continue and follow the bond in the hands of the holder thereof, until it is finally paid and taken up by the company. From this it was argued that the bondholder must be the creditor, within the meaning of the statute, and that a payment would not be complete so as to discharge the debt of the company, until it was made to' him. ;

Similar language was used in a statute of South Carolina-,passed December 20, 1856, to aid in the construction of the Charleston and Savannah Eailroad, under which the State guaranteed, by indorsement, the bonds of the railroad company, and it was provided “ that so soon as any such bonds shall have been indorsed as aforesaid . . . they shall con,-stitute a lien,” etc. This, it was held by the Supreme Court of that State in Hand v. Savannah & Charleston Railroad Co., 12 S. C. 314, vested in the State a lien, not merely for its own protection against the guaranty, but also for the [688]*688better security of the bonds themselves into whosesoever hands théy migh't fall. But, as this court had occasion to say in. Railroad Companies v. Schutte, 103 U. S. 118, 140, “ contracts created by, or entered into under, the authority of statutes, are to be interpreted according to the language used in each particular case to express the obligation assumed. Every statute, like every contract, must be read by itself, and it no more follows that one statutory contract is like another, than that one ordinary contract means what another does. ... It must be determined from the language, used in each particular case, what has been done, or agreed to be done, in that case.” Under the South Carolina statute the primary liability for the payment of the bonds to the respective holders thereof, rested on the company, and the State was bound only as surety. This was shown on the face of the bonds themselves, and the language of the statute was, there-' 'fore, to be construed with that as the subject matter of the legislation, that is to say, a guaranty by the State of the obligations of the railroad company.

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Stevens v. MEMPHIS & CHARLESTON RAILROAD COMPANY
114 U.S. 663 (Supreme Court, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
114 U.S. 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-bond-cases-stevens-v-memphis-c-r-co-scotus-1885.