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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
IN RE SINKING FUND CASES, 99 U.S. 700 (1878)
99 U.S. 700 (L.Ed.)
SINKING-FUND CASES.
UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY
v.
UNITED STATES.
CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY
v.
GALLATIN.
October Term, 1878
APPEAL from the Court of Claims.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District
of California.
The Union Pacific Railroad Company filed its petition in the
[99 U.S. 700, 701]
Court of Claims against the United States. The court found the
following facts:--
1. That during the month of July, 1878, the claimant, at the
request of the defendant, transported troops of the United States over
the claimant's road, as averred in the petition.
2. That the amount and value of said service so rendered by
the claimant for the defendant, as stated in proposition first, was
and is the sum of $10,451.73, the same being fair and reasonable
compensation for said service, and not exceeding the amounts paid by
private parties for the same kind of service.
3. That said amount was duly allowed and audited by the
accounting officers of the treasury for the said service, on the
eighth day of October, 1878.
4. That on the twenty-eighth day of October, 1878, the
claimant demanded of the defendant the one-half of the said sum, to
wit, $5,225.68 1/2, and protested against the payment of said one-half
into any sinking- fund, or its application to the payment of bonds
issued by the United States to said company, or to the interest
thereon, and against the retention of said one-half by the United
States on any account whatever.
5. That on the fourth day of November, 1878, the proper
officers of the Treasury Department of the United States issued a
warrant, No. 5950, for the said amount of $10,451.73, on account of
the transportation aforesaid.
6. That on the fifth day of November, 1878, the Secretary of
the Treasury refused to pay the said one-half to the claimant, giving
as his reason therefor that the same was required by an act of
Congress, approved May 7, 1878, hereinafter referred to, to be turned
into a sinking-fund, as provided in said act.
7. That on Nov. 6, 1878, a draft to the order of the
Secretary of the Treasury, assignee of the Union Pacific Railroad
Company, for $10,451.13, was issued. That the Secretary of the
Treasury made the following indorsement on the draft:--
'Pay to the Treasurer of the United States, to be by him
deposited in the United States Treasury, in general account, on
account of moneys received from the Union Pacific Railroad Company,
being the compensation found due it for transportation performed
[99 U.S. 700, 702]
for the War Department in July, 1878, and withheld in
accordance with the provisions of sect. 2, act May 7, 1878, as
follows:--
'One-half, $5,225.86, on account of reimbursement of interest
paid on bonds issued to the Union Pacific Railroad Company.
'Credit to be given under date of August --, and one-half,
$5,225.87, on account sinking-fund, Union Pacific Railroad Company,
to be carried to credit under sect. 4 of the above act.
'Secretary of the Treasury, Assee. Union Pacific Railroad.'
And the Assistant Treasurer of the United States indorsed the same.
8. That the Assistant Treasurer of the United States issued
a certificate of deposit, showing that $10,451.73 on account of moneys
received from the Union Pacific Railroad Company, being compensation
found due it for transportation performed in July, 1878, and withheld,
&c., have been deposited in the treasury.
9. That revenue covering warrants were issued, showing the
moneys before mentioned have been covered into the treasury, one-half,
viz. $5, 225.86, on account of reimbursement of interest, and
one-half, viz. $5,225. 87, on account of sinking-fund.
10. That the Secretary of the Treasury directed the Treasurer of
the United States to purchase at the end of each month five per cent
bonds of the United States, to the amount of the moneys withheld from
the Union and Central Pacific Railroad Companies since July 1, 1878,
and apply the same to the credit of the company from which the money
may have been withheld, the bonds to be registered in the name of the
Treasurer of the United States. In a schedule annexed, the sum of
$5,225.87 appears as having been withheld on this account.
11. That the Treasurer of the United States, in accordance with the
directions above recited, purchased bonds of the funded loan of 1881,
for account of the sinking-fund, Union Pacific Railroad Company, to a
large amount.
12. That an appropriation warrant was issued on account of sinking-
fund, Union Pacific Railroad Company, for the amount expended by the
Treasurer of the United States in the purchase
[99 U.S. 700, 703]
of five per cent bonds as before recited, and there was
included in the amount appropriated the sum of $5,225.87, which had
been deposited and covered into the treasury, as shown in the other
findings.
13. That the claimant never assigned or in any way parted with the
claim sued for; but the issuing of said warrant mentioned in finding
No. 5, in favor of the Secretary of the Treasury as assignee of the
Union Pacific Railroad Company, and the issuing of the draft on said
warrant, as found in finding No. 7, payable to the order of the
Secretary of the Treasury as assignee of the Union Pacific Railroad
Company, was each of the act of the defendant, done without the
consent of the claimant; and the said warrant and draft were issued in
that form for the purpose of enabling the proper officers of the
Treasury Department to place the said money in the treasury, as found
in the preceding findings.
14. That the said amount placed to the credit of the sinking-fund,
to wit, the sum of $5,225.87, as hereinbefore found, is the one-half
of the money earned by the claimant, as found in the above findings,
Nos. 1 and 2, and for which half this action is prosecuted.
The court adjudged that the petition be dismissed, and the company
thereupon appealed.
Gallatin, a stockholder of the Central Pacific Railroad Company,
filed his bill against t and the persons constituting its board of
directors, to compel them to comply with the requirements of the said
act of May 7, 1878. He alleges that the board has threatened to
disregard them, and that, Aug. 27, 1878, it declared a dividend of one
per cent upon the capital stock of the company payable out of the
earnings accumulated since June 30, 1878, although the company was
then in default in respect of the payment of five per cent of the net
earnings as required by the said act; that one of the consequences of
its conduct, if persisted in, will be a forfeiture of the company's
property and franchises, to his irreparable injury. He prays for an
injunction to restrain the directors from paying a dividend while the
company is in default in respect to any of the terms, requirements, or
provisions of said act, and from doing any other or further thing
whatever in the premises in
[99 U.S. 700, 704] contravention or
disregard thereof, or that will jeopardize or imperil, or cause or
tend to cause, thereunder a forfeiture of any of the rights,
privileges, grants, or franchises derived or obtained by said company
from the United States.
The defendants filed a demurrer, which was overruled, and on their
declining to answer, the court passed a decree in conformity with the
prayer of the bill. They thereupon appealed.
The following is the legislation bearing upon the questions
involved.
The act of Congress approved July 1, 1862 (12 Stat. 489), by its
first section enacts:--
'That Walter S. Burgess' and other persons therein named,
'together with five commissioners to be appointed by the Secretary
of the Interior, and all persons who shall or may be associated with
them and their successors, are hereby created and erected into a
body corporate and politic, in deed and in law, by the name, style,
and title of 'The Union Pacific Railroad Company;' and by that name
shall have perpetual succession, and shall be able to sue and to be
sued, plead and be impleaded, defend and be defended, in all courts
of law and equity within the United States, and may make and have a
common seal; and the said corporation is hereby authorized and
empowered to lay out, locate, construct, furnish, maintain, and
enjoy a continuous railroad and telegraph, with the appurtenances,
from a point on the one hundredth meridian of longitude west from
Greenwich, between the south margin of the valley of the Republican
River and the north margin of the valley of the Platte River, in the
Territory of Nebraska, to the western boundary of Nevada Territory,
upon the route and terms hereinafter provided, and is hereby vested
with all the powers, privileges, and immunities necessary to carry
into effect the purposes of this act, as herein set forth. . . .
'SECT. 2. That the right of way through the public lands be, and
the same is hereby, granted to said company for the construction of
said railroad and telegraph line; and the right, power, and
authority is hereby given to said company to take from the public
lands adjacent to the line of said road, earth, stone, timber, and
other materials for the construction thereof; said right of way is
granted to said railroad to the extent of two hundred feet in width
on each side of said railroad where it may pass over the
[99 U.S. 700, 705]
public lands, including all necessary grounds for stations,
buildings, workshops and depots, machine-shops, switches, side
tracks, turntables, and water stations. The United States shall
extinguish as rapidly as may be the Indian titles to all lands
falling under the operation of this act, and required for the said
right of way and grants hereinafter made.
'SECT. 3 [as amended by sect. 4 of act of July 2, 1864. 13 Stat.
356]. That there be, and is hereby, granted to the said company, for
the purpose of aiding in the construction of said railroad and
telegraph line, and to secure the safe and speedy transportation of
the mails, troops, munitions of war, and public stores thereon,
every alternate section of public land, designated by odd numbers to
the amount of ten alternate sections per mile on each side of said
railroad, on the line thereof, and within the limits of twenty miles
on each side of said road, not sold, reserved, or otherwise disposed
of by the United States, and to which a pre-emption or homestead
claim may not have attached at the time the line of said road is
definitely fixed: Provided, that all mineral lands shall be excepted
from the operation of this act; but where the same shall contain
timber, the timber thereon is hereby granted to said company. And
all such lands, so granted by this section, which shall not be sold
or disposed of by said company within three years after the entire
road shall have been completed, shall be subject to settlement and
pre-emption, like other lands, at a price not exceeding one dollar
and twenty-five cents per acre, to be paid to said company.
'SECT. 4 [as amended by sect. 6, act of 1864]. That whenever said
company shall have completed twenty consecutive miles of any portion
of said railroad and telegraph line, ready for the service
contemplated by this act, and supplied with all the necessary
drains, culverts, viaducts, crossings, sidings, bridges, turnouts,
watering-places, depots, equipments, furniture, and all other
appurtenances of a first-class railroad, the rails and all other
iron used in the construction and equipment of said road to be
American manufacture of the best quality, the President of the
United States shall appoint three commissioners to examine the same
and report in relation thereto; and if it shall appear to him that
twenty consecutive miles of said railroad and telegraph line have
been completed and equipped in all respects as required by this act,
then, upon certificate of said commissioners to that effect, patents
shall issue conveying the right and title to said lands to said
company, on each side of the road as far as the same is completed,
to the amount [99 U.S.
700, 706] aforesaid; and patents shall in like manner
issue as each twenty miles of said railroad and telegraph line are
completed, upon certificate of said commissioners. Any vacancies
occurring in said board of commissioners by death, resignation, or
otherwise shall be filled by the President of the United States:
Provided, however, that no such commissioners shall be appointed by
the President of the United States unless there shall be presented
to him a statement, verified on oath by the president of said
company, that such twenty miles have been completed, in the manner
required by this act, and setting forth with certainty the points
where such twenty miles begin and where the same end; which oath
shall be taken before a judge of a court of record.
'SECT. 5. That, for the purposes herein mentioned, the Secretary
of the Treasury shall, upon the certificate in writing of said
commissioners of the completion and equipment of forty [afterwards,
by act of 1864, reduced to twenty] consecutive miles of said
railroad and telegraph, in accordance with the provisions of this
act, issue to said company bonds of the United States of $1,000
each, payable in thirty years after date, bearing six per centum per
annum interest (said interest payable semi- annually), which
interest may be paid in United States treasury notes, or any other
money or currency which the United States have or shall declare
lawful money and a legal tender, to the amount of sixteen of said
bonds per mile for each section of forty [twenty] miles; and to
secure the repayment to the United States, as hereinafter provided,
of the amount of said bonds so issued and delivered to said company,
together with all interest thereon which shall have been paid by the
United States, the issue of said bonds and delivery to the company
shall ipso facto constitute a first mortgage on the whole line of
the railroad and telegraph, together with the rolling-stock,
fixtures, and property of every kind and description, and in
consideration of which said bonds may be issued; and on the refusal
or failure of the said company to redeem said bonds, or any part of
them, when required so to do by the Secretary of the Treasury, in
accordance with the provisions of this act, the said road, with all
the rights, functions, immunities, and appurtenances thereunto
belonging, and also all lands granted to the said company by the
United States, which at the time of said default shall remain in the
ownership of the said company, may be taken possession of by the
Secretary of the Treasury for the use and benefit of the United
States: Provided, this section shall not apply to that part of any
road now constructed.
