Wright v. Kentucky & Great Eastern Railway Co.

117 U.S. 72, 6 S. Ct. 697, 29 L. Ed. 821, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1817
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 1, 1886
Docket117
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 117 U.S. 72 (Wright v. Kentucky & Great Eastern Railway 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
Wright v. Kentucky & Great Eastern Railway Co., 117 U.S. 72, 6 S. Ct. 697, 29 L. Ed. 821, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1817 (1886).

Opinion

' Me. Justice Blatchfoed

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 18th of December, 1850, the Legislature of Kentucky, by special act, Laws of 1850, vol. ii., ch. 96, p. 73, created a corporation known as the Maysville and Big Sandy Railroad Company (hereinafter called the Big Sandy Company), with power to construct and maintain a railroad, commencing at or near the city of Maysville, Kentucky, and running thence to the Big Sandy River, by such route as might be- found practicable. The act gave authority to the counties of Mason, Lewis and Greenup, and to any town in any of those counties, to subscribe to the stock of the company, when authorized by a majority of the voters of the county or town, the proposition to be submitted to them by the directors of the company; and the issue of bonds by the counties and towns in aid of the railroad was provided for. This indicated that the route of the road was expected to run through the counties above named. Maysville is in Mason County, on the south bank of the Ohio River. Lewis County adjoins Mason on the east, and Greenup adjoins Lewis on the east. All three of them lie along the south bank of the Ohio River. The next county in Kentucky east of Greenup is Boyd, and the Big Sandy River, after, being for some distance the boundary between Kentucky and West Virginia, empties into the Ohio River in Boyd County, only a short distance eastward of the line between Greenup and Boyd Counties. For the railroad to reach the Big Sandy River it was necessary it should pass for a short distance through Boyd County.

The company was organized and began the construction of the road in 1853, and, after expending a considerable sum of money, claimed to have been $300,000, it became financially embarrassed and suspended the work permanently in 1854. To secure certain of its creditors, it executed one or more mortgages to them on its road and all its franchises and chartered privileges.

By an act of the Legislature of Kentucky, approved February 17, 1866, Laws of 1866, ch. 755, p. 664, those mortgages *74 were declared to be legal, and authority was given to foreclose them by proceedings in- the Mason Circuit Court, with power to that court to sell the road, with all its property, rights of property, franchises, and chartered privileges, at public sale; and' the act provided, that the purchasers at the sale, after it had been approved by the court, should be invested with the title to the road, and all its franchises and chartered privileges, and should have power to reorganize the company under its charter, and, for the purposes of its charter, to “ make contracts with individuals, corporations and other railroad companies for the building, completion and operation of said road, or any part thereof.” The foreclosure proceedings were had in 1869, resulting in a decree and a sale thereunder, at which M. Ryan, H. Taylor, Elizabeth Gray, ~W. H. "Wadsworth, John B. Poyntz, and John G. Hickman, trustee, of Charles B. Coons, deceased, became the purchasers of what the act of 1866 authorized to be sold, and a deed of it was made to them, but was not recorded until 1875.

On the 21st of March, 1870, the Legislature of Kentucky, by a special act, Laws of 1870, vol. 2, ch. 867, p. 545, created a corporation known as the Kentucky and Great Eastern Railway Company (hereinafter called the Great Eastern Company). The 10th section of that act gave power to the company to construct a railway from such-point or points in the cities of Covington and Newport as it might select, thence through the Counties of Campbell, Kenton, Pendleton, Bracken, Harrison, Fleming, Nicholas, Robertson, Bourbon, Clark, Montgomery, Menifee, Bath, Rowan, PoWell, "Wolfe, Morgan, Carter, Lawrence, Johnson, Magoffin, Breathitt, Eloyd, Pike and Letcher, or such of them as it might choose, to any point or points on the boundary line between the States of Kentucky and Yir-ginia that it might select. The route thus indicated for the road, by naming those counties, carried it far to the southward of the south line of Boyd County and of any road running from Maysville through Mason, Lewis, Greenup and Boyd Counties to the Big Sandy River. The 10th section of the act also authorized the company “ to .construct such branch railroads to their main trunk road, in or through such counties,” *75 as it might deem proper. Provision was made, in section 16 and following sections, for subscriptions by counties, precincts, cities and towns to the stock of the company, and for the issuing of bonds to pay therefor. Section 41 provided as follows: “ That the president and directors of said company may, with the assent of the holders of a majority in value of the stock in said company, purchase and hold any other railroad in this or any other State, and may subscribe stock in, or aid in the building of, any other road, in or out of this State, whenever, in their judgment, it may be to the interest of the said railway company to do 'so. They may sell the said railway ¿ or lease the same, and may build branches from said road, and branches from said branches. That said company may connect its said road, or any of its branches, with the railroad of any other company, in or out of this State, and may lease and operate any railroad connecting with the road or branches of said railway ; and it may consolidate with, and make running and operating arrangements with, any other railrpad company, upon such terms as may be agreed on by the contracting parties.” By sections 44 and 45, it was provided that the company might issue its bonds for $1000 each, to an amount not exceeding $15,000,000, to be secured by “ a mortgage or deed of trust conveying said railroad and its property franchises to a trustee or trustees.”

The Great Eastern Company was organized in June, 1871. On the 15th of July, 1871, the owners of the Big Sañdy road made the following written proposition, signed by all of them, to the Great Eastern Company: “ To the Kentucky and Great Eastern Railroad Co.: The owners of the Maysville and Big Sandy Railroad propose to accept fifty-seven thousand and seven dollars for the road and all its rights and franchises held by them under their purchase, payable in cash or bonds of the county of Mason, or other good security. Should the payments be made in the bonds of the county of Mason, they will take the payments in such proportion as their debt bears to the sum voted by the county of Mason and the issuance of those bonds by the county to the Kentucky and Great Eastern Company. But it is hereby stipulated, that, upon the acceptance. *76 of this proposition by the Kentucky and Great Eastern road, no unnecessary; delay shall occur in taking the vote of the county of Mason upon their subscription to the railroad company. This proposition to remain open for acceptance for thirty days from 15th day of July, 1871; the work on the road to commence in good faith in six month’s from the 15th July, or this article to be void.”

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Bluebook (online)
117 U.S. 72, 6 S. Ct. 697, 29 L. Ed. 821, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-kentucky-great-eastern-railway-co-scotus-1886.