Wilmer v. Atlanta & R. Airline Ry. Co.

30 F. Cas. 73, 2 Woods 409
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia
DecidedMay 25, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 30 F. Cas. 73 (Wilmer v. Atlanta & R. Airline Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilmer v. Atlanta & R. Airline Ry. Co., 30 F. Cas. 73, 2 Woods 409 (circtndga 1875).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge.

The complainants, Skipwith Wilmer and August Richard, allege that they are the owners and holders of certain of the bonds known as first mortgage eight per cent bonds of the Atlanta & Richmond Air Line Railway Company, which are secured by a deed of trust on all the property and franchises of the defendant company, and they file this bill in behalf of themselves and all other holders of similar bonds who shall be entitled to avail themselves of the benefit of the suit. The purpose and prayer of the bill is, that the trust deed, given to secure said bonds, may be so construed that the trustees therein named, or their substitutes to be appointed by the court, may [74]*74be compelled to execute the trusts created by the deed of trust, by taking possession of said railway and appurtenances, and all property granted by the deed of trust, and selling the same at public auction for the payment of the principal and interest of all the bonds secured by said trust deed, and that pending the suit, some suitable person may be appointed receiver to take possession of said railway and all its property conveyed by the trust deed, with power to operate and manage said railway, and receive all its earnings and income during the pendency of the suit, and with such other power as to the court shall seem right and proper.

The cause now comes on for hearing upon the motion of the complainants for the appointment of a receiver as prayed in the bill. It is alleged in the bill that the defendant company is a corporation created by, and existing under the laws of the states of Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina, and having its principal office and place of business in Atlanta, in the state of Georgia. It further appears from the bill that, by an act of the legislature of Georgia, approved March 5, 1856, a railroad company, to be known as “The Georgia1 Air Line Railroad Company,” was incorporated and authorized to build, equip and enjoy a railroad from Atlanta to the South Carolina state line, in the direction of Anderson court house. By an act of the general assembly of South Carolina, approved December 20, 1856, the Air Line Railroad Company of South Carolina was incorporated, with authority to construct a railroad from the line of the state of Georgia, in the direction of the city of Atlanta, to Anderson court house, and thence to some point of connection with the Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad, in the direction of Charlotte, North Carolina, and to equip and enjoy the same. The seventh section of this act of incorporation provides that it shall and may be lawful for the said company to combine or unite with any other railroad company having the right so to do, and to consolidate the management of the companies so combining, if they shall deem it necessary, and to make any regulations for the use of or combination of the interest or management of said roads as the public good may require, or to them may seem meet. By an act of the legislature of North Carolina, approved August 3, 1S6S, it was provided that the Air Line Railroad Company in South Carolina was authorized “to extend, construct, equip, and operate its road within the limits of North Carolina, from any point on the South Carolina line to the town of Charlotte, in North Carolina.” These three acts being in force, the legislature of Georgia, by an act approved September 7,1868, declared “that the Georgia Air Line Company be and they are hereby authorized to consolidate, combine, or unite with any other railroad company or companies directly or indirectly connecting therewith, or to unite the management of said companies, upon such terms, conditions, and provisions as shall be agreed upon by and between such companies so consolidated or uniting, and thereupon such consolidated or united companies shall be invested in this state with all the rights and privileges conferred upon, and be subject to all the restrictions imposed by, the original charter of the said Georgia Air Line Railroad Company, and the amendments thereto, with the right to adopt such other or modified corporate name, and to increase and diminish the number of directors now provided, or as shall be determined on and agreed upon by such companies.” And the legislature of South Carolina, by an act approved September 18, 1868, entitled “an act to amend an act entitled an act to incorporate the Air Line Railroad Company In South Carolina,” declared, sec.* 2, “that if said company shall, as authorized by its charter, consolidate or unite with any other company or companies, it may adopt such other or modified corporate name and increase br diminish the number of directors now provided for as shall be deemed best and agreed upon by such companies.”

In pursuance of the authority granted by these acts of the legislatures of Georgia and South Carolina, it is alleged that, on June 20, 1870, the Georgia Air Line Railroad Company, and the Air Line Railroad Company in South Carolina, by an agreement in writing, duly executed between said companies, were consolidated and united into one corporation under the name of the “Atlanta & Richmond Air Line Railway Company,” and from thenceforward became one body corporate under that corporate name, and the owner of all the property and entitled to all the rights, privileges and franchises which had belonged to the two companies out of which it was formed. It is further alleged that the Atlanta & Richmond Air Line Railway Company, having thus become the owner of all the property which had belonged to the two companies named, and being in need of a large sum of money to complete and equip its road, conveyed to trustees by deed of trust “the entire railway of said company, extending from the city of Atlanta, in the state of Georgia, to the city of Charlotte, in North Carolina, together with all its franchises, lands, buildings, machinery, rolling stock, materials- and' other property, real and personal, wherever situated, and however held, and whether now owned or hereafter acquired; andalso the annually accruing net income of said company,” the purpose of which said deed of trust, and it so declared, was to secure the payment of 4,248 coupon bonds of §1,000 each, to-be issued by the company, with interest pay-, able semi-annually at the rate of eight percent. per annum. It was made the duty of the trustees named in the deed of trust, upon default of payment of either the principal or interest of the bonds, to take possession of the trust property and its revenues and administer the same, and to sell the property or such part thereof as might be necessary to [75]*75pay the sum of money in default. The bonds secured by the deed of trust were duly executed and issued and negotiated by the Atlanta & Richmond Air Line Railway Company. The bill further states that on the 1st of January, 1874, the company made default in the payment of its interest that day due, that the interest coupons were presented for payment at the offices of the company in New York and Atlanta, and payment thereof was refused. More than sixty days haying elapsed from the time of such default, the complainants, together with the holders of other 2,342 of said bonds, gave notice to R. A. Lancaster and Alfred Austell, the surviving trustees under said deed of trust, of the default in the payment of interest, and requested them to proceed and execute the trusts created by said deed, and take possession of the trust property and the revenues of the company, as authorized and required by the deed of trust, to sell the property and apply the net proceeds of the entire trust property to the payment of the principal and interest on the bonds secured by said deed of trust, as therein provided.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 73, 2 Woods 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmer-v-atlanta-r-airline-ry-co-circtndga-1875.