[99 U.S. 700, 707] 'SECT. 6. That the grants aforesaid
are made upon condition that said company shall pay said bonds at
maturity, and shall keep said railroad and telegraph line in repair
and use, and shall at all times transmit despatches over said
telegraph line, and transport mails, troops, and munitions of war,
supplies and public stores upon said railroad for the government,
whenever required to do so by any department thereof, and that the
government shall at all times have the preference in the use of the
same for all the purposes aforesaid (at fair and reasonable rates of
compensation, not to exceed the amounts paid by private parties for
the same kind of service); and all [by act of 1864 reduced to half]
compensation for services rendered for the government shall be
applied to the payment of said bonds and interest until the whole
amount is fully paid. Said company may also pay the United States,
wholly or in part, in the same or other bonds, treasury notes, or
other evidences of debt against the United States, to be allowed at
par; and after said road is completed, until said bonds and interest
are paid, at least five per centum of the net earnings of said road
shall also be annually applied to the payment thereof.'
'SECT. 9. That . . . the Central Pacific Railroad Company of
California, a corporation existing under the laws of the State of
California, are hereby authorized to construct a railroad and
telegraph line from the Pacific coast, at or near San Francisco, or
the navigable waters of the Sacramento River, to the eastern
boundary of California, upon the same terms and conditions, in all
respects, as are contained in this act for the construction of said
railroad and telegraph line first mentioned, and to meet and connect
with the first-mentioned railroad and telegraph line on the eastern
boundary of California. Each of said companies shall file their
acceptance of the conditions of this act in the Department of the
Interior within six months after the passage of this act.
'SECT. 10. That . . . the Central Pacific Railroad Company of
California, after completing its road across said State, is
authorized to continue the construction of said railroad and
telegraph through the Territories of the United States to the
Missouri River, including the branch roads specified in this act,
upon the routes hereinbefore and hereinafter indicated, on the terms
and conditions provided in this act in relation to the said Union
Pacific Railroad Company, until said roads shall meet and connect,
and the whole line of said railroad and branches and telegraph is
completed. [99 U.S.
700, 708] 'SECT. 11. That for three hundred miles of
said road most mountainous and difficult of construction, to wit,
one hundred and fifty miles westwardly from the eastern base of the
Rocky Mountains, and one hundred and fifty miles eastwardly from the
western base of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, said points to be fixed
by the President of the United States, the bonds to be issued in the
construction thereof shall be treble the number per mile
hereinbefore provided; and the same shall be issued, and the lands
herein granted be set apart, upon the construction of every twenty
miles thereof, upon the certificate of the commissioners as
aforesaid that twenty consecutive miles of the same are completed;
and between the sections last named of one hundred and fifty miles
each the bonds to be issued to aid in the construction thereof shall
be double the number per mile first mentioned, and the same shall be
issued and the lands herein granted be set apart, upon the
construction of every twenty miles thereof, upon the certificate of
the commissioners as aforesaid that twenty consecutive miles of the
same are completed: Provided, that no more than fifty thousand of
said bonds shall be issued under this act to aid in constructing the
main line of said railroad and telegraph.'
'SECT. 17. That in case said company or companies shall fail to
comply with the terms and conditions of this act by not completing
said road and telegraph and branches within a reasonable time, or by
not keeping the same in repair and use, but shall permit the same
for an unreasonable time to remain unfinished or out of repair and
unfit for use, Congress may pass any act to insure the speedy
completion of said road and branches or put the same in repair and
use, and may direct the income of said railroad and telegraph line
to be thereafter devoted to the use of the United States, to repay
all such expenditures caused by the default and neglect of such
company or companies: Provided, that if said roads are not completed
so as to form a continuous line of railroad, ready for use, from the
Missouri River to the navigable waters of the Sacramento River, in
California, by the first day of July, eighteen hundred and
seventy-six, the whole of all of said railroads before mentioned,
and to be constructed under the provisions of this act, together
with all their furniture, fixtures, rolling-stock, machineshops,
lands, tenements, and hereditaments, and property of every kind and
character, shall be forfeited to and be taken possession of by the
United States. . . .
'SECT. 18. That whenever it appears that the net earnings of the
entire road and telegraph, including the amount allowed for
[99 U.S. 700, 709]
services rendered for the United States, after deducting
all expenditures,- including repairs, and the furnishing, running,
and managing of said road,- shall exceed ten per centum upon its
cost (exclusive of the five per centum to be paid to the United
States), Congress may reduce the rates of fare thereon, if
unreasonable in amount, and may fix and establish the same by law.
And the better to accomplish the object of this act, namely, to
promote the public interest and welfare by the construction of said
railroad and telegraph line, and keeping the same in working order,
and to secure to the government at all times (but particularly in
time of war) the use and benefits of the same for postal, military,
and other purposes, Congress may at any time-having due regard for
the rights of said companies named herein-add to, alter, amend, or
repeal this act.'
Sections of the Act of July 2, 1864. 13 Stat. 356.
'SECT. 5. That . . ., and that only one-half of the compensation
for services rendered for the government by said companies shall be
required to be applied to the payment of the bonds issued by the
government in aid of the construction of said roads.'
'SECT. 10. That sect. 5 of said act [act of July 1, 1862] be so
modified and amended that the Union Pacific Railroad Company, the
Central Pacific Railroad Company, and any other company authorized
to participate in the construction of said road, may, on the
completion of each section of said road, as provided in this act and
the act to which this act is an amendment, issue their
first-mortgage bonds on their respective railroad and telegraph
lines to an amount not exceeding the amount of the bonds of the
United States, and of even tenor and date, time of maturity, rate
and character of interest, with the bonds authorized to be issued to
said railroad companies respectively. And the lien of the United
States bonds shall be subordinate to that of the bonds of any or
either of said companies hereby authorized to be issued on their
respective roads, property, and equipments, except as to the
provisions of the sixth section of the act to which this act is an
amendment, relating to the transmission of despatches and the
transportation of mails, troops, munitions of war, supplies, and
public stores for the government of the United States.' . .
'SECT. 22. And be it further enacted, that Congress may at any
time alter, amend, or repeal this act.'
[99 U.S. 700, 710]
Act of May 7, 1868. 20 Stat. 56.
October Term, 1878
'Whereas, on the first day of July, anno Domini eighteen hundred
and sixty-two, Congress passed an act entitled 'An Act to aid in the
construction of a railroad and telegraph line from the Missouri
River to the Pacific Ocean, and to secure to the government the use
of the same for postal, military, and other purposes;' and
'Whereas afterwards, on the second day of July, anno Domini
eighteen hundred and sixty-four, Congress passed an act in amendment
of said first- mentioned act; and
'Whereas the Union Pacific Railroad Company, named in said acts,
and under the authority thereof, undertook to construct a railway,
after the passage thereof, over some part of the line mentioned in
said acts; and
'Whereas, under the authority of the said two acts, the Central
Pacific Railroad Company of California, a corporation existing under
the laws of the State of California, undertook to construct a
railway, after the passage of said acts, over some part of the line
mentioned in said acts; and
'Whereas the United States, upon demand of said Central Pacific
Railroad Company, have heretofore issued, by way of loan and as
provided in said acts, to and for the benefit of said company, in
aid of the purposes named in said acts, the bonds of the United
States, payable in thirty years from the date thereof, with interest
at six per centum per annum, payable half-yearly, to the amount of
$25,885,120, which said bonds have been sold in the market or
otherwise disposed of by said company; and
'Whereas the said Central Pacific Company has issued and disposed
of an amount of its own bonds equal to the amount so issued by the
United States, and secured the same by mortgage, and which are, if
lawfully issued and disposed of, a prior and paramount lien, in the
respect mentioned in said acts, to that of the United States, as
stated and secured thereby; and
'Whereas, after the passage of said acts, the Western Pacific
[99 U.S. 700, 711]
Railroad Company, a corporation then existing under the
laws of California, did, under the authority of Congress, become the
assignee of the rights, duties, and obligations of the said Central
Pacific Railroad Company, as provided in the act of Congress passed
on the third of March, anno Domini eighteen hundred and sixty-five,
and did, under the authority of the said act and of the acts
aforesaid, construct a railroad from the city of San Jose to the
city of Sacramento, in California, and did demand and receive from
the United States the sum of $1,970,560 of the bonds of the United
States, of the description before mentioned, as issued to the
Central Pacific Company, and in the same manner and under the
provisions of said acts; and upon and in respect of the bonds so
issued to both said companies the United States have paid interest
to the sum of more than $13, 500,000, which has not been reimbursed;
and
'Whereas said Western Pacific Railroad Company has issued and
disposed of an amount of its own bonds equal to the amount so issued
by the United States to it, and secured the same by mortgage, which
are, if lawfully issued and disposed of, a prior and paramount lien
to that of the United States, as stated, and secured thereby; and
'Whereas said Western Pacific Railroad Company has since become
merged in, and consolidated with, said Central Pacific Railroad
Company, under the name of the Central Pacific Railroad Company,
whereby the said Central Pacific Railroad Company has become liable
to all the burdens, duties, and obligations before resting upon said
Western Pacific Railroad Company; and divers other railroad
companies have been merged in and consolidated with said Central
Pacific Railroad Company; and
'Whereas the United States, upon the demand of the said Union
Pacific Railroad Company, have heretofore issued, by way of loan to
it, and as provided in said acts, the bonds of the United States,
payab e in thirty years from the date thereof, with interest at six
per centum per annum, payable half-yearly, the principal sums of
which amount to $27,236,512; on which the United States have paid
over $10,000,000 interest over and above all reimbursements; which
said bonds have been sold in the market or otherwise disposed of by
said corporation; and
'Whereas said corporation has issued and disposed of an amount of
its own bonds equal to the amount so issued to it by the United
States as aforesaid, and secured the same by mortgage, and which
[99 U.S. 700, 712]
are, if lawfully issued and disposed of, a prior and
paramount lien in the respect mentioned in said acts, to that of the
United States, as stated, and secured thereby; and
'Whereas the total liabilities (exclusive of interest to accrue)
to all creditors, including the United States, of the said Central
Pacific Company, amount in the aggregate to more than $96,000,000,
and those of the said Union Pacific Railroad Company to more than
$88,000,000; and
'Whereas the United States, in view of the indebtedness and
operations of said several railroad companies respectively, and of
the disposition of their respective incomes, are not and cannot,
without further legislation, be secure in their interests in and
concerning said respective railroads and corporations, either as
mentioned in said acts or otherwise; and
'Whereas a due regard to the rights of said several companies
respectively, as mentioned in said act of eighteen hundred and
sixty-two, as well as just security to the United States in the
premises, and in respect of all the matters set forth in said act,
require that the said act of eighteen hundred and sixty-two be
altered and amended as hereinafter enacted; and
'Whereas, by reason of the premises also, as well as for other
causes of public good and justice, the powers provided and reserved
in said act of eighteen hundred and sixty-four for the amendment and
alteration thereof ought also to be exercised as hereinafter
enacted: Therefore,
'Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled, that the net
earnings mentioned in said act of eighteen hundred and sixty-two, of
said railroad companies respectively, shall be ascertained by
deducting from the gross amount of their earnings respectively the
necessary expenses actually paid within the year in operating the
same and keeping the same in a state of repair, and also the sum
paid by them respectively within the year in discharge of interest
on their first-mortgage bonds, whose lien has priority over the lien
of the United States, and excluding from consideration all sums
owing or paid by said companies respectively for interest upon any
other portion of their indebtedness; and the foregoing provision
shall be deemed and taken as an amendment of said act of eighteen
hundred and sixty-four, as well as of said act of eighteen hundred
and sixty-two. This section shall take effect on the thirtieth day
of June next, and be applicable to all computations of net earnings
thereafter; but it shall not affect any right of
[99 U.S. 700, 713]
the United States or of either of said railroad companies
existing prior thereto.
