74 Ga. 509 | Ga. | 1885
A corporation is an artificial person created by law for specific purposes, and its powers are limited and fixed by the act of incorporation. Code, §1670. Besides the powers thus specially granted, there are some others common to all corporations, among which is the power to purchase and hold such property, real or personal, as is necessary to the purposes of their organization, and the doing of all such acts as are essential to the legitimate execution of this purpose. Id., §1679. This is the law of their being, and if they transcend its bounds, they are guilty of a misuser of their franchises, and thereby incur a forfeiture of the same. .Id., § 1685.
In Whittendon Mills vs. Upton et al., 10 Gray, 582, in which the question of the ability of corporations to form a partnership with individuals and the validity of contracts made by such an association was fully considered, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts' says: “ What• powers are granted expressly, or by implication, because necessary or usual for the purposes which this charter was given to effect, the corporation has and no more.
“ There is one obvious and important distinction between such a society as this charter creates and that of a partnership. An act of the corporation, done either by direct
“ The power to form a partnership is not only not among the powers granted expressly or by reasonable implication, but is wholly inconsistent with the scope and tenor of the powers expressly conferred, and .the duties expressly imposed upon a corporation by the legislation of the commonwealth.”
Farther it is said (Id., 598) thati! the case rests upon broader grounds. The charter of the corporation is part of the public law. Those who deal with it must take notice of the extent of its powers, and that the corporation is legally • incapable of entering into the contract of partnership, that that contract was beyond the scope of its authority, and that this incapacity resulted from considerations not personal or peculiar to the corporation or its members, but from general grounds of public policy, which tibe corporation and those dealing with it cannot be pesr
The Central Railroad & Banking Company has no express power, by the terms of its charter, to enter into a contract of partnership, nor is this among the powers (as we have seen) common to all corporations. Railroad companies derive their grant of corporate powers and privileges from an act of the general assembly, under the constitution of this state (Code, §5077), and all such legislative acts, published by authority, are to be held and taken as public laws. Code, §3815.
After this case was argued, it was suggested that the suit was maintainable under the act of 1880 and 1881, p. 165 (Code, §1689(o), as railroad companies are thereby authorized “ to build, construct and run, as part of their corporate property, such number of steamboats or vessels as they may déem necessary to facilitate the business of such companies.” But it is manifest from the very terms of this law, that they were to be the separate and exclusive owners of such boats or vessels as were employed by them for the purpose of facilitating their business. There is, therefore, no necessity, and indeed it would be improper, to consider or decide the constitutional questions made upon the portion of the act from which this section is taken, and upon that subject we intimate no opinion. We decide the single point that this corporation had no
Judgment affirmed.