107 A. 626 | N.H. | 1919
The defendant claims that for sundry reasons the plaintiff is not entitled to collect from him for his use of its property. It is urged that because this was interstate traffic the state had no power in the premises. But the law is that in this class of cases "the States may act within their respective jurisdictions until Congress sees fit to act." Port Richmond c. Ferry Co. v. County,
Next it is said that the "charter provides that passage shall be free unless an obstruction is maintained." No such provision has been found in the charter.
Authority from the state of Vermont to act in the premises is said to be lacking. The original charter was granted by the New Hampshire legislature in 1795 (6 N.H. Laws, 230) and twice amended in 1796 ((Ib. 328, 353). In 1797 the Vermont legislature passed an act "confirming" the proprietors in their rights. The evident purpose of the act was to make the existing corporation competent to act in that capacity in Vermont. It did not create a second corporation, but gave the New Hampshire corporation a legal existence and domicile in Vermont. This is frequently done in the case of railroads, and the power to so endow the company is well settled. "Nor do we see any reason why one State may not make a corporation of another State, as there organized and conducted, a corporation of its own, quoad hoc any property within its territorial jurisdiction." Baltimore Ohio Railroad Co. v. Harris, 12 Wall. 65, 83. And what is true as to the corporate property is of course equally true as to corporate business.
The claim that the plaintiff is, in Vermont, a foreign corporation is not borne out by the facts. The incorporators organized and have held meetings sometimes in New Hampshire and sometimes in Vermont. Their action in so treating their organization as a corporation in both states may or may not be justified under the powers granted. But whether it is or not is immaterial on this question. So long as the plaintiff was a corporation at all it was a Vermont corporation as to its property and business in that state. If it could be held that an irregular method of holding meetings had deprived it of its corporate character and existence, then it was no longer a corporation, and hence was not a foreign corporation. The Vermont legislature made the plaintiff a Vermont corporation, so far as it is a corporation in that state at all. It follows that the statutes of Vermont relating to foreign corporations have no application.
The Vermont act provides that the plaintiff be granted "the same rates of toll which are granted to them, by the acts of the legislature of the state of New Hampshire, relating to said bridge." If the tolls sued for were authorized by New Hampshire they were also authorized by Vermont. The grant of tolls was made before self-propelled vehicles were known, and hence it is argued that no toll can be charged for their passage. It is manifest that the legislature intended that all travel passing over the bridge should contribute to its support. If the present day development of means of travel were *257
outside the purview of the act, it should be held to be equally outside the intent of the proprietors. That is, their act in establishing the bridge, though a dedication of the structure to public travel as then known, would not be a dedication of it to unknown future modes of travel, as to which there was no grant of a toll, and which no one had in contemplation. In such a case, there being no public duty and no grant of a toll, the owner could collect according to special contract, or a reasonable sum if no amount were agreed upon. Olcott v. Banfill,
But the true construction of the act is that when new modes of travel come into vogue, and it is evident that the legislative grant was intended to cover all travel, there is authority to collect therefor on a basis commensurate with the established rates. Geiger v. Turnpike Road, 167 Pa. St. 582; Murfin v. Company,
In this state the rule of construction relied upon is not treated as a controlling one in most instances. The rule here is that the construction of a grant, like the interpretation of any writing, is to be arrived at by ascertaining the fair meaning of the language to those who used it. The rule of taking a grant of a franchise strongly against the grantee is not here magnified so as to deprive him of everything save what is within the strict letter of the grant. The principle that what is within the spirit of an act is within its terms is applied to charters as well as to other legislation. Burke v. Railroad,
So far as passenger automobiles are concerned the act clearly covers the situation. Such a vehicle is a "four wheeled carriage for passengers." As to freight vehicles, or "carriage[s] of burden," the fact that they are or are not "drawan by two beasts" is not the true *258 test of liability to pay a toll. Murfin v. Company, supra. The number of beasts is used as a convenient measure for the amount of the toll. A vehicle drawn by four beasts paid more toll than one drawn by two beasts because it would be heavier. A charge for the passage of an automobile equal to that fixed for a carriage drawn by two horses is plainly not in excess of that granted. The right to charge it is within the spirit of the grant and is conferred thereby.
The argument that because the traffic in question arose in Vermont, therefore the case is controlled by Peru Turnpike Co. v. Peru, supra, is based upon a misconception of the situation. The Vermont grant is of "the same rates of toll which are granted to them by the acts of the legislature of the state of New Hampshire." Vermont granted whatever New Hampshire had granted; and the extent of the New Hampshire grant is here determinable as a question of New Hampshire law. Even if Vermont would not be bound to follow the New Hampshire construction of the New Hampshire grant in litigation in Vermont, the result would not be affected. Upon the same principle New Hampshire would not be compelled to follow the Vermont view of the extent of a Vermont grant in litigation in New Hampshire. Much less is the Vermont view authority here on the construction to be placed upon a New Hampshire grant. In any aspect of the situation, the extent of the grant is to be settled in this suit as a question of New Hampshire law.
Finally it is said that the rates were never legally promulgated. The charter provision for a revision by the court was superseded by the act establishing the public service commission. Laws 1911, c. 164. A schedule of rates was thereafter filed with the commission, and to it the defendant makes objection. The schedule was not sworn to; but as an oath is prescribed only in such manner as may be required by the commission (Ib. s. 8 (a)) and as the commission's order (No. 15) does not call for an oath, this objection is untenable.
The schedule was prepared and filed by the treasurer of the company, after informal consultation with the directors, who delegated the task to him. ". . . it is competent for the general agents, who have charge of the business of transportation, to establish rates of freight, though of course subject to the control of the directors, if they choose to act upon the matter; . . . as in other cases, the assent of the directors may be presumed unless there is some evidence of dissent. The rates relied on in this case, then, being shown to have *259
been posted up at their depots, and acted upon during the period of these transactions without question or objection, may well be taken to have been legally established." Manchester Lawrence Railroad v. Fisk,
Other exceptions taken by the defendant have not been argued and are assumed to be waived.
Judgment for the plaintiff.
All concurred.