56 F. 333 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina | 1893
The complaint in this case was filed in the. court of common pleas for Beaufort county, in the state of South. Carolina. A petition for removal of the cause into this court was filed by the defendant, with .the bond required by law. It is said that the state court refused to grant the order of removal: A trans.c-ript of the record, however, has been filed in this court, and the cause has been docketed here. The present motion is to remand it to the state court. The ground upon which it is based is that the record does not present a case arising under the constitution and laws of the United States. If this be so, the cause must be remanded. Stone v. South Carolina, 117 U. S. 430, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 799.
Whether a suit is one that arises under the constitution and laws of-the United States is determined by the questions involved. If from' them it appears that some title, right, privilege, or immunity on which the recovery depends will be defeated by one construction of the constitution or.a- law of the United States or sustained by-' the-opposite construction, then the cáse is one arising under the constitution or laws of the United States. Cooke v. Avery, 147 U. S. 385, 13 Sup. Ct. Rep. 340. The right of removal does.not ■depend xrpon the validity..of the claim set up under the, constitution - or laws of the United Stales. It is enough if the elai-m involves a real and substantial dispute or controversy in the Suit. Southern Pac. R. Co. v. California, 118 U. S. 112, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 993. Eor is -it necessary to sustain this right of removal that no other questions be- involved than the federal question. “In Railroad Co. v. Mississippi, 102 U. S. 135, it was decided that a suit brought by a state in one. of its own courts against a corporation of its own creation can be removed to the circuit, court of. the United States if it is a suit arising under the constitution and laws of the United- States, although it may Involve questions other than tho'se which .depend oh the constitution and laws.” Southern Pac. R. Co. v. California, supra; Ames v. Kansas, 111 U. S. 449, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 437. In seeking the determination of the question whether the case is one arising under the constitution or laws of the United States, we examine into the record, and must find the answer there only. The record is the complaint and, the petition- for removal. State v. Coosaw Mining Co., 45 Fed. Rep. 804, and cases quoted! ..'The question.is also decided upon the facts and reasons stated, and. not •simply upon conclusions of law, or the assertion that a federal question is relied upon. Milling Co. v. Hoff, 48 Fed. Rep. 341; Gold,
The complaint begins with a statement of the creation and history of the defendant,'corporation, by which it appears that it was originally incorporated in the state of South Carolina, and that there was granted to it a charter in the state of Georgia; that its capital stock is 7,500 shares of $100 each, a slum; being entitled to one vote; that in 1878 two series of bonds were issued,- — sinking-fund bonds and general mortgage bonds, — the general mortgage bonds being entitled to one vote for each $100, making a voting-constituency of 7,500 on account of stock and 15,000 on account of bonds; that the corporation possesses its existence under the acts and laws of the states of South Carolina and Georgia alone; and that its entire right and object of existence is limited and governed by the grant of these states. It then states that ihe object of these grants was tlie construction and maintenance of a public highway from the harbor of Tort Royal to the city of Augusta, and incidentally to open communication between the interior and the sea. That this purpose was fulfilled, and the ends sought were obtained and promoted, until the lawful ownership and control of the Central Railroad & Banking Company of Georgia was obtained over this defendant corporation. The complaint then goes on and gives a short sketch of this, Central Railroad & thinking Company of Georgia. That it is a railroad corporation under the laws of Georgia, engaged in operating a large number of railroad lines, owned, leased, and otherwise controlled by it in the states of Georgia, South Carolina, and elsewhere;; owning also and controlling the Ocean Steamship Company, and lines of steamships operated by it between Savannah, Ga., and the ports of New York, Philadelphia, and Boston, said lines consisting of a number of steamers engaged in the freight and passenger business. It may be noted by the way that this means largely engaged in interstate commerce. That in a part of this business it draws business from territory also tributary to the Port Royal & Augusta Railway Company, and to that extent is its competitor. That in 1881. in furtherance of a scheme to get control of all competing lines, the Central Railroad & Banking Company obtained by purchase and otherwise a parr of the stock in the Port Royal & Augusta Railway Company, and a part of the bonds, with A'oting power, eventually getting 4,015 shares of stock and $1,170,000 worth of the bonds. Thenceforward it dominated this company, ran it in its own interest, diverted a large part of its business, abandoned the use of valuable terminal property, and generally injured it to a great extent, disappointing the purposes.for which it was-cliartered; in other words, depressing- and crushing a,competitor. The complaint then charges that this purchase and holding pf, this stock and these bonds by
