121 Ark. 1 | Ark. | 1915
This is an action instituted by the Attorney General, in the name of the State, against appellant, a domestic corporation, to recover the price of the aggregate quantity of sand and gravel taken by appellant from the bed of the Arkansas river. It was instituted under an act of the General Assembly of 1913, which act provides that a “railway company, Corporation or company may take from said navigable stream sand .and gravel by paying into the State treasury the sum of not less than 4c per cubic yard for sand and not less than 5c per cubic yard for gravel.” There was a trial of the case upon testimony which was undisputed that appellant had removed from the bed of the Arkansas River, after the passage of said statute and prior to the commencement of this suit, sand and gravel sufficient to make the aggregate price of $4,297.63 at the prices named in the statute. Judgment was rendered against appellant for the sum named above and an appeal has been prosecuted to this court.
This case was here before, on a former appeal from a judgment sustaining a demurrer to the complaint, and an attack was made on the constitutionality of the statute. We upheld the statute, and the law of the case is laid down in the opinion. 113 Ark. 149. It is unnecessary to repeat what was then said with regard to the validity of the statute. Appellant filed an answer when the case was remanded for further proceedings and set up the fact that in the year 1908 it was incorporated for the specified purpose “to operate a dredging and pumping outfit for the purpose of obtaining sand from the Arkansas and any other river, and that that operated as a contract with the State which is in effect abrogated by operation of this statute, if valid.
It is argued now that the statute is invalid so far as .applicable to the plaintiff because it in effect abrogates the contract of the 'State. It is sufficient to say in reply to that argument that .the 'articles of incorporation do not constitute a contract on the part of the State to permit the corporation to take sand contrary to any lawful rights therein which the State anight thereafter see fit to assert. In other words, the issuance of a charter to the corporation authorizing it to engage in the business of taking sand from the bed of the Arkansas River did not confer a property right upon the corporation in the sand and gravel lying in the river bed, but merely created a body corporate for the purpose of engaging in that business. The State holds the beds of the navigable streams for the common use of her citizens, and by issuing a charter to a corporation does not bind herself not to change the terms upon which the material can be taken out of the beds of streams.
According to the law as settled in the former opinion, which has become the law of this case, appellant is liable for the price of the material taken out of the bed of the Arkansas River, and there is no dispute as to the amount so taken.
The decree is therefore affirmed.