West Virginia & P. R. v. Harrison County Court

34 S.E. 786, 47 W. Va. 273, 1899 W. Va. LEXIS 156
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 S.E. 786 (West Virginia & P. R. v. Harrison County Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Virginia & P. R. v. Harrison County Court, 34 S.E. 786, 47 W. Va. 273, 1899 W. Va. LEXIS 156 (W. Va. 1899).

Opinion

Brannon, Judge:

The county court of Harrison County submitted to its voters a proposition for the county to suberibe one hundred and fifty thousand dollars in aid of the construction of a railroad from the Pennsylvania state line to Clarks-burg, — “said subscription not to be available or paid to the said railroad company until the road bed of the same shall have been completed ready for the ties and rails from the said Pennsylvania line to said town of Clarksburg,” and on 17th of May, 1881, the voters approved the subscription. No particular corporation was named in the order submitting the question to the voters. On the 27th of May, 1884, the county court made an order stating that such subscription had been so approved, and that a corporation nam[275]*275ed the West Virginia and Pennsylvania Railroad Company had undertaken the railroad, and appointing-agents on the part of the county to make the subscription in behalf of the county. This order provided that the subscription should be paid in the bonds of the county, payable 1st of January, 1907, and prescribed the form of bond and coupons, and directed said agents to cause the bonds to be prepared as soon as possible, and directed the agents, after execution by the president and clerk of the court, to deposit such bonds in the custody of the Merchants’ National Bank of West Vii'ginia, provided said railroad company deposit with the same bank, for the count}'-, certificates for one hundred and fifty thousand dollars of its stock. This same order provided that the bank should hold the bonds and stock on certain conditions, — among others, that it should be the duty of said agents, or such other persons as the court might appoint, to ascertain when the road was completed according to the terms of the subscription, and when they should certify to the bank and court that the construction of the road, ready for ties and rails, had been completed in good faith, then the court should order the bank to deliver to the railroad company the bonds, and at the same time to deliver to the county court said certificates of stock; and the order contained this proviso: “Provided, that should the said railroad company not comply with this subscription by completing its roadbed before the first day of January, 1887, ready for the ties and rails, this subscription shall be forfeited.” It further provided that “in the event of such forfeiture the bank shall deliver up to the respective parties the bonds and stock aforesaid.” The bonds and stock were deposited with the bank, and remain with it. Some little work has been done in the construction of the railroad, but it has never been made ready for ties or rails. The work done is merely nominal, — colorable. In September, 1888, three hundred and twenty-five voters and tax-payers petitioned the county court to rescind the order of the court making the subscription; but the court decided that “said order should not be rescinded, nor should said bonds be cancelled.” A similar proposition was lost in December, 1888, before the court. As it was proposed by or for the [276]*276county court at its June term, 1898, to declare the subscription forfeited and cancel said bonds, the said railroad company filed a bill of injunction against the county court to restrain it from doing so, and, having obtained an injunction, the case was heard in the circuit court; and a decree was entered dissolving the injunction, declaring that the railroad company had forfeited its right to the subscription and to the bonds, and adjudging subscription and bonds null and void, and that the county court had the right to, and should’upon delivery to it, cancel said bonds, and directing it to do so, and directing the bank to surrender them to the county court. From this decree the railroad company appealed.

At the outset a question presents itself, very material in the solution of this case. What power had the county court to prepare, issue, and deliver these bonds in escrow to the bank when the railroad had not been so far completed as to be ready for ties and rails? The statute provided that a county subscription should be paid in cash or in its bonds, and therefore bonds are per se payment of a county subscription. The vote of the people was that the subscription should not “be available or paid until the roadbed shall have been completed, ready for the ties and rails,” from the Pennsylvania line to Clarksburg; plainly meaning that, while there could be the act of subscription, there could be no bonds — no right to make or deliver them absolutely or in escrow — until the road was ready for ties and rails. I fail to see any power in a county, under such a direction from the people and statute, to make any deliv-ei'y in escrow so long before the day of payment. Take vote and statute together, and they say that only upon one event could the bonds be delivered, — that is, when the road should be ready for ties and rails, — and then an absolute delivery to the company as an actual payment. The company grants that it yet has no right to the bonds, but claims that this escrow somehow gives it a right to demand its continuance; but how can it rely upon rights under an escrow when there could be no escrow'? The company could have no vested right to the bonds till the road was ready for ties and rails. The vote must not be departed from as to matters on which it speaks. When it fixes [277]*277terms and conditions it requires little authority to show that they must be observed. Neale v. Wood County Court, 43 W. Va. 90(27 S. E. 370). As there shown (page 104, 43 W. Va., and page 376, 27 S. E.),and below shown, where completion of the road is a precedent condition to delivery of bonds it is strictly enforced. It is clear law that there is no power in a count” court to subscribe for the county without statute, and it must conform in doing so to the directions of the vote and statute in material matters. They are the chart of its authority. "When a vote and statute say that bonds can be delivered only when the road is completed, the county court can act then — then only — in making delivery and payment. It cannot make delivery in escrow so as to vest any rights. Did the people intend that their bonds should be executed years in advance and deposited in escrow, so that if, by any means, they would get out into the world, they would have to pay them, or be endangered as to payment? Did they think they authorized bonds to mature in 1907, when the road might not be ready for ties until a year before their maturity? Surely it was not contemplated by them that taxes would be raised for interest and sinking fund before the road was ready for ties, but if not raised the whole principal might fall on them, to be paid within a few years, —a grievous load the people never dreamed of. They thought their bonds would bear date from the date when the road was ready for ties, and would mature in a. given time thereafter, and not until then would the time of indulgence or taxes begin to run against them. The doctrine relied on by counsel, stated in 6 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 863, that one party to an escrow cannot revoke it and destroy another’s right, is sound; but this rule presupposes a valid, lawful, binding escrow. But we find in the improved second edition of that work (volume 11, p. 352) that a depositary may and should redeliver on failure to perform a condition of the deposit. Therefore I cannot see how the company can claim any vested right under this deposit in escrow. The county court had the naked power to make delivery to the company of the bonds in payment of the subscription when the road was ready for ties, not to deliver in escrow years ahead.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.E. 786, 47 W. Va. 273, 1899 W. Va. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-virginia-p-r-v-harrison-county-court-wva-1899.