'SECT. 2. That the whole amount of compensation which may, from
time to time, be due to said several railroad companies
respectively, for services rendered for the government, shall be
retained by the United States, one-half thereof bo be presently
applied to the liquidation of the interest paid and to be paid by
the United States upon the bonds so issued by it as aforesaid, to
each of said corporations severally, and the other half thereof to
be turned into the sinking-fund hereinafter provided, for the uses
therein mentioned.
'SECT. 3. That there shall be established in the Treasury of the
United States a sinking-fund, which shall be invested by the
Secretary of the Treasury in bonds of the United States; and the
semi-annual income thereof shall be in like manner from time to time
invested, and the same shall accumulate and be disposed of as
hereinafter mentioned. And in making such investments the Secretary
shall prefer the five per centum bonds of the United States, unless,
for good reasons appearing to him, and which he shall report to
Congress, he shall at any time deem it advisable to invest in other
bonds of the United States. All the bonds belonging to said fund
shall, as fast as they shall be obtained, be so stamped as to show
that they belong to said fund, and that they are not good in the
hands of other holders than the Secretary of the Treasury until they
shall have been indorsed by him, and publicly disposed of pursuant
to this act.
'SECT. 4. That there shall be carried to the credit of the said
fund, on the first day of February in each year, the one-half of the
compensation for services hereinbefore named, rendered for the
government by said Central Pacific Railroad Company, not applied in
liquidation of interest; and, in addition thereto, the said company
shall, on said day in each year, pay into the treasury, to the
credit of said sinking-fund, the sum of $1,200,000, or so much
thereof as shall be necessary to make the five per centum of the net
earnings of its said road payable to the United States, under said
act of eighteen hundred and sixty-two, and the whole sum earned by
it as compensation for services rendered for the United States,
together with the sum by this section required to be paid, amount in
the aggregate to twenty-five per centum of the whole net earnings of
said railroad company, ascertained and defined as hereinbefore
provided, for the year ending on the thirty-first day of December
next preceding. That there shall be carried to the
[99 U.S. 700, 714]
credit of the said fund, on the first day of February in
each year, the one-half of the compensation for services
hereinbefore named, rendered for the government by said Union
Pacific Railroad Company, not applied in liquidation of interest;
and, in addition thereto, the said company shall, on said day in
each year, pay into the treasury, to the credit of said
sinking-fund, the sum of $850,000, or so much thereof as shall be
necessary to make the five per centum of the net earnings of its
said road payable to the United States under said act of eighteen
hundred and sixty- two, and the whole sum earned by it as
compensation for services rendered for the United States, together
with the sum by this section required to be paid, amount in the
aggregate to twenty-five per centum of the whole net earnings of
said railroad company, ascertained and defined as hereinbefore
provided, for the year ending on the thirty-first day of December
next preceding.
'SECT. 5. That whenever it shall be made satisfactorily to appear
to the Secretary of the Treasury, by either of said companies, that
seventy- five per centum of its net earnings, as hereinbefore
defined, for any current year are or were insufficient to pay the
interest for such year upon the obligations of such company, in
respect of which obligations there may exist a lien paramount to
that of the United States, and that such interest has been paid out
of such net earnings, said Secretary is hereby authorized, and it is
made his duty, to remit for such current year so much of the
twenty-five per centum of net earnings required to be paid into the
sinking-fund, as aforesaid, as may have been thus applied and used
in the payment of interest as aforesaid.
'SECT. 6. That no dividend shall be voted, made, or paid for or
to any stockholder or stockholders, in either of said companies
respectively at any time when the said company shall be in default
in respect of the payment either of the sums required as aforesaid
to be paid into said sinking-fund, or in respect of the payment of
the said five per centum of the net earnings, or in respect of
interest upon any debt the lien of which, or of the debt on which it
may accrue, is paramount to that of the United States; and any
officer or person who shall vote, declare, make, or pay, and any
stockholder of any of said companies who shall receive any such
dividend contrary to the provision of this act, shall be liable to
the United States for the amount thereof, which, when recovered,
shall be paid into said sinking-fund. And every such officer,
person, or stockholder who shall knowingly vote, declare, make, or
pay any [99 U.S. 700,
715] such dividend, contrary to the provisions of this
act, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, on conviction
thereof, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding $10,000, and by
imprisonment not exceeding one year.
'SECT. 7. That the said sinking-fund so established and
accumulated shall, at the maturity of said bonds so respectively
issued by the United States, be applied to the payment and
satisfaction thereof, according to the interest and proportion of
each of said companies in said fund, and of all interest paid by the
United States thereon, and not reimbursed, subject to the provisions
of the next section.
'SECT. 8. That said sinking-fund so established and accumulated
shall, according to the interest and proportion of said companies
respectively therein, be held for the protection, security, and
benefit of the lawful and just holders of any mortgage or lien debts
of such companies respectively, lawfully paramount to the rights of
the United States, and for the claims of other creditors, if any,
lawfully chargeable upon the funds so required to be paid into said
sinking-fund, according to their respective lawful priorities, as
well as for the United States, according to the principles of
equity, to the end that all persons having any claim upon said
sinking-fund may be entitled thereto in due order; but the
provisions of this section shall not operate or be held to impair
any existing legal right, except in the manner in this act provided,
of any mortgage, lien, or other creditor of any of said companies
respectively, nor to excuse any of said companies respectively from
the duty of discharging, out of other funds, its debts to any
creditor except the United States.
'SECT. 9. That all sums due to the United States from any of said
companies respectively, whether payable presently or not, and all
sums required to be paid to the United States or into the treasury,
or into said sinking-fund under this act, or under the acts
hereinbefore referred to, or otherwise, are hereby declared to be a
lien upon all the property, estate, rights, and franchises of every
description granted or conveyed by the United States to any of said
companies respectively or jointly, and also upon all the estate and
property, real, personal, and mixed, assets, and income of the said
several railroad companies respectively, from whatever source
derived, subject to any lawfully prior and paramount mortgage, lien,
or claim thereon. But this section shall not be construed to prevent
said companies respectively from using and disposing of any of their
property or assets in the ordinary, proper, and lawful course
[99 U.S. 700, 716]
of their current business, in good faith and for valuable
consideration.
'SECT. 10. That it is hereby made the duty of the
Attorney-General of the United States to enforce, by proper
proceeding against the said several railroad companies respectively
or jointly, or against either of them, and others, all the rights of
the United, States under this act and under the acts hereinbefore
mentioned, and under any other act of Congress or right of the
United States; and in any suit or proceeding already commenced, or
that may be hereafter commenced, against any of said companies,
either alone or with other parties, in respect of matters arising
under this act, or under the acts or rights hereinbefore mentioned
or referred to, it shall be the duty of the court to determine the
very right of the matter without regard to matters of form, joinder
of parties, multifariousness, or other matters not affecting the
substantial rights and duties arising out of the matters and acts
hereinbefore stated and referred to.
'SECT. 11. That if either of said railroad companies shall fail
to perform all and singular the requirements of this act and of the
acts hereinbefore mentioned, and of ny other act relating to said
company, to be by it performed, for the period of six months next
after such performance may be due, such failure shall operate as a
forfeiture of all the rights, privileges, grants, and franchises
derived or obtained by it from the United States; and it shall be
the duty of the Attorney-General to cause such forfeiture to be
judicially enforced.
'SECT. 12. That nothing in this act shall be construed or taken
in any wise to affect or impair the right of Congress at any time
hereafter further to alter, amend, or repeal the said acts
hereinbefore mentioned; and this act shall be subject to alteration,
amendment, or repeal, as, in the opinion of Congress, justice or the
public welfare may require. And nothing herein contained shall be
held to deny, exclude, or impair any right or remedy in the premises
now existing in favor of the United States.
'SECT. 13. That each and every of the provisions in this act
contained shall severally and respectively be deemed, taken, and
held as in alteration and amendment of said act of eighteen hundred
and sixty-two and of said act of eighteen hundred and sixty-four
respectively, and of both said acts.'
The legislature of California, April 4, 1864, passed the following
act (Stat. for 1863-64, p. 471):---
[99 U.S. 700, 717] 'An Act to aid in
carrying out the Pacific Railroad and Telegraph Act of Congress and
other matters relating thereto.
'The people of the State of California, represented in Senate and
Assembly, do enact as follows:--
'SECT. 1. Whereas, by the provisions of an act of Congress,
entitled 'An Act to aid in the construction of a railroad and
telegraph line from the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean, and to
secure to the government the use of the same for postal, military,
and other purposes, approved July 1, 1862,' the Central Pacific
Railroad Company of California is authorized to construct a railroad
and telegraph line in the State of California, and in the
Territories lying east of said State towards the Missouri River;
therefore, to enable the said company more fully and completely to
comply with and perform the provisions and conditions of said act of
Congress, the said company, their successors and assigns, are hereby
authorized and empowered, and the right, power, and privilege is
hereby granted to, conferred upon, and vested in them to construct,
maintain, and operate the said railroad and telegraph line not only
in the State of California, but also in the said Territories lying
east of and between said State and the Missouri River, with such
branches and extensions of said railroad and telegraph line, or
either of them, as said company may deem necessary or proper; and
also the right of way for said railroad and telegraph line over any
lands belonging to this State, and on, over, and along any streets,
roads, highways, rivers, streams, waters, and watercourses, but the
same to be so constructed as not to obstruct or destroy the passage
or navigation of the same; and also the right to condemn and
appropriate to the use of said company such private property,
rights, privileges, and franchises as may be proper, necessary, or
convenient for the purposes of said railroad and telegraph, the
compensation therefore to be ascertained and paid under and by
special proceedings, as prescribed in the act providing for the
incorporation of railroad companies, approved March 20, 1861, and
the acts supplementary and amendatory thereof; said company to be
subject to all the laws of this State concerning railroad and
telegraph lines, except that messages and property of the United
States, of this State, and of the said company, shall have priority
of transportation and transmission over said line of railroad and
telegraph; hereby confirming to and vesting in said company all the
rights, privileges, franchises, power, and authority conferred upon,
granted to, or vested in said company by said act of Congress;
hereby repealing all laws and parts of
[99 U.S. 700, 718]
laws inconsistent or in conflict with the provisions of
this act, or the rights a d privileges herein granted.
The State of Nevada, March 9, 1866 (the Territory of that name
having in the mean time become a State), passed, mutatis mutandis, a
similar act. It will be found in the laws of that State for 1866, c.
