аfter making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
By the judgment of the highest court of the State of New York, the city of Rochester was allowed to recover from the Rochester Railroad, a street surface railroad corporation, the cost of laying new pavements on the parts of two streets which lay between the tracks, the rails of the tracks and two feet outside of the tracks of the railroad. This reсovery was had under a statute of New-York, which .required such railroads to keep that part of the street over which their tracks ran in permanent repair. The requirement of permanent repair includes the duty of laying new pavements.
Conway
v.
Rochester,
The Rochester Railroad, not denying its liability in ordinary cases to bear the expense of paving, asserts that, with respect to the two streets in question, it was exempted from that burden by contract with the. State of New York, made with its predecessor in title, the Brighton Railroad, and transferred to it with the title to the property of that railroad. The contract relied upon is found in a law enacted in 1869, for the benefit of the Brighton Railroad, which relieved that road from the burden of pavement of any part of the streets in which its tracks were situated. The Rochester Railroad claims that the law of New York, .so far as that law imposes upon it; the cost of the pavement of the streets in question, was in violation of that provision of the Constitution of the United States which forbids a State to pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts.
The Brighton Railroad was incorporated in 1862, under the general law of 1850, which contained no provision with respect to the railroad’s share of street repairs. Until the enactment of the law of 1884, under which the Rochester Railroad was subsequently incorporated, there was no general law regulating the apportionment between street railroads and municipalities of the expense of such. repairs, and 'the *246 question was determined in individual cases either by agreement or a special law. Differences having arisen between the Brighton Railroad and the city of Rochester as to the share of the expense of street repair which ought to be borne by the railroad, they joined in a request for legislation whiсh would settle this and other disagreements. In response ■ to that request the law of 1869 was enacted. The fifth section of the law, after providing that the railroad should put and keep the surface and street inside of the rails of its tracks in repair, enacts that: “Whenever any of saidjstreets áre by ordinance or otherwise permanently improved said company shall not be required to make any part or portion of such improvement or bear any part of the expense thereof.”
This law obviously, as held by the Court of Appeals, exempted, the railroad from the expense of new pavements, which is the expense sought to be recovered in this action. This was the effect conceded to the statute by the city for the whole time during which the railroad propertj7 was owned and operated by the Brighton Railroad, and even after it parted with the property, and until the decision in
Conway
v.
Rochester,
It becomes therefore necessary to inquire whether the *247 contract has been transferred with the property of the Brighton Railroad to the Rochester Railroad, the plaintiff in error.
The Rochester Railroad was incorporated for the purpose of acquiring the property of the Brighton Railroad, which was. accomplished by a lease of the property, franchises, rights and privileges of the Brighton Railroad, followed by the purchase of its capital stock. This was done under the authority of a statute, which provided that a railroad corporation, being the lessee of the property of another railroad corporation, might acquire the whole of the capital stock of the latter, and. in such a case its “estate, property, rights, privileges, and franchises should vest in and be held and enjoyed by” the purchasing corporation. It is contended that the effect of the transfer under this law is to vest in the Rochester Railroad the exemption from the expense of street pavement which thе Brighton Railroad enjoyed through • the contract with the State of New York. This contention presents the question to be decided.
This court has frequently had occasion to decide whether an immunity from the exercise of governmental power which has been granted by. contract to one, has by legislative authority been vested in. or transferred to another, and in the decisions certain general principles, which control in the determination of the case at bar, have been established. Although the obligations. of such a contract are protected •by the Federal Constitution from impairment by the State, the contract itself is' not property which, as such, can be transferred by the owner to another, because, being personal to him with whom it was made, it is incapable of assignment. The person with whom the contract is made by the State may continue to enjoy its benefits unmolested as long аs he chooses, but there his rights end, and he cannot by any form of conveyance transmit the contract or its benefits, to a successor.
Morgan
v.
Louisiana,
Keeping these fundamental principles steadily in mind, we prоceed to inquire whether the State of New York has authorized or directed the transfer from the Brighton Railroad to the Rochester Railroad of the contract of exemption. A legislative authorization of the transfer of “the property and franchises,”
Morgan
v.
Louisiana, ub. sup.; Picard
v.
Tennessee &c. Co., ub. sup.;
of “the property,”
Wilson
v.
Gaines, ub. sup.; Louisville & Nashville R. R. ub. sup.;
of “the charter and works,”
Memphis &c. Railroad Co.
v.
Commissioners,
• In the case of
Humphrey
v.
Pegues,
In
Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad
v.
Virginia,
In
Tennessee
v. Whitworth,
If the authority of these four cases, supported by some dicta which need not be cited, remained unimpaired, it would justify the opinion that a legislative transfer of the “privileges” of a corporation includes an exemption' from the taxing or other governmental power granted by a contract with the State. But other and later cases have essentially modified the rule which may be deduced from them.
In the case of the
Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Company
v.
Miller,
In
Picara
v.
