Ross v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R.

77 Ill. 127 | Ill. | 1875

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Lewis W. Ross having commenced an action of ejectment against the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. to reoox-er possession of a strip of ground occupied by it for its right of xvav across a certain tract of land owned by him, at Lewistown, in Fulton county, the present bill xvas filed to enjoin further proceedings in that suit, and to enforce the conveyance of the strip of ground in question by Ross to the company. The decree of the court below xvas in conformity xvith the prayer of the bill.

The Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company derives xvhatever rights it may ha\-e, in the right of xx'ax-referred to, by conx-eyances from the Peoria and Hannibal Railroad Company to Joy, and from Joy to itself; and the first objection taken to the decree beloxv is, that the Peoria and Hannibal Railroad Company nex-er had any legal existence. The objection is not as to the mere regularity of the incorporation, but it is. that xxdiat assumes to be the charter of that company was and is no laxv, because enacted at a special session of the General Assembly eonx-ened by the Gox-ernor. and not embraced in the purposes enumerated in his proclamation, for xvhich the special session xvas convened.

The act under xvhich “The Peoria and Hannibal Railroad Company” claimed to be incorporated, xvas enacted at the special session of the General Assembly xvhich convened February 9, 185.4, and xvas approved on the 24th day of that month. (Laxvs 1854, p. 237.) It xvas entitled “An act- to amend an act entitled ‘an act to incorporate the Macomb, Vermont and Bath Railroad Company/ approved February 11, 1853.” Among the purposes enumerated- in the proclamation of the Governor for convening the General Assembly at that time, xvere the following: “To amend charters of towns; cities, railroads, ferries, dykes and plankroads, and to extend the same.” (Legislatixm Journal 2d Sess. 18th General Assembly, p. 18.) The question is, therefore, Avas the act of February 24, 1854, what, by its title, it professed to be?

By the-first section of the act of February 11, 1853, the persons therein named were incorporated, by the name and style of the “Macomb, Vermont and Bath Railroad Company,” and empoAvered to locate, construct and maintain a railroad, etc., commencing at the toAvn of Macomb, in the county of McDonough, running from thence, on the most eligible route, to the toAvn of Vermont, in the county of Fulton, and from thence, on the most eligible .route, to the toAvn of Bath, in the county of Mason.

The seventeenth section of the same act also authorized the company to extend their railroad from Macomb to a point opposite, or at the city of Burlington, in the State of loAva, on the most eligible route, and to also extend their railroad from Bath, in Mason county, to some point that might be agreed upon, on the Petersburg and Springfield Railroad. (See Pm-ate Luavs of 1853, p. 20, et seq.)

It Avas enacted by the first section of the act of February 24,1854, that the name of the “ Macomb, Vermont and- Bath Railroad Company,” be changed, and that hereafter said company be knoAvn and. called by the name and style of “The Peoria and Hannibal Railroad Company,” and that said company be authorized and empoAvered to sm-A-ev, lopate, construct and fully complete and operate an extension of their said railroad from the toAvn of V ermont, in the countv of Fulton, by the Avay of LeAvistoAvn and Canton, in said county, to the terminus of the Peoria and Bureau Valley Railroad, at or in the city of Peoria, and from the town of Vermont aforesaid, by the way of Ruslu-ille, in Schuyler county, and Mount Sterling, in Brovm county, to a point on the Mississippi river, as nearly as practicable, opposite the city of Hannibal, in the State of Missouri. By the fifth section it was provided, that the company should not be required to construct the line of their road from the toA\m of Macomb to the ,toAA-n of Bath, and that the Avork on said extended railroad should be commenced within five years, and completed within eight years after the passage of the act.

The act of February 11, 1853, contained seventeen sections, and by the act of February 24th, 1854, five of these—the second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth-—were expressly repealed; but the remaining sections, except in so far as they were inconsistent with the provisions of that act, were left in full force.