112.
The cases were heard at the same time.
Mr. Samuel Shellabarger and Mr. Jeremiah M. Wilson for the Union
Pacific Railroad Company.
The Attorney-General and Mr. Edwin B. Smith, Assistant Attorney-
General, for the United States.
Mr. Benjamin H. Hill and Mr. S. W. Sanderson for the Central
Pacific Railroad Company, and Mr. George H. Williams for Gallatin.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the court.
The single question presented by the case of the Union Pacific
Railroad Company is as to the constitutionality of that part of the
act of May 7, 1878, which establishes in the treasury of the United
States a sinking-fund. The validity of the rest of the act is not
necessarily involved.
It is our duty, when required in the regular course of judicial
proceedings, to declare an act of Congress void if not within the
legislative power of the United States; but this declaration should
never be made except in a clear case. Every possible presumption is in
favor of the validity of a statute, and this continues until the
contrary is shown beyond a rational doubt. One branch of the
government cannot encroach on the domain of another without danger.
The safety of our institutions depends in no small degree on a strict
observance of this salutary rule.
The United States cannot any more than a State interfere with
private rights, except for legitimate governmental purposes. They are
not included within the constitutional prohibition which prevents
States from passing laws impairing the obligation of contracts, but
equally with the States they are prohibited
[99 U.S. 700, 719]
from depriving persons or corporations of property without due
process of law. They cannot legislate back to themselves, without
making compensation, the lands they have given this corporation to aid
in the construction of its railroad. Neither can they by legislation
compel the corporation to discharge its obligations in respect to the
subsidy bonds otherwise than according to the terms of the contract
already made in that connection. The United States are as much bound
by their contracts as are individuals. If they repudiate their
obligations, it is as much repudiation, with all the wrong and
reproach that term implies, as it would be if the repudiator had been
a State or a municipality or a citizen. No change can be made in the
title created by the grant of the lands, or in the contract for the
subsidy bonds, without the consent of the corporation. All this is
indisputable.
The contract of the company in respect to the subsidy bonds is to
pay both principal and interest when the principal matures, unless the
debt is sooner discharged by the application of one-half the
compensation for transportation and other services rendered for the
government, and the five per cent of net earnings as specified in the
charter. This was decided in Union Pacific Railroad Co. v. United
States,
91 U.S. 72 . The precise point to be determined now is, whether a
statute which requires the company in the management of its affairs to
set aside a portion of its current income as a sinking-fund to meet
this and other mortgage debts when they mature, deprives the company
of its property without due process of law, or in any other way
improperly interferes with vested rights.
This corporation is a creature of the United States. It is a
private corporation created for public purposes, and its property is
to a large extent devoted to public uses. It is, therefore, subject to
legislative control so far as its business affects the public
interests. Chicago, Burlington, & Quincy Railroad Co. v. Iowa,
94 U.S. 155 .
It is unnecessary to decide what power Congress would have had over
the charter if the right of amendment had not been reserved; for, as
we think, that reservation has been made. In the act of 1862, sect.
18, it was accompanied by an explanatory
[99 U.S. 700, 720]
statement showing that this had been done 'the better to
accomplish the object of this act, namely, to promote the public
interest and welfare by the construction of said railroad and
telegraph line, and keeping the same in working order, and to secure
to the government at all times (but especially in time of war) the use
and benefits of the same for postal, military, and other purposes' and
by an injunction that it should be used with 'due regard for the
rights of said companies.' In the act of 1864, however, there is
nothing except the simple words (sect. 22) 'that Congress may at any
time alter, amend, and repeal this act.' Taking both acts together,
and giving the explanatory statement in that of 1862 all the effect it
can be entitled to, we are of the opinion that Congress not only
retains, but has given special notice of its intention to retain, full
and complete power to make such alterations and amendments of the
charter as come within the just scope of legislative power. That this
power has a limit, no one can doubt. All agree that it cannot be used
to take away property already acquired under the operation of the
charter, or to deprive the corporation of the fruits actually reduced
to possession of contracts lawfully made; but, as was said by this
court, through Mr. Justice Clifford, in Miller v. The State (15 Wall.
498), 'it may safely be affirmed that the reserved power may be
exercised, and to almost any extent, to carry into effect the original
purposes of the grant, or to secure the due administration of its
affairs, so as to protect the rights of stockholders and of creditors,
and for the proper disposition of its assets;' and again, in Holyoke
Company v. Lyman (id. 519), 'to protect the rights of the public and
of the corporators, or to promote the due administration of the
affairs of the corporation.' Mr. Justice Field, also speaking for the
court, was even more explicit when, in Tomlinson v. Jessup (id. 459),
he said, 'the reservation affects the entire relation between the
State and the corporation, and places under legislative control all
right, privileges, and immunities derived by its charter directly from
the State;' and again, as late as Railroad Company v. Maine (
96 U.S. 510 ), 'by the reservation . . . the State retained the
power to alter it [the charter] in all particulars constituting the
grant to the new company,
[99 U.S. 700, 721] formed under it, of
corporate rights, privileges, and immunities.' Mr. Justice Swayne, in
Shields v. Ohio (
95 U.S. 324 ), says, by way of limitation, 'The alterations must
be reasonable; they must be made in good faith, and be consistent with
the object and scope of the act of incorporation. Sheer oppression and
wrong cannot be inflicted under the guise of amendment or alteration.'
The rules as here laid down are fully sustained by authority. Further
citations are unnecessary.
Giving full effect to the principles which have thus been
authoritatively stated, we think it safe to say, that whatever rules
Congress might have prescribed in the original charter for the
government of the corporation in the administration of its affairs, it
retained the power to establish by amendment. In so doing it cannot
undo what has already been done, and it cannot unmake contracts that
have already been made, but it may provide for what shall be done in
the future, and may direct what preparation shall be made for the due
performance of contracts already entered into. It might originally
have prohibited the borrowing of money on mortgage, or it might have
said that no bonded debt should be created without ample provision by
sinking-fund to meet it at maturity. Not having done so at first, it
cannot now by direct legislation vacate mortgages already made under
the powers originally granted, nor release debts already contracted. A
prohibition now agai st contracting debts will not avoid debts already
incurred. An amendment making it unlawful to issue bonds payable at a
distant day, without at the same time establishing a fund for their
ultimate redemption, will not invalidate a bond already out. All such
legislation will be confined in its operation to the future.
Legislative control of the administration of the affairs of a
corporation may, however, very properly include regulations by which
suitable provision will be secured in advance for the payment of
existing debts when they fall due. If a State under its reserved power
of charter amendment were to provide that no dividends should be paid
to stockholders from current earnings until some reasonable amount had
been set apart to meet maturing obligations, we think it would not be
seriously contended that such legislation was unconstitutional, either
because [99 U.S. 700,
722] it impaired the obligations of the charter contract
or deprived the corporation of its property without due process of
law. Take the case of an insurance company dividing its unearned
premiums among its stockholders without laying by any thing to meet
losses, would any one doubt the power of the State under its reserved
right of amendment to prohibit such dividends until a suitable fund
had been established to meet losses from outstanding risks? Clearly
not, we think, and for the obvious reason that while stockholders are
entitled to receive all dividends that may legitimately be declared
and paid out of the current net income, their claims on the property
of the corporation are always subordinate to those of creditors. The
property of a corporation constitutes the fund from which its debts
are to be paid, and if the officers improperly attempt to divert this
fund from its legitimate uses, justice requires that they should in
some way be restrained. A court of equity would do this, if called
upon in an appropriate manner; and it needs no argument to show that a
legislative regulation which requires no more of the corporation than
a court would compel it to do without legislation is not unreasonable.
Such a regulation, instead of being destructive in its character,
would be eminently conservative. Railroads are a peculiar species of
property, and railroad corporations are in some respects peculiar
corporations. A large amount of money is required for construction and
equipment, and this to a great extent is represented by a funded debt,
which, as well as the capital stock, is sought after for investment,
and is distributed widely among large numbers of persons. Almost as a
matter of necessity it is difficult to secure any concert of action
among the different classes of creditors and stockholders, and
consequently all are compelled to trust in a great degree to the
management of the corporation by those who are elected as officers,
without much, if any, opportunity for personal supervision. The
interest of the stockholders, who, as a rule, alone have the power to
select the managers, is not unfrequently antagonistic to those of the
debt-holders, and it therefore is especially proper that the
government, whose creature the corporation is, should exercise its
general powers of supervision and do all it reasonably may to protect
investments in the [99
U.S. 700, 723] bonds and stock from loss through
improvident management.
No better case can be found for illustration than is presented by
the history of this corporation. Without undertaking in any manner to
cast censure upon those by whose matchless energy this great road was
built and, as if by magic, put into operation, it is a fact which
cannot be denied, that, when the road was in a condition to be run,
its bonds and stocks represented vastly more than the actual cost of
the labor and material which went into its construction. Great
undertakings like this, whose future is at the time uncertain,
requiring as they do large amounts of money to carry them on, seem to
make it necessary that extraordinary inducements should be held out to
capitalists to enter upon them, since a failure is almost sure to
involve those who make the venture in financial ruin. It is not,
however, the past with which we are now to deal, but rather the
present and the future. We are not sitting in judgment upon the
history of this corporation, but upon its present condition. We now
know that when the road was completed its funded debt alone was as
follows: First mortgage, $27,232,000, subsidy bonds, $27,236,512, all
maturing thirty years after date, and that the average time of its
maturity is during the year 1897. In addition to this are now the
sinking-fund bonds, the land-grant bonds, and the Omaha-bridge bonds,
amounting to at least $ 20,000,000 more. The interest on the first
mortgage and all other classes of bonds, except the subsidy bonds,
will undoubtedly be met as it falls due; but on the subsidy bonds, as
has already been seen, no interest is payable, except out of the half
of the earnings for government service and the five per cent of net
earnings, until the maturity of the principal. Thus far, as we have
had occasion to observe in the various suits which have come before us
during the past few years, involving an inquiry into these matters,
the payments from these sources have fallen very far short of keeping
down the accruing interest, and according to present appearances it is
not probably too much to say that when the debt is due there will be
as much owing the United States for interest paid as for principal.
There will then become due from this company, in less than twenty
years from this date, in the neighborhood
[99 U.S. 700, 724]
of $80,000,000, secured by the first and subsidy mortgages. In
addition to this are the capital stock, representing $36,000,000 more,
and the funded debt inferior in its lien to that of the subsidy bonds.
All these different classes of securities have become favorites in the
market for investments, and they are widely scattered at home and
abroad. They have taken to a certain extent the place of the public
funds as investments. With the exception of the land-grant, which is
first devoted to the payment of the land-grant bonds, but little if
any thing except the earnings of the company can be depended on to
meet these obligations when they mature. The company has been in the
receipt of large earnings since the completion of its road, and, after
paying the interest on its own bonds at maturity, has been dividing
the remainder, or a very considerable portion of it, from time to time
among its stockholders, without laying by any thing to meet the
enormous debt which, considering the amount, is so soon to become due.
It is easy to see that in this way the stockholders of the present
time are receiving in the shape of dividends that which those of the
future may be compelled to lose. It is hardly to be presumed that this
great weight of pecuniary obligation can be removed without
interfering with dividends hereafter, unless at once some preparation
is made by sinking-fund or otherwise to prevent it. Under these
circumstances, the stockholders of to-day have no property right to
dividends which shall absorb all the net earnings after paying debts
already due. The current earnings belong to the corporation, and the
stockholders, as such, have no right to them as against the just
demands of creditors.
