Tompkins v. Little Rock & Ft. S. Ry.

15 F. 6
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedOctober 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 15 F. 6 (Tompkins v. Little Rock & Ft. S. Ry.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tompkins v. Little Rock & Ft. S. Ry., 15 F. 6 (E.D. Ark. 1882).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

We are confronted at the threshold of this case with the question, whether the acts of the legislature, under which the bonds were issued to the railroad company, created a statutory mortgage or lien upon the railroad, or an equitable lien or charge on its earnings and income, to secure the payment of the principal and interest of the state bonds.

Before discussing the provisions of tiie act relating to this question, it will be well to have an accurate understanding of the relation the state and company sustained to each other in the matter of the bonds. It was contemplated that the company would sell the bonds to raise money to build its road. They were loane 1 by the state to the company for that purpose. They were accommodation paper, [10]*10and, as between the state and the company, the company was the principal debtor and the state only a surety.

The company was bound to save the state harmless by paying the interest on the state bonds as it fell due, and the principal of the bonds at maturity, or provide the state with funds for that purpose. It was not necessary that this obligation of the company should be expressed; the law would imply it from the transaction itself. And if the loan was to constitute a debt at large against the company, without lien or security, there was no occasion for the act to have said more than that the bonds were loaned to the company for its accommodation. From such a contract the law would imply an obligation on the company to provide funds to pay the bonds. If more was said, it was probably said for a purpose, and with a view to secure performance of this duty on the,part of the company.

In determining the question under consideration, the acts of 1868 and 1869 are to be construed together as one act, and considered in all their parts. By the terms of the act of 1869, the company was to provide 'the state with funds to pay the semi-annual interest on the state bonds three months before it fell due, and after five years was to pay per cent, on the principal of the bonds annually, to raise a sinking fund with which the bonds might be anticipated, or liquidated at maturity.

The interest on the bonds, fell due on the first day of October and April in each year. The treasurer of state was required to make requisition on' the company for funds to pay the October interest on or before the first day of the preceding June, and a. requisition to pay the April interest on or before the first day of the preceding December, and the company was to make payment within 30 days from the date of the requisitions, respectively, and if payment was not made within that time sequestration of the income and revenues of the company was to follow. It was not contemplated that the state should at any time pay the interest on these bonds out of her general revenues, and hence the provision giving the state power to sequester the income and revenues of the company to provide funds to pay the interest 30 days in advance of the time it fell due.

The stipulations and provisions of the acts constitute a contract between the state and the company, and that contract, like all contracts, is the law by which the parties to it are bound and are to be governed. Ordinarily, the legislative expression of the sovereign will binds all the citizens, whether they desire to be bound thereby or not. These acts are to be viewed in the double aspect of public statutes [11]*11and of a contract. But the contract is in no sense unilateral. The company was not bound to borrow the state bonds; the loan was tendered on certain terms and conditions, and when it applied for and accepted the bonds, it voluntarily assented to be bound by the provisions of the acts, which at once constituted a contract between the company and the state. By the terms of this contract, if the company did not pay the interest on the state bonds as stipulated, it authorized the treasurer of state, “by writ of sequestration, to seize and take possession of the income and revenues of said company until the amount of said default be fully paid up and satisfied, with costs of sequestration, after which said treasurer shall return, the further revenues of said company to its officers.” Such seizure and sequestration might be repeated from time to time as often as the company made default. The “claims and liens on the part of the state” were not to be discharged until “the bonds issued to such company, and the interest thereon,” had been fully paid. Section 7. There is nothing mysterious or doubtful in the meaning of “sequestration” and “writ of sequestration,” as used in the acts. The word is here used in its usual sense, and means “to seize or take possession of the property belonging to another, and hold it till the profits have paid the demand for which it was taken.” Worcest.

This is precisely what the company agreed the state might do with its property if it failed at any time to furnish the state with tho funds to pay the interest and principal of the state bonds according to the terms of its contract. Where a creditor acquires the right by contract to seize and sell the property of his debtor, or sequester the incomes and revenues of the same, to pay the latter’s debt, such right, in equity, necessarily imports and creates a lien. Jones, Mortg. § 162.

A creditor at large possesses no such right, and cannot seize and soil the property of his debtor or sequester its income.

The terms “tax” and “taxation” are not used in the act in the sense of a tax that is to be assessed and levied for the support of the state or any of its subdivisions. A tax, in the legal signification of the term, has to be levied on all property “by a uniform rule,” not only as to the rate, but in the mode of its assessment. Article 10, § 2, Const.; Fletcher v. Oliver, 25 Ark. 295.

Clearly, this word as used in the act has no reference to a tax in its strict legal signification. The sense in which a word is used in any given case is to be determined by the context.

[12]*12Among the meanings of the word “tax” are “a requisition; a demand; a burden,” (Worcest.;) and it is here used in the sense of a charge or burden, for which the state may make a requisition in the prescribed mode.

It is obvious, therefore, that what is said by the supreme court in Haine v. Levee Com’rs, 19 Wall. 655, that “taxes not assessed are not liens, and that the obligation to assess taxes is not a lien on the property on which they ought to be assessed,” has no application to the case at bar. The taxes there spoken of are taxes, in the legal acceptation of the word, levied on the property of all the citizens alike to support the government or discharge a common burden.

It is argued that the right to tax or charge the “railroad company,” and sequester its “income and revenues,” did not give an equitable lien on the road itself for the income and revenues derived therefrom. The company was created to build and operate a railroad. Under its charter it could lawfully conduct no other business. Erorn. what source, then, was it' expected to derive its income and revenues ? Obviously from the operation of its road. How could the state sequester the income and revenues of the company without sequestering the income and revenues derived from the operation of its road,; and how could the income revenues derived from that source be sequestered unless the state or her representatives had possession of the road?

In Ketchum v. St. Louis,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Shizhe Shen v. Irene Martin
C.D. California, 2022
Niland v. Niland
143 N.W. 170 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tompkins-v-little-rock-ft-s-ry-ared-1882.