We do not feel authorized to hold, as a matter of law, that the entire purpose and scope of the act of February 24,1854, is so foreign to the objects embraced by the act of February 11, 1853, that it can not be held to be an amendment of that act. Its leading objects might all still be attained under the charter as amended—not necessarily, it is true, but possibly—and some of them were entirely unaffected by the amendment. Precisely how far the original purpose of a statute may or may not be changed by an enactment professing only to be an amendment, we will not undertake to say. The legislative determination in this respect can not, in anv view, be disregarded, unless it is c-learly wrong; and that- is not established to our satisfaction in the present instance.

A further objection to the constitutionality of the charter of the Peoria and Hannibal Railroad Company, as constituted by the various amendatory statutes, insisted upon, is, that it embraces more than one subject—that is, the location and construction, etc., of more than one line of road.

The same objection was" argued in The Belleville, etc., R. R. Co. v. Gregory, 14 Ill. 28, and overruled; and what was there said on this point is equally applicable here. The court said : “ The first inquiry, then, is, does this law embrace more than one subject? The subject of this law is the incorporation of a railroad company. No other subject is introduced into the law, and but one company was created by it; but it was urged that two roads were authorized to be constructed by the law, if this extension is sustained. Even admitting that this would make the law obnoxious to the constitutional objection, the fact does not sustain the objection. "With the extension to Alton, there will be but one continuous road, and that on a much straighten line than many other roads in the State. If we are to look at the line of road authorized to be constructed, for the purpose of determining whether the bill embraces more than one subject, we shall find the law as free from objection as most others of a similar character, and much more than some others. Take, for instance, the Illinois Central Railroad Company, providing for the construction of a main trunk, and Chicago and Dubuque branches, the former of which. projects from the. main road over two hundred miles from its terminus at Chicago, presenting the same objection in a much higher degree. * * Should we hold this law to be unconstitutional for the reason urged, but few railroad charters in the State could survive the test.” We can not now reconsider the rule of construction then announced. It has ever since been accepted and acted upon as the correct exposition of the clause of the constitution involved. See, also, City of Ottawa v. The People ex rel. 48 Ill. 233.

It can not be claimed that, by the charter of the Peoria and Hannibal Railroad Company, the construction of two or more distinct and independent lines of road was contemplated. The authority was merely to construct, etc., one or more extensions of the principal line, in different directions, as in the illustration given in the opinion from which we have quoted.

The proof of acceptance of the various amendatory acts by user, etc., under them, is ample. Indeed, no question is raised in argument on this ground.

An instrument, of which the following is a copy, was executed and delivered to the railroad company by Ross:

•‘Know all men by these presents: That I, Lewis W. Ross, of Lewistown, Fulton county, Illinois, in consideration of one dollar to me in hand paid by the Peoria anil Hannibal Railroad Company, the receipt of which is hereby aokuowledged, do hereby agree to release and convey unto said company the right of way for said railroad over any land, or town lots owned by me, in Fniton county, Illinois, except those having buildings on the line, and to execute and deliver to the said company a proper release and conveyance of the same as soon as the said road is located.

“In testimony whereof, I have hereunto subscribed my name and affixed my. seal, this 26th day of June, A. D. 1854.

“Lewis W. Ross, [seat..]”

It is contended, because the road was not completed within eight years after the passage of the act of Feb. 24, 1854, as required by the 5th section of that act, and because, also, by a subsequent amendment to the charter, the company were allowed to divide the line of road into sections, and to complete it in that way, the promise contained in this instrument ceased to be obligatory.

An amendatory act, entitled “An act to amend an act entitled ‘an act to incorporate the Macomb, Vermont and Bath Railroad Company/” was enacted by the legislature, and approved Feb. 14,1857. By the 4th section of this act it was provided, that the Peoria and Hannibal Railroad Company should have the right, by its directors, to divide the route of its road, running from Peoria to Hannibal,in divisions, to let, construct and operate any of such divisions, and also to call in installments on stock from stockholders interested in, or near the line of such divisions so to be constructed, and apply the same on such part so to be built and operated; and it was also thereby empowered to unite its road with any other road, now or hereafter constructed, at its termini, or any point thereof where the same or any part thereof may come in contact with any such road; to issue bonds, bearing any rate of interest not exceeding ten per cent per annum, and to mortgage, sell or lease their said railroad and its equipments, rolling stock, station houses, or any portion or part thereof.