The United States occupy towards this corporation a two-fold
relation,- that of sovereign and that of creditor. United States v.
Union Pacific Railroad Co.,
98 U.S. 569 . Their rights as sovereign are not crippled because
they are creditors, and their privileges as creditors are not enlarged
by the charter because of their sovereignty. They cannot, as
creditors, demand payment of what is due them before the time limited
by the contract. Neither can they, as sovereign or creditors, require
the company to pay the other debts it owes before they mature. But out
of regard to the rights of the subsequent lienholders
[99 U.S. 700, 725]
and stockholders, it is not only their right, but their duty,
as sovereign to see to it that the current stockholders do not, in the
administration of the affairs of the corporation, a propriate to their
own use that which in equity belongs to others. A legislative
regulation which does no more than require them to submit to their
just contribution towards the payment of a bonded debt cannot in any
sense be said to deprive them of their property without due process of
law.
The question still remains, whether the particular provision of
this statute now under consideration comes within this rule. It
establishes a sinking-fund for the payment of debts when they mature,
but does not pay the debts. The original contracts of loan are not
changed. They remain as they were before, and are only to be met at
maturity. All that has been done is to make it the duty of the company
to lay by a portion of its current net income to meet its debts when
they do fall due. In this way the current stockholders are prevented
to some extent from depleting the treasury for their own benefit, at
the expense of those who are to come after them. This is no more for
the benefit of the creditors than it is for the corporation itself. It
tends to give permanency to the value of the stock and bonds, and is
in the direct interest of a faithful administration of affairs. It
simply compels the managers for the time being to do what they ought
to do voluntarily. The fund to be created is not so much for the
security of the creditors as the ultimate protection of the public and
the corporators.
To our minds it is a matter of no consequence that the Secretary of
the Treasury is made the sinking-fund agent and the treasury of the
United States the depository, or that the investment is to be made in
the public funds of the United States. This does not make the deposit
a payment of the debt due the United States. The duty of the manager
of every sinking- fund is to seek some safe investment for the moneys
as they accumulate in his hands, so that when required they may be
promptly available. Certainly no objection can be made to the security
of this investment. In fact, we do not understand that complaint is
made in this particular. The objection is to the creation of the fund
and not to the investment, if that investment is not in law a payment.
[99 U.S. 700, 726]
Neither is it a fatal objection that the half of the earnings
for services rendered the government, which by the act of 1864 was to
be paid to the companies, is put into this fund. The government is not
released from the payment. While the money is retained, it is only
that it may be put into the fund, which, although kept in the
treasury, is owned by the company. When the debts are paid, the
securities into which the moneys have been converted that remain
undisposed of must be handed over to the corporation. Under the
circumstances, the retaining of the money in the treasury as part of
the sinking-fund is in law a payment to the company.
Not to pursue this branch of the inquiry any further, it is
sufficient now to say that we think the legislation complained of may
be sustained on the ground that it is a reasonable regulation of the
administration of the affairs of the corporation, and promotive of the
interests of the public and the corporators. It takes nothing from the
corporation or the stockholders which actually belongs to them. It
oppresses no one, and inflicts no wrong. It simply gives further
assurance of the continued solvency and prosperity of a corporation in
which the public are so largely interested, and adds another guaranty
to the permanent and lasting value of its vast amount of securities.
The legislation is also warranted under the authority by way of
amendment to change or modify the rights, privileges, and immunities
granted by the charter. The right of the stockholders to a division of
the earnings of the corporation is a privilege derived from the
charter. When the charter and its amendments first became laws, and
the work on the road was undertaken, it was by no means sure that the
enterprise would prove a financial success. No statutory restraint was
then put upon the power of declaring dividends. It was not certain
that the stock would ever find a place on the list of marketable
securities, or that there would be any bonds subsequent in lien to
that of the United States which could need legislative or other
protection. Hence, all this was left unprovided for in the charter and
its amendments as originally granted, and the reservation of the power
of amendment inserted so as to enable the government to accommodate
its legislation to the requirements
[99 U.S. 700, 727] of the public and the
corporation as they should be developed in the future. Now it is known
that the stock of the company has found its way to the markets of the
world; that large issues of bonds have been made beyond what was
originally contemplated, and that the company has gone on for years
dividing its earnings without any regard to its increasing debt, or to
the protection of those whose rights may be endangered if this
practice is permitted to continue. For this reason Congress has
interfered, and, under its reserved power, limited the privilege of
declaring dividends on current earnings, so as to confine the
stockholders to what is left after suitable provision has been made
for the protection of creditors and stockholders against the
disastrous consequences of a constantly increasing debt. As this
increase cannot be kept down by payment unless voluntarily made by the
corporation, the next best thing has been done, that is to say, a fund
safely invested, which increases as the debt increases, has been
established and set apart to meet the debt when the time comes that
payment can be required.
The only material difference between the Central Pacific Company
and the Union Pacific lies in the fact that in the case of the Central
Pacific the special franchises, as well as the land and subsidy bonds,
were granted by the United States to a corporation formed and
organized under the laws of California, while in that of the Union
Pacific Congress created the corporation to which the grants were
made. The California corporation was organized under a State law with
an authorized capital of $ 8,500,000, to build a road from the city of
Sacramento to the eastern boundary of the State, a distance of about
one hundred and fifteen miles. Under the operation of its California
charter, it could only borrow money to an amount not exceeding the
capital stock, and must provide a sinking- fund for the ultimate
redemption of the bonds. Hittell's Cal. Laws, 1850- 64, sect. 840. No
power was granted to build any road outside the State, or in the State
except between the termini named. By the act of 1862, Congress granted
this corporation the right to build a road from San Francisco, or the
navigable waters of the Sacramento River, to the eastern boundary of
the State, and from there through
[99 U.S. 700, 728] the Territories of the
United States until it met the road of the Union Pacific Company. For
this purpose all the rights, privileges, and franchises were given
this company that were granted the Union Pacific Company, except the
franchise of being a corporation, and such others as were merely
incident to the organization of the company. The land-grants and
subsidy bonds to this company were the same in character and quantity
as those to the Union Pacific, and the same right of amendment was
reserved. Each of the companies was required to file in the Department
of the Interior its acceptance of the conditions imposed, before it
could become entitled to the benefits conferred by the act. This was
promptly done by the Central Pacific Company, and in this way that
corporation voluntarily submitted itself to such legislative control
by Congress as was reserved under the power of amendment.
No objection has ever been made by the State to this action by
Congress. On the contrary, the State, by implication at least, has
given its assent to what was done, for in 1864 it passed 'An Act to
aid in carrying out the provisions of the Pacific railroad and
telegraph act of Congress,' and thereby confirmed and vested in the
company 'all the rights, privileges, franchises, power, and authority
conferred upon, granted to, or ve ted in said company by said act of
Congress,' and repealed 'all laws or parts of laws inconsistent or in
conflict with . . . the rights and privileges herein (therein)
granted.' Hittell's Laws, sect. 4798; Acts of 1863-64, 471. Inasmuch
as by the Constitution of California then in force ( art. 4, sect. 31)
corporations, except for municipal purposes, could not be created by
special act, but must be formed under general laws, the legal effect
of this act is probably little more than a legislative recognition by
the State of what had been done by the United States with one of the
State corporations.
In so doing, the State but carried out its original policy in
reference to the same subject-matter, for as early as May 1, 1852, an
act was passed reciting 'that the interests of this State, as well as
those of the whole Union, require the immediate action of the
government of the United States, for the construction of national
thoroughfare connecting the navigable
[99 U.S. 700, 729] waters of the Atlantic
and Pacific Oceans, for the purposes of national safety, in the event
of war, and to promote the highest commercial interests of the
Republic,' and granting the right of way through the State to the
United States for the purpose of constructing such a road. Hittell's
Laws, sect. 4791; Acts of 1852, 150. In 1859 (Acts of 1859, 391), a
resolution was passed calling a convention 'to consider the refusal of
Congress to take efficient measures for the construction of a railroad
from the Atlantic States to the Pacific, and to adopt measures whereby
the building of said railroad can be accomplished;' and at the same
session of the legislature a memorial was prepared asking Congress to
pass a law authorizing the construction of such a road, and asking
also a grant of lands to aid in the construction of railroads in the
State. Acts of 1859, 395. Nothing was done, however, by Congress until
the Rebellion, which at once called the attention of all who were
interested in the preservation of the Union to the immense practical
importance of such a road for military purposes, and then, as soon as
a plan could be matured and the necessary forms of legislation gone
through with, the act of July 1, 1862, was passed. But this was not
enough to interest capitalists in the undertaking, and although the
legislature of California during the year 1863 passed several acts
intended to hold out further inducements, but little was accomplished
until the amendatory act of Congress in 1864, which, besides
authorizing the first mortgage, and changing in some important
particulars the conditions on which the subsidy bonds were to be
issued, conferred additional powers on the corporation, some of which,
such as the right of eminent domain in the Territories, the State
could not grant, and others, such as the right of issuing
first-mortgage bonds without a sinking-fund, and in excess of the
capital stock, it had seen fit to withhold. This act also reserved to
Congress full power of amendment, and was promptly accepted by the
corporation. With this addition of corporate powers and pecuniary
resources the work was pushed forward to completion with unexampled
energy. But for the corporate powers and financial aid granted by
Congress it is not probable that the road would have been built. The
first-mortgage bonded debt was created without a sinking-fund, and the
road [99 U.S. 700, 730]
in the Territories built under the authority of Congress,
assented to and ratified by the State.
The Western Pacific Company, now, by consolidation, a part of the
Central Pacific Company, was also organized, Dec. 13, 1862 (Acts of
1863, 81), under the general railroad law of California, with power to
construct a road from a point on the San Francisco and San Jose
Railroad, at or near San Jose, to Sacramento, and there connect with
the road of the Central Pacific Company. Afterwards the Central
Pacific Company assigned to this corporation its rights, under the act
of Congress, to construct the road between San Jose and Sacramento;
and this assignment was ratified by Congress, 'wit all the privileges
and benefits of the several acts of Congress relating thereto, and
subject to all the conditions thereof.' 13 Stat. 504. By the same act
further privileges were granted by the United States both to the
Central Pacific and Western Pacific Companies, in respect to their
issue of first-mortgage bonds.
Under this legislation, we are of the opinion that, to the extent
of the powers, rights, privileges, and immunities granted these
corporations by the United States, Congress retains the right of
amendment, and that in this way it may regulate the administration of
the affairs of the company in reference to the debts created under its
own authority, in a manner not inconsistent with the requirements of
the original State charter, as modified by the State Aid Act of 1864,
accepting what had been done by Congress. This is as far as it is
necessary to go now. It will be time enough to consider what more may
be done when the necessity arises. As yet, the State has not attempted
to interfere with the action of Congress. All complaint thus far has
come from the corporation itself, which, to secure the government aid,
accepted all the conditions that were attached to the grants,
including the reservation of power to amend.