It is clear from this summary of the complaint that it proceeds upon the ground that the Port Boyal & Augusta Bailway must forfeit its charter because the majority of its stock and bond voting-power is held by the Central Bailroad & Banking- Company, for the reason that this holding is ultra vires; not authorized by its charter or the laws of Georgia or the laws of South Carolina, especially because it is a competitor of the Port Boyal & Augusta, and intei*-ested in and in fact crippling it. The petition addresses itself to these questions. It asserts the right of tin* Central Bailroad & Banking Company to hold this stock, and rests this right upon the interstate commerce clauses of the constitution, and the laws passed thereunder. The petition, in effect, denies that in testing the rightful holding of these stocks and bonds, we must look solely to the charter and the laws of the two states; that it can be maintained under interstate commerce law, and that for the purposes of interstate commerce such holding is. lawful. The validity of this position depends entirely upon the construction to be given the constitution and laws of the United States. It must be met and decided, not only as one of the issues, but as tl^e controlling issue in the case. The counsel for the plaintiff contends that there is no evidence whatever in this record that the Central Bailroad & Banking Company is engaged or is authorized to engage in inter
The other question raised In the petition as a ground for removal is that the obligation of a contract is sought to be impaired by this complaint. The complaint charges that the purchase and holding of these stocks and bonds by the Central Railroad & Banking Company is illegal and void, among oilier reasons, because it is obnoxious to article 4, § 2, par. 4, of the constitution of the state of Georgia, adopted in 1877, which is in these words:
" Flic general assembly of iliis state shall linve no potver to authorize any corporation to buy shares or stock in any corporation of this state or elsewhere, or to make any contract or agreement whatever, with any such corporation which may have the effect to defeat or lessen competition in their respective business, or to encourage monopoly; and all such contracts shah l>e illegal and void.”
The position of the defendant is that under its original charter, approved 20th December, 1832, the Central Railroad & Banking Company had the power to buy, hold, and sell real and personal estate, and to do all lawful acts properly incident to a corporation, and necessary and proper to the transaction of the business for which it is ineorporated; that the use made of the provision of the constitution of the state of Georgia above quoted, and set out at large in the complaint, is to repeal and annul this right; that its charter is a contract, and that, if the effect sought in the complaint be given to this provision of the constitution of the state of Georgia, it will defeat and annul and so impair this contract. To this the plaintiff replies that the constitution of the state of Georgia in express terms disclaims any interference with existing contracts, and declares that its provisions shall not apply to them. Article 4, § 2, par. 6. That it is
Does the fact that the state court has construed the- charter upon which the question is. made prevent this court from putting its own construction? Is this court confined to the single question, does the charter as construed by the state court impair the obligation of a contract? In Stone v. Mississippi, 101 U. S. 816, after citing the great Dartmouth College Case, Waite, C. J., adds this> comment:
“It is to bo kept in mind tliat it is not tlie charter which is protected, hut only any contract the charter may contain. If there is no contract there is nothing in the grant on which the constitution can act. Consequently the first inquiry in this class of cases is whether the contract has been in fact entered'into, and, if so, what its obligations are.”
He then goes on, discusses an act of the legislature of Mississippi, and construes it, notwithstanding the fact that it has been already and in the same case construed by the supreme court of that state. The case of Central Railroad & Banking Co. v. Georgia, 92 U. S. 665, quoted by the plaintiff, went to the supreme court on writ of error.. .That court construed for itself and overruled the construction-of a Georgia statute by the supreme court.of that state. It would, appear from-this that when the protection-of the constitution of the ¡United States,’ article 1, § 10, is claimed,- the court will first inquire -into the existence of a contract, next into the terms of.the contta-ct and :its proper construction, and then whether 'the record discloses-..an act by the, state, either..in convention or in ¡the -legisr latqre*'#perating.; against ..such contract <.so ascertainedtand; .-con-