34 Me. 411 | Me. | 1852
The parties expressed a desire, at the argument, that this case might be heard and determined, as if free from technical difficulties. Yielding to their request, we pass the demurrers, to examine the general merits upon the bill amd answers. The leading facts are not in controversy.
.seems that the town of North Yarmouth claimed a tract of land' called the “ school farm,” consisting of about two hundred a eres, originally appropriated for the use of schools in that town. Whether this was a grant from the proprietors, or. from the go yemment, does not appear. By a special Act of the Legislature of Massachusetts, of March 3, 1806, certain inhabitants of" 'that town were incorporated as “ the
The trustees accepted the trust, conveyed the land, received the proceeds, and have had the exclusive possession and management of the funds. Whether the town assented does not directly appear, but it may fairly be presumed from their long acquiescence and receiving the income under the provisions of the Act without objection, that they assented to its passage. Lanesborough v. Curtis, 22 Pick. 320. The Act of 1821, providing for the incorporation of Cumberland, from a portion of North Yarmouth, and for a division of the school funds; and the Act of 1829, authorizing the trustees to appropriate the income of the funds, before the annual amount was $300, do not affect the principles of this decision.
The plaintiffs claim a portion of these school funds, according to the provisions of the 4th section of their Act of incorporation. The defendants resist the claim, upon the ground that the funds were not within the control or direction of the Legislature, and that the fourth section, which provides for the division of the funds, is unconstitutional and void. It is not pretended that either North Yarmouth, or the trustees assented to the provisions of that section, but they seem to have resisted them throughout. Were they binding upon the trustees, and could the Legislature authoritatively require them to divide the funds thus intrusted, and deliver them to others ? This brings us to the consideration whether the trustees were constituted a public or a private corporation.
The distinction between public and private corporations has reference to their powers, and the purposes of their creation. They are public, when created for public purposes only, connected with the administration of the government, and where the “ whole interests and franchises are the exclusive property and domain of the government itself.” Over these the Legislature has power, not limited by the constitution, to impose such modifications, extensions or restraints as the general interests and public exigencies may require without infringing private rights. All corporations invested with subordinate powers, for public purposes, fall within this class, and are subject to legislative control. All other corporations are private. They exist by legislative grants conferring powers, rights and privileges, for special purposes. These grants
The fee of the “ school farm” was in the town of North Yarmouth, in trust for the use of schools, in 1806, when the Legislature of Massachusetts, by consent of those interested, as we must presume from their entire acquiescence, authorized the sale of the land, and the creation of a personal fund from the proceeds, by the trustees then incorporated, in trust for the same use. This fund was never in the town, but was vested, by the Act, in the trustees, as a corporation, for the use mentioned, forever. They did not constitute a municipal or public corporation, although the object of its creation might have been a public benefit. Their charter was a. grant from the State, partaking the nature of a contract, which they accepted, and in which the government had no interest. This was a franchise, which involved the right to possess and control property, and the right to perpetuate a corporate immortality. 2 Black. Com. 37. Though springing from the grant, the franchise, and the rights flowing from it, were no more * subject to the control or interference of the Legislature, than were private rights of property, unless on default of the corporation, judicially determined. 2 Kent’s Com. 306. Trustees of the New Gloucester School Fund v. Bradbury, 11 Maine, 118, is a case similar to this at bar, and directly in point. Richardson v. Brown, 6 Maine, 355 ; Terrett v. Taylor, 9 Cranch, 43 ; Pawlet v. Clark, 9 Cranch, 292.
The Act relating to the separation of this State from Massachusetts, provides, that “ all grants of lands, franchises, immunities, corporate and other rights, Spc., shall continue in full force,” after Maine shall become a separate State. The
It follows, that the “ trustees of the sehool funds in North Yarmouth,” constituted a private corporation; that they can hold and enjoy their rights and privileges under their charter, independent of legislative interference or control, except for causes which do not now appear; and that so much of the fourth section of the Act to incorporate the town of Yar-mouth, as provides for the division of “ the school funds belonging to the town of North Yarmouth,” is inoperative and void. The constitution is imperative, that the Legislature shall pass no law impairing the obligation of contracts» Const. Maine, art. 1, § 11; Const. U. S., Art. 1, § 10, cl. 1.
This result renders further consideration of the merits, or of the objections, unimportant.
Bill dismissed with costs for defendants.