.The 6th section was as follows: “This act shall not, in any respect, affect the subscriptions of stock voted or subscribed by any county, city, corporation or persons. The said company may commence the work on said road within three years; and if any division thereof be completed within eight years after the passage of this act, their this act to remain in full force and effect, together with the several acts to which this is an amendment.” (Private Laws of 1857, 619.)

At, and long prior to, the date of this enactment Boss was a stockholder in the Peoria and Hannibal Bailroad Company. He was one of the commissioners named in the act of Feb. 24, 1854, to solicit subscriptions to its capital stock, and lie was active and zealous in this capacity in promoting the success of the company’s undertaking. It appears that the act of Feb. 14, 1857,received his express approval; and from 1862, in April, he was, for the period of two years, one of the directors of the company, during which time he authorized and approved of acts done by and on behalf of the company, having their only legal sanction in the provisions of that act. He is, therefore, not only bound, by implication, as a stockholder to the acts of acceptance of the company, but also expressly, by his own acts, as a director, in exercising the powers and privileges conferred by the act.

Bor do we think the adoption of this amendment worked such a fundamental change in the charter of the company as could be held to release individuals from their obligations to it upon the ground that it thereby became a new and essentially different corporation. The cases of Sprague v. Id. R. R. Co. et al. 19 Ill. 177, Ill. R. R. Co. v. Zimmer, 20 id. 657, are in point, and sustain this view. The case of Fulton County v. Marsh, 10 Wallace, 676, cited as holding differently, is not analogous. There, the subscription was made to a corporation which was subsequently divided, and made into three corporations, one of which claimed the benefit of the subscription. Here, the unity of the original corporation is not disturbed. It is merely allowed to construct its road by sections, and appropriate the proceeds arising from subscriptions to the payment of expenses incurred, according to the locality in which the subscriptions were made. This was, doubtless, designed to stimulate local aid. It was clearly auxiliary to the main design of the original organization, and, therefore, whether it was the wisest policy that could have been adopted under the circumstances, it is unnecessary for us to inquire.

"We do not comprehend the force of the distinction attempted to be drawn between the duties and liabilities of Ross as a stockholder, and as an individual, when applied to the inquiry before us. We can not understand how Ross, as a stockholder and director in the Peoria and Hannibal Railroad Company, can be regarded as accepting an amendment to its charter, and at the same time protesting against it as an individual. Having, by his own personal acts, accepted and assisted in fastening this amendment upon the company, to what principle of equity can he appeal for the purpose of being relieved from his private obligations to the company on account of the change thus wrought in its charter? His mouth is closed. He can not be heard to say, upon well settled principles of equitable estoppel, that the corporation has ceased to be that to which he bbcame obligated.

The time specified for the completion of the road, in the 5th section of the act of Feb. 24, 1854, was not irrevocable. It was competent for the legislature and the company to change it at any time, by mutual consent. The State alone could take advantage of a failure in this respect on behalf of the company, and if it should choose to waive its rights on that account, no one else could complain. While it may be said that the time within which the road was to be completed mav be .presumed to have been within the contemplation of the parties when this instrument was executed, it may, on the other hand, be said, it may also be presumed to have been within their contemplation that this provision might be subsequently changed. So, the only way to have made time certainly of the essence of the contract, was to have inserted a stipulation to that effect.

The case cited relating to comfnon highways, was governed by an express statutory provision, and, on that account, has no application here.

The cases holding parties relieved from like obligations with that of Ross, where the evidence shows there was a subsequent abandonment of the enterprise, would be in point if the evidence here supported that theory. But, in our opinion, it does not.