It is clear that the establishment of a sinking-fund by the act of
1878 is not at all in conflict with any thing contained in the
original State charter, for by that charter no such debt could be
created without provision for such a fund. This part of the act of
1878 is, therefore, in the exact line of the policy
[99 U.S. 700, 731]
of the State, and does no more than place the company again, to
some extent, under obligations from which it had been released by
congressional legislation. So, too, the reservation of the power of
amendment by Congress is equally consistent with the settled policy of
the State; for not only the State charter, in terms, makes such a
reservation in favor of the State, but the Constitution expressly
provides that all laws for the creation of corporations 'may be
altered from time to time, or repealed.' Art. 4, sect. 31.
It is not necessary now to inquire whether, in ascertaining the net
earnings of the company for the purpose of fixing the amount of the
annual contributions to the sinking-fund, the earnings of all the
roads owned by the present corporation are to be taken into the
account, or only of those in aid of which the land-grants were made
and the subsidy bonds issued. The question here is only as to the
power of Congress to establish the fund at all. If disputes should
ever arise as to the manner of stating the accounts, they can be
settled at some future time.
Judgment affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, MR. JUSTICE STRONG, and MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY,
dissented.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG.
In my opinion, the act of Congress of May 7, 1878, is plainly
transgressive of legislative power. As was said by Mr. Hamilton in his
celebrated communication to the Senate of Jan. 20, 1795, 'when a
government enters into a contract with an individual, it deposes, as
to the matter of the contract, its constitutional authority, and
exchanges the character of legislator for that of a moral agent, with
the same rights and obligations as an individual. Its promises may be
justly considered as excepted out of its power to legislate, unless in
aid of them. It is in theory impossible to reconcile the idea of a
promise which obliges, with a power to make a law which can vary the
effect of it.' 3 Hamilton's Works, 518, 519. Opinions similar to this
have often found expression in judicial decisions, even in those of
this court. If this [99
U.S. 700, 732] be sound doctrine, it is as much beyond
the power of a legislature, under any pretence, to alter a contract
into which the government has entered with a private individual, as it
is for any other party to a contract to change its terms without the
consent of the person contracting with him. As to its contract the
government in all its departments has laid aside its sovereignty, and
it stands on the same footing with p ivate contractors.
The contracts of the government with the Union Pacific Railroad
Company and with the Central Pacific, which the act of Congress of
1878 has in view, were not made by the act of 1862, the act chartering
the former company, nor by the amending act of 1864. They were made
after those acts had been accepted by the companies, and after their
chartered rights had been completely acquired. There was no agreement
of the companies to repay the loan of government bonds made to them,
until the bonds were issued and delivered. The companies were under no
obligation to accept the loan and assume the liability resulting from
its acceptance. The contracts, therefore, are no part of the charter
of the Union Pacific Company, and no part of the acts of 1862 or 1864.
They are subsequent to those acts and independent of them. It is true
Congress authorized the loan. It made the companies offers to lend
upon certain conditions; and when those offers and conditions were
subsequently accepted, the contracts of loan were made. Not until
then. Before that time there was nothing but an unaccepted offer.
What, then, was the contract when it was made? The government lent
its bonds, and, in consideration of the loan, each company assumed
five obligations: 1st, to pay the bonds at their maturity, that is, at
the expiration of thirty years; 2d, to keep the railroad and telegraph
line in repair and use; 3d, to furnish transmission of despatches and
transportation for the government at reasonable rates, allowing it a
preference for such purposes; 4th, to apply to the payment of the
bonds and interest half the compensation due to it from the government
for services rendered, until the whole amount of the loan is fully
paid; and, 5th, after the completion of the railroad, to apply to the
payment of the bonds at least five per cent annually
[99 U.S. 700, 733]
of its net earnings. The lender required and the borrower
undertook nothing more.
It is manifest that by this contract the government acquired a
vested right to payment at the time and in the mode specified, as well
as to preference of transportation and transmission of despatches; and
the company acquired a vested right to retain the consideration given
for its assumption,-that is, a vested right to withhold payment until
by the terms of the contract payment became due. The contract implied
an agreement not to call for payment or additional security before
that time. I cannot conceive of any rational doubt of this. There is
no technicality about vested rights. Most of them grow out of
contracts, and, no matter how they arise, they are all equally sacred,
equally beyond the reach of legislative interference. A vested right
of action is property in the same sense in which rights to tangible
things are, and is equally protected. Whether it springs from contract
or from other rules of the common law, it is not competent for the
legislature to take it away. If we look at what must have been the
understanding of all parties to these contracts of loan, the rights
created and vested under them cannot be in doubt. The government
sought to induce private adventurers to construct a railroad and
telegraph line to the Pacific Ocean,-a work which necessarily required
years and immense expenditures for its accomplishment. A loan,
repayable on call or within a short time, would have been no
inducement. Had it been dreamed that a call could have been made at
any time thereafter designated by Congress, it is inconceivable that
the loan proffered would have been accepted. It would have furnished
no reliable basis for an attempt to build the road. The parties could
not so have understood the bargain. The bonds were required to be paid
by the companies only at their maturity, except so far as half-payment
for governmental service, and five five per cent of the net earnings,
after the completion of the road, might pay. The contract, therefore,
means exactly what it would have meant had it contained the express
stipulation: 'The United States shall not require payment of the
amount of the bonds, or any part thereof (except half- compensation
for services, and five per cent of net earnings), until the expiration
of thirty years from [99
U.S. 700, 734] their issue to the company, or date, nor
shall additional security be required, beyond the lien reserved.' Such
was the contract. It was not one of the franchises granted in the
charter of the Union Pacific or the Central Pacific, but it was a
business transaction, differing in nothing, except parties, from what
it would have been if it had been made between two private
individuals. It is true Congress authorized the loan on the terms upon
which it was made; but, as I have said, the contract was not made by
the act of Congress, or with Congress. It was a subsequent
transaction, and the United States became a party to it, not in its
sovereign character, but as a civil corporation, as said by Mr.
Hamilton, with the same rights and obligations as a private person,
and no more.
Now, what has been attempted by the act of May 7, 1878? That act
was passed with sole reference to this contract, and all its
provisions have in view the imposition of additional obligations upon
the railroad company. It does not purport to be a repeal of the
charter. Its leading purpose is to take control of the property of the
debtor, and sequester it for the security of a debt, which, by the
terms of the contract, is not due and payable for years to come. I
shall not go over all its provisions. It will be sufficient to notice
some of the more prominent ones, which, if they are ruled to be
operative, greatly change the contract which the parties made when the
bonds were delivered and accepted, when the contract was closed, and
which impose new and oppressive obligations upon the debtor.
By the contract only one-half the compensation for services
rendered to the government was required to be applied to the payment
of the bonds, but by this act the whole amount of the compensation
which may from time to time be due for services rendered to the
government is directed to be retained by the United States, and, at
the same time, the obligation to render those services is continued.
By the third section of the act a sinking-fund is established in the
treasury of the United States, that is, in the treasury of the
creditor; and the fourth section enacts that there shall be carried
into that fund, on the first day of February in each year, the
one-half of the compensation above
[99 U.S. 700, 735] named, not applied in
liquidation of interest. By the contract the debtor was bound to pay
only five per cent of its net earnings, after the completion of the
road, annually to the creditor; but this act requires the debtor to
pay into the creditor's treasury, to the credit of the sinking-fund,
twenty-five per cent of its whole net earnings, on the 1st of February
in each year. The act further directs that the sinking-fund thus
created shall, with its accumulations, be invested in bonds of the
United States, and at the maturity of the bonds loaned to the debtor
be applied to the payment and satisfaction thereof, and of all
interest paid by the United States. There are other provisions of this
act intended to enforce compliance with these newly added obligations
imposed upon the debtor, as also provisions that the sinking-fund
shall be held for the benefit, protection, and security of other
lien-creditors of the debtor. But I deem it unnecessary to mention
them in detail. Those which I have mentioned are enough for the
present case. No one can deny that they materially change the contract
of loan and borrowing previously existing between the government and
the railroad companies, and change it at the will of the creditor
alone. Nor can it be denied that they impose upon the debtors new and
onerous burdens that they never agreed to assume. Practically, they
enforce payment of the debt before, by the terms of the contract, it
is due. The act seizes the half-compensation, which the government
agreed should not be retained, and covers it into the treasury,
appropriating it to the payment of the debt. For nothing else can it
be u ed. The act also requires payment into the treasury of
twenty-five per cent of the net earnings of the company, instead of
five per cent only, as stipulated when the contract was made. It is
true it does not make immediate application of the sums thus withheld
and demanded to the extinguishment of the debt. It declares that they
shall be applied to the payment of the debt and interest 'at the
maturity of the bonds.' But this is a distinction without a
difference, obviously made to evade what it was known could not
lawfully be done. An immediate application might as well have been
directed. It would probably be better for the debtor if the
application were immediately made. The money is taken from the debtor,
withdrawn entirely from the
[99 U.S. 700, 736] debtor's control and
use, and put into the treasury of the creditor, and there left to the
mere agreement of the creditor to apply it to payment. I apprehend no
plain man of common sense will hesitate to conclude that this is
exacting payment before the debt is due. If A. borrows from B. $1,000,
and gives his note therefor, payable at the expiration of five years,
and at the end of one year the lender demands that there be placed in
his hands by the debtor a sum of money to meet the note when it shall
fall due, it will hardly be contended that would not be requiring
payment before the debtor was bound to pay. And if such a demand could
be enforced, it would be at the expense of the contract. What more is
the present case? And were it conceded the act of 1878 does not
attempt to enforce the payment before the maturity of the debt, the
concession would be of little worth, for it will not be questioned
that it attempts to enforce giving additional security for payment
beyond that stipulated for in the contract. That is no less a material
alteration of the contract, a serious addition to it. The plain truth
is, the assertion of such a power is claiming the right to disregard
the contract entirely, and substitute for it a different one, without
the consent of the debtor. If the United States can exact now one-
quarter of the net earnings of each of these companies, and place it
in their treasury, they can, by the same power, and with the same
reason, exact the whole of the earnings, or any other property equal
to the amount of the debt. Was any such thing contemplated by the
parties when the contract was made?
Now, where is the power of Congress to add new terms to any
contract made with the United States, or made between any two private
individuals? Where is the power to annul vested rights? It is
certainly not to be found in the Constitution. True, the provision
that no State shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts
applies only to State legislation. For such legislation the
prohibition was necessary; for State legislatures have all legislative
power which is not expressly denied to them. But no necessity existed
for imposing such a limitation on the power of Congress. As Mr.
Hamilton said in the eighty-fourth number of the Federalist, 'Why
declare that things shall not be done which there is no power to
[99 U.S. 700, 737]
do?' Congress has no power except such as has been expressly
granted to it, or such as is necessary or proper for carrying into
execution the powers specified, and those vested by the Constitution
in the government, or some department or officer thereof. I search in
vain for any express or implied grant of power to add new terms to any
existing contracts made by or with the government, or any grant of
power to destroy vested rights. No power has been given to Congress to
lessen the obligations of a contract between private parties by direct
legislation, except by the enactment of uniform laws on the subject of
bankruptcy. Even a bankrupt law cannot be enacted applicable only to
single corporations or single debtors. To be constitutional, it must
be uniform throughout the United States. I admit that in the exercise
of some of the powers granted, Congress may enact laws that indirectly
affect existing contracts and lessen their obligation, but I d ny that
it can by any direct action, otherwise than by a bankrupt law, even
relieve a debtor to a private party from any duty he has assumed by
his contract. Much less can it change the stipulations of the contract
and impose additional liabilities upon a contractor with the
government. Such an exercise of power would be making a contract for
parties to which they never assented. In all the history of
congressional legislation before the act of 1878, such a power was
never attempted to be exercised.
