25 Neb. 156 | Neb. | 1888
This is an information in the nature of a quo warranto^ instituted by the attorney general against the defendant. ,
The allegations of the information are, in substance, that the defendant .is a railroad corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Illinois, and is not incorporated under the laws of this state, and is, therefore, a foreign corporation; that it has been,, and is now, unlawfully exercising the right of eminent domain,-by purchasing real estate for depot and other uses, as well as by obtaining the same by condemnation proceedings for. the purposes of right of way for its railroad, and that it is now,,and has been for some time past, unlawfully usurping the rights, privileges, and franchises of a domestic corporation, without having become one, under the laws of this state.
To this information the defendant filed its answer, which consists of -an extended history of the defendant from the time of its incorporation in the state of Illinois to the present time, arid which need not be noticed further than that the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company, as. originally organized, constructed its railroad from the city of Chicago to the city of Burlington, Iowa; that the Burlington & Missouri River Railroad Company was duly in
The only other feature of the answer which it is deemed necessary to notice is, that on and prior to the first- day of January, 1880, the railroad of the'Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company in Iowa, and the railroad of the Burlington & Missouri River Railroad Company in Nebraska, being connected at the boundary line between the states of Iowa and Nebraska, at the city of Plattsmouth, in accordance with'the laws of the states of Iowa and Nebraska, and in pursuance of a vote of more than three-fourths of all the stockholders of the respective companies, entered into certain articles of consolidation, whereby the parties thereto merged and consolidated the stock of the respective companies, making one joint stock company of said corporations, by the name of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Company; that by force of said articles of con
It is not deemed necessary to set out in detail the method of consolidation which is presented and set up in the answer, further than to say that it appears to have been in •compliance with the requirements of the laws of this state, ¡and especially of section 114 of chapter 16 of the Compiled Statutes of 1887.
This section we here copy: “Every railroad company •organized under the laws of this state shall have power to intersect, join and unite its railroad or railroads with any railroad or railroads constructed or to be constructed in this state or in any adjoining state or territory, by • any railroad company organized under the laws of any ■state or territory, at such point on the boundary line ■of this state and such adjoining state or territory or at. ¡such other point as may be mutually agreed upon between ¡said companies, and all such railroad companies whose railroads are or may be connected at the boundary line of this state or at such other agreed point by bridge, transfer, ferry or otherwise as to form practically a continuous line •of railway over which cars may pass, are authorized to •consolidate the stock of the respective companies, making one joint stock company thereof, and bring the railroads
Upon the filing of this answer, the cause was argued and submitted upon the pleadings; counsel for defendant insisting that by virtue of the consolidation set out in the answer, which was admitted by the attorney general, the defendant became a domestic corporation. The attorney general contended against this conclusion. The case is decided upon the pleadings alone.
The question presented is not whether defendant has complied with the laws of this state. If that is admitted, the question still is, whether or not such compliance has rendered it a domestic corporation within section 8 of article XI. of the constitution, which provides that “ no railroad corporation organized under the laws of any other state, or of the United States, and doing business in this state, shall be entitled to exercise the right of eminent domain, or have the power to acquire the right of way, or real estate for depot or other uses, until it shall have become a body corporate pursuant to and in accordance with the laws of this state.”
It will be noticed that by section 114, above quoted, it is provided that, upon the filing for record in the office of the secretary of state of copies of the articles of consolidation, with the consent or approval of the companies so consolidating, they shall become one corporation, which shall be known by the name adopted, and shall possess the powers, franchises, and immunities, and be subject to the liabilities and restrictions imposed by the laws of this state upon other railroad companies, and as the consolidating corporations within this state were possessed of, subject to and under the laws of this state at the time of
It is alleged in the answer that this consolidated corporation was created about the 1st day of January, 1880; that since that date it has been, in law and in fact, a domestic corporation, and nota corporation “organized under the laws of another state or of the United States.”
Upon an examination of the allegations and averments of the answer, in connection with the section of the statute above referred to, as well as that of the constitution, we are convinced that by the action of the companies as set out in the answer, the defendant became and now is a “ body corporate pursuant to, and in accordance with, the laws of this state,” and is entitled to exercise the rights and privileges of such corporation, and is subject also to all the limitations and liabilities imposed upon domestic corporations, and that it is not a “corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Illinois,” as alleged in the information, nor of any other foreign state.
It was stated by counsel for the defendant, upon the argument of the cause, that the view entertained by them at that time had not been entertained by them during the whole of the time which has elapsed since the 1st day of January, 1880, and that, acting upon a different opinion, they had sought to and had removed causes from the courts of this state to the United States circuit court, as a foreign corporation, but that in the early part of the year 1888 they had became convinced that they were not entitled' to do so, and since that time had acted' in all respects as a domestic corporation subject to the laws of this state.
The attorney general being desirous only of having the status of the defendant company ascertained and declared,
Judgment accordingly.