Work was done at different places along the line of the road, according to the evidence, commencing in 1854, in small quantities, every year, until in 1862, when it was completed from Canton to Lewistown. Ross remained a director in the company until' in 1864, and the organization was kept up until after 1869, when the road was completed from Lewis-town to Rushville. After the completion of the road to Lewistown, in 1862, work was for some time suspended, but there is not a particle of evidence showing an abandonment of the enterprise. On the contrary, efforts were being made and renewed, at difierent intervals, to secure additional means and enlist the aid of those whose influence would insure success. Work, also, seems to have been done occasionally. The line was run across the property of Ross, substantially where the road is now built. Estimates, profiles, etc., were made, and it seems to have been regarded by the president and engineer of the company that the road was located there, as we infer from the evidence, as early as in 1861 or 1862. Ross, himself, may not have actually known of this location, but he does not pretend to have been ignorant of the fact that the organization of the company was kept up; that efforts were being made, from time to time, to complete the road to Rushville; that the hope of its completion was hot abandoned, and the probability that the road, if constructed, would .run not far from where it was built. Yet he made no effort to cancel the instrument he had executed obligating himself to convey the right of way, gave no notice that he did not intend to be bound by its terms, but permitted the company to retain this instrument, and complete the construction of the road over his property, before he made known a single one of the many objections'now alleged against their rights under that instrument. Even if such time had elapsed as to authorize him to revoke the offer contained in the instrument, it was for him to determine whether he would do so or not, and it would seem, under the circumstances proved, that good faith would have required that he should have given notice to that effect before the company had taken possession of his property, so that it might have adopted another location, or taken proceedings to condemn this property before rendering itself otherwise liable.

We do not consider the question important, what line of road was in contemplation when this instrument was executed. The line, as constructed, is within the limits of the charter of the company, and, as in regard to time, so in this respect, if other limitations were intended, they should have been distinctly specified in the instrument. It was perfectly competent for him, in that way, to impose what restrictions or limitations he pleased.

There is one other circumstance to be noticed, tending strongly, in our opinion, to show that Boss is not equitably entitled to recover the possession of the right of way, even if we could regard the question of his right to damages against the company open.

Some short time subsequent to the completion of the road over his property, he commenced two suits against the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, which was then, and is still, in possession of the road—one in ejectment for the possession of this right of way, and the other trespass quare clausum fregit, for damages to his real estate sustained in the construction of the road. These suits were dismissed by him pursuant to an understanding then had with those representing that company. Some witnesses swear that the agreement was, the company was to make a cattle-pass for Ross on this ground, under the railroad, and Ross was to dismiss the suits and make a deed of the right of way to the company. Eoss, and other of the witnesses, disagree with so much of this as relates to the making of the deed. That the suits were to be dismissed, and.the cattle-pass to be made, and that the suits were dismissed, and the cattle-pass made to the satisfaction of Eoss, there is no controversy. Eoss says his understanding was, the making of the cattle-pass was to go in reduction of his claim of damages. Upon this hypothesis, was not this a distinct abandonment .of any right which he might have liad to the possession of the property, and an election to take his damages instead? The pass cost §800, was made for the sole accommodation and convenience of Eoss, and, of course, upon the hypothesis that the right to the possession of the property where it was made was in the company. He induced the company to expend this money, with the understanding it should have the benefit of it in his claim for damages. Shall he now be allowed to defeat this by taking the whole property ? We think, in equity, this can not be allowed.

In every view we have been able to take of the case, we think the equities are in favor of the company.

We have not discussed the rights of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Eailroad Company as distinct from those of the Peoria and Hannibal Eailroad Company, as no question is made in that respect. "We have assumed that-, by the effect of the several conveyances, the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Eailroad Company occupies the same position the Peoria and Hannibal Eailroad Company would if no conveyance had been made.

The decree is affirmed.

Decree affirmed.