And not only is such legislative authority not conferred upon
Congress by the Constitution, but it is, in effect, expressly denied.
The fifth amendment contains restrictions taken, in substance, from
Magna Charta. Among them are the provisions that no person shall be
deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, nor
shall private property be taken for public use without just
compensation. These are restrictions upon legislative as well as
executive power. What is due process of law is well understood. It is
law in regular course of administration through courts of justice.
Coke, 2 Inst. 272; Murray's Lessee v. The Hoboken Land and Improvement
Co., 18 How. 272. 'The terms 'the law of the land,' said Chief Justice
Ruffin (Hoke v. Harderson, 4 Dev . (N. C.) 1), do not mean merely an
act of the General Assembly. If they
[99 U.S. 700, 738] did, every restriction
upon legislative authority would be at once abrogated, and private
property would be at the mercy of the legislature.' p. 15. Yet the act
of 1878 does attempt by its own force, and without any judicial
action, not only to change a contract and increase its obligations,
but also to deprive the railroad companies of their property. What is
property? What is the common understanding of the term? It is, in
reference to its subject, whatever a person can possess and enjoy by
right, and the person who has that right has the property. The subject
may be corporeal or incorporeal. A right in action is as completely
property as is a title to land. A very large portion of the property
of the country consists in rights attendant upon contract. The right
of a promisee to demand payment when the note falls due is a right of
property; and equally so is the right of the promisor to hold, as
against his promisee, the consideration for the promise until the time
stipulated in the note for payment. The promises has no right to
enforce payment, or to enforce giving security for it, if none was
promised in the contract. Such a right is no portion of his property,
and it can be enforced only at the expense of a clear right of the
promisor. On the other hand, the promisor has a right to exemption
from liability to give such security. It is incident to his contract.
Indeed, it may be said that whatever rights are created by contract,
or held under it, if they relate to property, are themselves, in a
very just sense, property, and as such are protected by the fifth
amendment to the Constitution.
I notice another consideration which, to my mind, is not without
weight. It may, I think, well be doubted whether the act of 1878 is
even an attempted exercise of legislative power. A statute undertaking
to take the property of A. and transfer it to B. is not legislation.
It would not be a law. It would be a decree or sentence, the right to
declare which, if it exists at all, is in the Judicial Department of
the government. The act of Congress is little, if any, more. It does
not purport to be a general law. It does not apply to all corporations
or to all debtors of the government. It signles out two corporations,
debtors of the government, by name, and prescribes for them as debtors
new duties to their creditor. It thus attempts
[99 U.S. 700, 739]
to perform the functions of a court. This, I cannot but think,
is outside of legislative action and power.
I turn now to the arguments by which the constitutionality of the
act of Congress has been attempted to be supported. It is said that,
though Congress cannot directly abrogate contracts, or impair their
obligation, it may in irectly, by the exercise of other powers granted
to it. This I have conceded, but I deny that an acknowledged power can
be exerted solely for the purpose of effecting indirectly an
unconstitutional end which the legislature cannot directly attempt to
reach. If the purpose were declared in the act, I think no court would
hesitate to pronounce the act void. In Hoke v. Harderson, to which I
have referred, Chief Justice Ruffin, when considering at length an
argument that a legislature could purposely do indirectly what it
could not do directly, used this strong language: 'The argument is
unsound in this, that it supposes (what cannot be admitted as a
supposition) the legislature will, designedly and wilfully, violate
the Constitution, in utter disregard of their oaths and duty. To do
indirectly in the abused exercise of an acknowledged power, not given
for, but perverted for that purpose, that which is expressly forbidden
to be done directly, is a gross and wicked infraction of the
Constitution.'
It is unnecessary, however, to enlarge upon this, for the effect
wrought upon the contracts of these two companies is a direct
effect,-a direct alteration of the obligation assumed by the debtors,
and not an incidental result of legislation upon some other subject
over which Congress has a right to legislate. It is too plain to admit
of any doubt that the sole object of the act of 1878 was to enforce
giving new and additional security for the payment of the subsidy
bonds at their maturity. All its provisions aim directly at that, and
the new terms thereby added to the contract have that end solely in
view.
In further attempted support of the validity of the act, it has
been denied that it does change the contract, because it does not
require the application of the additional payments to the satisfaction
of the debt before its maturity. I have, perhaps, said enough upon
this subject. The argument can hardly be seriously made. The act does
compel the debtors to surrender
[99 U.S. 700, 740] possession of their
property to the creditor before the time when, by the terms of the
contract, they were under obligation to part with it. The debtors are
no longer permitted to hold and use one-half the compensation due
presently from the government for services rendered, and are no longer
at liberty to use all their net income or earnings, except five per
cent, at their discretion. One quarter of their net earnings they are
compelled to surrender to the creditor. Thus the creditor becomes the
custodian of the debtors' property, and acquires a right to hold and
manage it as if it were his own. It is absurd to say this is not
practically a radical change in the relations between the parties
established by the contract. And it is equally impossible to maintain
that it is not depriving the debtors of their property without due
process of law.
I turn now to what has been most relied upon in support of the
validity of the act. I refer to the clauses in the acts of 1862 and
1864, reserving the right to repeal, amend, or alter. There are two
such,-one in the act of 1862, and one in that of 1864. That in the
latter act is the broadest, and it is as follows: 'Congress may at any
time alter, amend, or repeal this act.' The power thus reserved is one
over the act itself, not over any thing that may have lawfully been
done under the act, before its repeal or alteration. It is only by
great confusion of things essentially distinct that this power can be
construed as applicable to a contract made after the corporation came
into existence. Besides, the act of 1878 does not attempt to repeal,
or alter or amend, the acts of 1862 and 1864. It changes no franchise
granted by those acts, nor does it interfere with its exercise. It
interferes only with the fruits of the franchise. The right to possess
and enjoy the income of the company is not a franchise. It is an
incident of the ownership of the company's property, though the
property may be accumulated by the use of the franchise. Concede that
Congress has power to regulate the tolls on the railroad, o in some
other mode to restrict the use of the franchise, and thus lessen the
income, yet the income, whether large or small when made, is the
company's property, and, like other property, protected against being
taken without due process of law. Or suppose the acts of 1862 and 1864
were repealed, and thus all the franchises
[99 U.S. 700, 741]
granted by them were taken away, the property of the company
would remain, and the income thereof, though greatly decreased, would
be the property of the stockholders. Nobody denies that. Is the lesser
greater than the whole? I repeat, therefore, the act of 1878 is no
exercise of the reserved power to alter, amend, or repeal the acts of
1862 and 1864. It is no attempt to make any such repeal or amendment.
It is at most an attempt to seize the fruits of the franchise after
they shall have become the vested property of the corporations. It is
an attempt to sequester the income of the property owned by them. As
well might the government attempt to seize and put into its treasury
the rents, issues, and profits of the lands granted to them by the
third and fourth sections of the act of 1862, and call that an
amendment of the act. There is no distinction to be made between the
profits of the road and telegraph line and the rents of the lands.
None has been attempted.
But if the act of 1878 could be considered an alteration or
amendment of the acts of 1862 and 1864, the question would still
remain, what was the extent of the power reserved by those acts. I
mean the power to alter, amend, or repeal them. All the cases agree
that such a reserved power is not without limits. I think its limits
may be stated generally thus: It must be exercised, when exerted at
all, so as to do no injustice to those to whom the franchise has been
granted. Certainly the reservation cannot mean a right to take away
the franchise, in whole or in part, and yet hold the grantee to the
performance of the duties assumed,-the consideration given for the
grant. Nor can it mean to continue in the legislative power which the
legislature never possessed, and which it is constitutionally
incapable of exercising. A partial definition of the limits of the
reserved power may be found in Commonwealth v. Essex Company (13 Gray
( Mass.), 239), where Chief Justice Shaw (speaking of the reserved
power to alter, amend, or repeal a charter), said: 'It seems to us
this power must have some limit, though it is difficult to define it.
Suppose authority has been given by law to a railroad corporation to
purchase a lot of land and hold it for purposes connected with its
business, and they purchase such lot from a third person, could the
legislature [99 U.S.
700, 742] prohibit the company from holding it? If so, in
whom would it vest? Or could the legislature direct it to revert to
the grantor or escheat to the public? Or how otherwise? Suppose a
manufacturing company, incorporated, is authorized to construct a dam
and flow a tract of meadow, and the owners claim gross damages, which
are assessed and paid, can the legislature afterwards alter the act of
incorporation so as to give to such meadow owners future annual
damages? Perhaps from these extreme cases, for extreme cases are
allowable to test a legal principle, the rule to be extracted is this:
that where, under a power in a charter, rights have been acquired and
become vested, no amendment or alteration of the charter can take away
the property or rights which have become vested under a legitimate
exercise of the powers granted.' p. 253. This rule has been recognized
ever since. Vide Sage v. Dillard, 15 B. Mon. (Ky.) 349. It has been
adopted by this court. In Miller v. The State (15 Wall. 478), it was
said by Mr. Justice Clifford: 'Power to legislate founded upon such a
reservation in a charter of a private corporation is certainly not
without limits, and it may well be admitted that it cannot be
exercised to take away or destroy rights acquired by such a charter,
and which, by a legitimate use of the powers granted, have become
vested in the corporation.' To the same effect is Holyoke Company v.
Lyman, id. 500. If this limitation be admitted, it is impossible to
see how a reserved power to alter, amend, or repeal an act granting a
private charter can include a right to change the stipulations of a
contract made under that charter, or to sequester for purpose the
property of the company acquired while the charter remains unrepealed
and unaltered. If the acts of 1862 and 1864 were repealed, would not
the contract of loan remain unaffected thereby? Can a legislature that
offers a contract on certain terms change those terms after they have
been accepted and after the contract has been perfected? Yet that is
what the act of 1878 attempts to do. A principal who has authorized
his agent to make a contract for him may revoke or restrict the agency
before any contract is made, but he is bound by a contract made during
the continuance of the agent's powers, if those powers were not
transgressed in making it. He cannot afterwards repudiate its
[99 U.S. 700, 743]
terms or add to them. I see no essential difference between
such a case and the present. I cannot confound an alteration of the
acts of 1862 and 1864 with an alteration of a subsequent commercial
contract authorized by those acts, and made between the United States
and companies chartered by them. My conviction, therefore, is, that
the act of 1878 cannot be defended as a legitimate exercise of the
powers reserved to Congress.
I need not say it cannot rest upon what is generally denominated
the visitatorial power of the government over its own corporations,
though it is upon this power the opinion of the majority of the court
largely relies. That power is applicable only to eleemosynary
corporations, such as colleges, schools, and hospitals, and the
visitation is always through the medium of courts of justice. It is
judicial and not legislative. 2 Kent, Com., Lect. 23, sect. 4. To
claim, therefore, that, by virtue of that power, a private business
corporation can be compelled by legislative action to establish a
sinking-fund for the payment of its debts, and deposit it in the
treasury of its creditor, is totally inadmissible.