East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia Railroad Companyr
“The later, and, we think, the better opinion, is that unless other provisions remove all doubt of the intention of the legislature to include the immunity in the term ‘privileges/ it will not be so construed. It can have its full force by confining it to other grants to the corporation.”
In
Wilmington & Weldon Railroad Company
v.
Alsbrook,
In
Keokuk & Western R. R. Co.
v.
Missouri,
These conflicting views were before the court in
Phenix Fire & Marine Insurance Company
v.
Tennessee,
In
Gulf & Ship Island Railroad Company
v.
Hewes,
We think it is now- the rule, notwithstanding earlier decisions and dicta to the contrary, that a statute authorizing or directing' the grant or transfer of the “privileges” of a corporation, which enjoys immunity from taxation or regulation, should not be interpreted as including that immunity. We, therefore, conclude that the words “ the estate, property, rights, privileges and franchises,” did hot embrace within their meaning the immunity from the burden of paving enjoyed by the Brighton Railroad Company. Nor is there anything in this, or any other statute, which tends to show that the legislature used the words with any larger meaning than they wоuld have standing alone. The’meaning is not *253 enlarged, as faintly suggested, by the expression in the statute that they are to be held by the successor “fully and entirely and without change and diminution,” words of unnecessary emphasis, without which all included in “estate, property, rights, privileges and franchises” would pass, and with which nothing more could pass. On the contrary, it appears, as clearly as it did in the Phenix Fire Insurance Co. case, supra, that the legislature intended to use the words “rights, franchises and privileges” in the restriсted sense. The law under which this transfer was made was enacted in 1867 and amended in 1879. In 1869 an act was passed authorizing the merger and consolidation of railroad corporations, chap. 917, Laws of 1869, which provided that'upon the consolidation “all and singular the rights, privileges, exemptions and franchises should be transferred to the new corporation.” In 1876 an act was passed, chap. 446, Laws of 1876, which authorized the purchasers of the rights, privileges and franchises of railroad corporations (except street railroad corporations) under a foreclosure sale to become a corporation, and thereupon have “all the franchises, rights, powers, privileges and immunities” of the corporation whose property was sold. The omission in the statute under consideration of the words “exemptions” or “immunities,” either of which would be apt to transfer the immunity claimed, is significant, in view of the fact that each of these words was employed by the legislature about the same time in other statutes dealing with the transfer of corporate property, and raises a doubt of the intention of the legislature, which in cases of the interpretation of a statute claimed to divest the State of a governmental power is equivalent to a denial.
The conclusion that the exemption of the Brighton Railroad did not accompany the transfer of its property to the Rochester Railroad is reached by another and entirely independent course. of reasoning, based upon a consideration of the law under which the Rochester Railroad was incorporated. That was the general incorporation law of 1884. Every corporation
*254
incorporated under it was made “subject to all the liabilities imposed by the act,” (§1) and directed to keep the street ' surfacе about and between its tracks “in permanent repair,” (§ 9) which, as held by the state court, includes the duty of laying such pavement as is in controversy here. We follow the construction by that court of § 9, so hv as it holds that that section applies to all tracks, whether constructed under this law or any other law, owned and operated by a corporation incorporated under it. Whether the section applies, or constitutionally can apрly, to a corporation not deriving its powers from the act of 1884, in respect of tracks not constructed under its provisions, it is not necessary for us to consider. There may have been a saving of the rights of such corporations under § 18. That question would be presented if the Brighton Railroad, instead of a successor in title, were claiming an exemption. Here a corporation, deriving its right to exist under the act of 1884, is asserting an exemption from a duty imрosed upon it by the law which created it. The authorities are numerous and conclusive that no corporation can receive by transfer from another an exemption .from taxation or governmental regulation which is inconsistent with its own charter or with the constitution or laws of the State then applicable, and this is true, even though, under legislative authority, the exemption is transferred by words which clearly include it.
Trask
v.
Maguire,
The. principle governing these dеcisions, so plain that it needs ho reasoning to support it, is that those who seek and *255 .obtain the benefit of a charter of incorporation must take the benefit under the conditions and with the burdens prescribed by the laws then in force, whether written in the constitution, in general laws or in the charter itself. The Rochester Railroad, therefore, having accepted its charter under a law which imposed upon it the duty of laying pavements is bound to perfоrm that duty, even in respect of tracks, which, while owned by a predecessor in title, would have been exempt.
The foregoing considerations would be conclusive of the case were it not that the plaintiff in' error takes another position, which, if tenable, would avoid the result reached by either course of reasoning. It "is insisted that this is not a case of transfer of an exemption; that the rules governing transfer are not applicable herе; that the Brighton Railroad has not ceased to exist as a corporation; that it has been merely joined by merger with the Rochester Railroad, which controls it by stock holdings, and operates it by virtue of its franchises; and that, therefore, the Rochester Railroad may claim and enjoy the exemption of the Brighton Railroad in its behalf in respect of its property. In support of this view counsel cite
Tomlinson
v.
Branch,
The júdgment of the Supreme Court of New York is, therefore,
Affirmed.
