83 Va. 707 | Va. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is trespass on the case, to recover damage® from the defendant for the destruction of the plaintiff’s property by fire alleged to have been caused by the negli
It is proved by the evidence in the record and admitted by the demurrer to the evidence that the plaintiff’s property (his fencing, timber and grass) was extensively and repeatedly, as alleged in the declaration, destroyed by fires caused by the negligent operation of the locomotives running over the railroad of the defendant company; but the defense is set up by the company and 'sustained by the court that at the time of the injury inflicted, in 1880 and 1881, the railroad property of the defendant company was in the possession of, and being operated by, the trustees in a deed of trust executed by the defendant in June, 1866, the said trustees having taken possession of the road and controlled and operated it since December, 1872. No evidence was offered to prove, nor was it pretended, that the surrender of the possession and control and operation of the road by the company to the said trustees was, in any way or form, involuntary or compulsory • nor was there any effort or evidence to prove that the public at any time’ had notice, either actual or constructive, of such transfer or surrender. The proof simply was that the trustees, during the period named, had the possession and operation of the road. The defendant, the Alexandria & Fredericksburg Eailway Company, was chartered by the general assembly of Virginia February 3, 1864, and its charter was amended by an act approved June 4,1870. By its charter and by the presump
The decisions are numerous in which railroad companies have been held exempt from liablity for injuries, torts or breaches of contract growing out of the operation of their road in the hands of mortgage trustees; but the cases were those in which the power to mortgage was conferred by charter, and where the possession of the trustees was adverse to the company and the result of proceedings m invitum—cases arising in those States where special statutes existed authorizing and regulating the surrender and transfer of a company’s road and franchises to trustees for the benefit of creditors. In an elaborate note by the editor of the American Decisions (vol. 75, p. 548) on “railroad corporation’s power to transfer its franchises and property,”
The question in this case under review is whether in this State, where there is no statutory provision authorizing or regulating the transfer and surrender of its road, the company defendant can escape liability for a proved injury by showing a previous voluntary surrender to mortgage trustees, and indefinitely substitute those trustees for the company in the exercise of their corporate rights and franchises and the discharge of their charter obligations to the public, so as to exonerate the company from liability for injuries inflicted in the operation of the road upon the persons or property of the public. To affirm this question would be to place the public at the mercy of collusive arrangements by which the. ends of justice would all be defeated, and would conflict with every principle and analogy of the law of Virginia.
A railroad company in Virginia is a quasi public corporation, which, whatever it may do, cannot, by its own voluntary contract or collusion, surrender its functions and responsibilities to agents or trustees of its own selection, living, it may be (and as in this case is the fact, by the record), outside the limits of the State, beyond the reach of its tribunals and its process, with no one in the State to respond to the demands for the wrongs and injuries done
In Pierce on Eailroads, 496, it is said: “ The company cannot, according to the current of the decisions, without special authority of statute, alienate its franchise or property acquired under the right of eminent domain or essential to the performance of its duty to the public, whether by sale, mortgage, or lease.”
In Railroad Co. v. Brown, 17 Wall. 450, the supreme court says: “ It is the accepted doctrine in this country that a railroad corporation cannot escape the performance of any duty or obligation imposed by its charter, or the general laws of the State, by a voluntary surrender of its road into the hands of - lessees.” A voluntary surrender to trustees, under a mortgage for which there is no legislative authority, cannot have a different operation.
In Railroad Co. v. Winans, 17 How. 39, it is said : “The
The supreme court of Massachusetts, in Richardson v. Sibley, 11 Allen, 65, say “A corporation, created for the very purpose of constructing, owning, and managing a railroad for the accommodation and benefit of the public, cannot, without distinct legislative authority, make any alienation, absolute or conditional, either of the general franchise to be a corporation, or of the subordinate franchise to manage and carry on its corporate business; ‘ which,’ says the learned editor of the American Decisions in one of its recent volumes (75 Amer. Dec. 549), ‘ in qur opinion, expresses the correct view.’ ”
The supreme court of New Hampshire, in Pierce v. Emery, 32 N. H. 484, say: “ They may sell or mortgage their personal property, but they cannot sell or mortgage with it the right to manage and control the road, nor any corporate right or franchise.”
The supreme court of the United States, in one of its. very latest decisions (Penn. Co. v. St. Louis, Alton, &c., Railroad, 118 U. S. 309), says: “ We think it may be stated as the just result of these cases, and on sound principle, that unless specially authorized by its charter, or aided by some other legislative action, a railroad company cannot by lease, or any other contract, turn over to another company, for a long period of time, its road, and all its appurtenances, the use of its franchise, and the exercise of its powers.”
The same facts as in this case—so far as the effect of the possession of the road of the company, and its operation by trustees under a mortgage, was the question—were before the supreme court of Illinois in the case of Grand Tower Manufacturing and Transportation Co. v. Ullman, 89 Ill. 244, and it was held that where a railroad is in the hands of trustees, exercising the same functions the cor
In the case of Thomas v. Railroad Co., 101 U. S. 71, it was contended that “ a corporate body may (as at common law) do any act which is not, either expressly or impliedly, prohibited by its charter,” etc.; but the court said: “We do not concur in this proposition. We take the general doctrine to be, in this country (though, there may'be exceptional cases and some authorities to the contrary), that the powers of corporations, organized under legislative statutes, are such, and such only, as those statutes confer. Conceding the rule applicable to all statutes, that what is fairly implied is as much granted as what is expressed, it remains that the charter of a corporation is the measure of its powers, and that the enumeration of these powers implies the exclusion of all others.”
No provision is found in the charter of the defendant company, or in the general railroad law of Virginia, which will authorize the company to transfer to trustees or to mortgagees, under the deed of trust given as a mere incumbrance and security, the right and legal capacity to step into the shoes of the company and assume and exercise indefinitely the franchises, rights and privileges of the company, so as to give the company exemption and immunity from responsibility for all injuries inflicted by the operation of the road by the trustees. Whatever may be the effect of the deed of trust upon the “works and property” of the company, as a security between the company and its bondholders, it cannot be set up by the company as a defense against liability for injuries to persons or property inflicted by the negligent operation of the road. “A mortgage by which a corporation undertakes to mortgage both its property and franchises may be good
We are of opinion that the circuit court of Prince William county erred in holding the defendant in this case to be exempt from liability for the injury sustained by the plaintiff; that the judgment complained of must be reversed and annulled; and that this court will enter judgment for the plaintiff upon the verdict rendered by the jury upon the facts in the case.
Judgment aeeiemed.