There are, undoubtedly, many cases to be found in which it has been
decided that, by virtue of such a reservation as that contained in the
acts of 1862 and 1864, a legislature may make new regulations, to some
extent, of the action of corporations created by it,-such as
prescribing a new measure of tolls, increasing the capital of
insurance companies, repealing an exemption from taxation, and the
like. So, without the reservations, some new regulations may be
prescribed in the exercise of the police power. They are all
regulations of the franchise or of its use,- not invasions of rights
or property acquired under the franchise subsequently to its grant;
and not one of them under the practice of amendment or rightful
regulation has undertaken to change or vary any contract the
corporation had made, or to control possession of property acquired.
The act of 1878 is, I believe, the first assertion of any such force
in the reservation. It is a very grave and dangerous assertion. It is
especially dangerous in these days of attempted repudiation, when the
good faith of the government is above all price. If it can be
maintained, the government is no longer bound by
[99 U.S. 700, 744]
any commercial contract into which it may enter with these
corporations, though it holds them bound. I cannot assent to any such
doctrine; and upon he whole, in my opinion, the act of 1878 is not
only unauthorized by any power existing in Congress, but it is an
infraction of the prohibition I have pointed out, contained in the
fifth amendment of the Constitution.
Most of what I have said is applicable to each of the cases,-that
of the Union Pacific and that of the Central. There are some other
considerations peculiar in the case of the Central Pacific, which is a
corporation of the State of California, and was such in 1862. These I
leave for consideration by my brethren who unite with me in dissent.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY.
I am unable to concur in the judgment of the court in these cases,
and will very briefly state the grounds of my dissent.
I think that Congress had no power to pass the act of May 7, 1878,
either as it regards the Union Pacific or the Central Pacific Railroad
Company. The power of Congress, even over those subjects upon which it
has the right to legislate, is not despotic, but is subject to certain
constitutional limitations. One of these is, that no person shall be
deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law;
another is, that private property shall not be taken for public use
without just compensation; and a third is, that the judicial power of
the United States is vested in the supreme and inferior courts, and
not in Congress. It seems to me that the law in question is violative
of all these restrictions,-of their spirit at least, if not of their
letter; and a law which violates the spirit of the Constitution is as
much unconstitutional as one that violates its letter. For example,
although the Constitution declares only that private property shall
not be taken for public use without just compensation, and does not
expressly declare that it shall not be taken for private use without
compensation, or, in other words, does not declare that the property
of one person shall not be taken from him and given to another without
compensation, yet no one can reasonably doubt that a law which should
do this would be unconstitutional, because the prohibition to do
[99 U.S. 700, 745]
it is within the spirit of the prohibition that is given, it
being the greater enormity of the two.
The contract between the Union and Central Pacific Railroad
Companies and the government was an executed contract, and a definite
one. It was in effect this: that the government should loan the
companies certain moneys, and that the companies should have a certain
period of time to repay the amount, the loan resting on the security
of the companies' works. Congress, by the law in question, without any
change of circumstances, and against the protest of the companies,
declares that the money shall be paid at an earlier day, and that the
contract shall be changed pro tanto. This is the substance and effect
of the law. Calling the money paid a sinking-fund makes no substantial
difference. The pretence or excuse for the law is that the stipulated
security is not good. Congress takes up the question, ex parte,
discusses and decides it, passes judgment, and proposes to issue
execution, and to subject the companies to heavy penalties if they do
not comply. That is the plain English of the law. In view of the
limitations referred to, has Congress the power to do this? In my
judgment it has not. The law virtually deprives the companies of their
property without due process of law; takes it for public use without
compensation; and operates as an exercise by Congress of the judicial
power of the government.
That it is a plain and flat violation of the contract there can be
no reasonable doubt. But it is said that Congress is not subject to
any inhibition against passing laws impairing the validity of
contracts. This is true; and the reason why the inhibition to that
effect was imposed upon the States and not upon Congress evidently
was, that the power to pass bankrupt laws should be exclusively vested
in Congress, in order that the bankruptcy system might be uniform
throughout the United States. When the States exercised the power,
they often did it in such a manner as to favor their own citizens at
the expense of the citizens of other States and of foreign countries.
It was deemed expedient, therefore, to take the power from the States
so far as it might involve the impairing the validity of contracts.
State bankrupt laws, since the Constitution went into effect, have
only been sustained when operating prospectively
[99 U.S. 700, 746]
upon contracts, and then only in the absence of a national law.
The inhibition referred to undoubtedly had its origin in these
considerations. It fully explains the fact that no such inhibition was
laid upon the national egislature; and the absence of such an
inhibition, therefore, furnishes no ground of argument in favor of the
proposition that Congress may pass arbitrary and despotic laws with
regard to contracts any more than with regard to any other
subject-matter of legislation. The limitations already quoted exist in
their full force, and apply to that subject as well as to all others.
They embody the essential principles of Magna Charta, and are
especially binding upon the legislative department of the government.
Under the English Constitution, notwithstanding the theoretical
omnipotence of Parliament, such a law as the one in question would not
be tolerated for a moment. The famous denunciation that 'it would cut
every Englishman to the bone,' would be promptly reiterated.
It will not do to say that the violation of the contract by the law
in question is not a taking of property. In the first place, it is
literally a taking of property. It compels the companies to pay over
to the government, or its agents, money to which the government is not
entitled. That it will be entitled by the contract to a like amount at
some future time does not matter. Time is a part of the contract. To
coerce a delivery of the money is to coerce without right a delivery
of that which is not the property of the government, but the property
of the companies. It is needless to refer to the importance to the
companies of the time which the contract gives. If it be alleged that
the security of the government requires this to be done in consequence
of waste of dissipation by the companies of the mortgage security,
that is a question to be decided by judicial investigation with
opportunity of defence. A prejudgment of the question by the
Legislative Department is a usurpation of the judicial power.
But if it were not, as it is, an actual or physical taking of
property,-if it were merely the subversion of the contract and the
substitution of another contract in its place, it would be a taking of
property within the spirit of the constitutional provisions. A
contract is property. To destroy it wholly or
[99 U.S. 700, 747]
to destroy it partially is to take it; and to do this by
arbitrary legislative action is to do it without due process of law.
The case bears no analogy to the laws which were passed in time of
war and public necessity, making treasury notes of the government a
legal tender. The power to pass those laws was found in other parts of
the Constitution: in the power to borrow money on the credit of the
United States, to regulate the value of money, to raise and support
armies, to suppress insurrections, and to pass all laws necessary and
proper for carrying into execution the general powers of the
government. My views on that subject were fully expressed in the
Legal-Tender Cases, reported in 11 Wallace, and I have yet seen no
reason to modify them. The legal-tender laws may have indirectly
affected contracts, but did not abrogate them. The case before us is
totally different. It is a direct abrogation of a contract, and that,
too, of a contract of the government itself,-a repudiation of its own
contract.
Nor does the case in hand bear any analogy to what are familiarly
known as the Granger Cases, reported in 94 U. S. under the names of
Munn v. Illinois, &c. The inquiry there was as to the extent of the
police power in cases where the public interest is affected; and we
held that when an employment or business becomes a matter of such
public interest and importance as to create a common charge or burden
upon the citizen; in other words, when it becomes a practical
monopoly, to which the citizen is compelled to resort, and by means of
which a tribute can be exacted from the community, it is subject to
regulation by the legislative power. It is obvious that the present
case does not belong to that category. It is an individual case of
private contract between the companies and the government. It is a
question of dollars and cents, and terms and conditions, in a
particular case. To call the law an exercise of the police power would
be a misuse of terms.
Great stress, however, is laid upon the reservation in the charter
of the right to amend, alter, or repeal the act.
As a matter of fact, the reservation referred to really has no
office in an act of Congress; for Congress is not subject, as the
States are, to the inhibition against passing any law impairing the
obligation of contracts. It has become so much the custom
[99 U.S. 700, 748]
to insert it in all charters at the present day, that its
original intent and purpose are sometimes forgotten. Since, however,
it is contained in the charter of the Union Pacific Railroad Company,
it is proper that its meaning and effect should be adverted to.
It seems to me that this clause has been greatly misunderstood. It
is a sort of proviso peculiar to American legislation, growing out of
the decision in the Dartmouth College Case. Mr. Justice Story, in his
opinion in that case (4 Wheat. 675), says: 'When a private
eleemosynary corporation is thus created by the charter of the crown,
it is subject to no other control on the part of the crown than what
is expressly or impliedly reserved by the charter itself. Unless a
power be reserved for this purpose, the crown cannot in virtue of its
prerogative, without the consent of the corporation, alter or amend
the charter, or divest the corporation of any of its franchises.' This
hint, that such a reservation would authorize an alteration or
amendment to be made in a charter, has been freely availed of by
legislatures and constitutional conventions in order to be freed from
the constitutional restriction against impairing the validity of
contracts, so far as it applied to charters of incorporation. The
application of that restriction to such charters, by construing them
to be contracts within the meaning of the Constitution, was a surprise
to many statesmen and jurists of the country. Chief Justice Marshall,
indeed, in his opinion in that case, says: 'It is more than possible
that the preservation of rights of this description was not
particularly in the view of the framers of the Constitution, when the
clause under consideration was introduced into the instrument.' p.
644. Probably in view of this somewhat unexpected application of the
clause, operating as it did to deprive the States of nearly all
legislative control over corporations of their own creation, the
courts have given liberal construction to the reservation of power to
alter, amend, and repeal a charter; and have sustained some acts of
legislation made under such a reservation which are at least
questionable.
In my judgment, the reservation is to be interpreted as placing the
State legislature back on the same platform of power and control over
the charter containing it as it would have
[99 U.S. 700, 749]
occupied had the constitutional restriction about contracts
never existed; and I think the reservation effects nothing more. It
certainly cannot be interpreted as reserving a right to violate a
contract at will. No legislature ever reserved such a right in any
contract. Legislatures often reserve the right to terminate a
continuous contract at will; but never to violate a contract, or
change its terms without the consent of the other party. The reserved
power in question is simply that of legislation,-to alter, amend, or
repeal a charter. This is very different from the power to violate, or
to alter the terms of a contract at will. A reservation of power to
violate a contract, or alter it, or impair its obligation, would be
repugnant to the contract itself, and void. A proviso repugnant to the
granting part of a deed, or to the enacting part of a statute, is
void. Interpreted as a reservation of the right to legislate, the
reserved power is sustainable on sound principles; but interpreted as
the reservation of a right to violate an executed contract, it is not
sustainable.
The question then comes back to the extent of the power to
legislate. But that is a restricted power,-restricted by other
constitutional provisions, to which reference has already been made.
Certainly the legislature cannot in a charter of incorporation, or in
any other law, reserve to itself any greater power of legislation then
the Constitution itself concedes to it. It seems to me clear,
therefore, that the power reserved cannot authorize a flat abrogation
of the contract by Congress, because, as before shown, such an
abrogation would be a violation of those clauses which inhibit the
taking of property without process of law and without compensation.
It may be said that by reason of the reserved power to alter and
repeal a charter, this court has sustained legislative acts imposing
taxes from which the corporation by the charter was exempted. This is
true. But the imposition of taxes is preeminently an act of
legislation. Its temporary suspension, conceded in a charter, is a
suspension of the legislative power pro tanto. Being such, a
reservation of the right to legislate, or, which is the same thing, to
alter, amend, or repeal the charter, necessarily includes the right to
resume the power of taxation. The same observations apply to the
regulation of fares and freights; for this is a branch of the police
power, applicable [99
U.S. 700, 750] to all cases which involve a common charge
upon the people.
I conclude, therefore, that the power reserved to alter, amend, and
repeal the charter of the Union Pacific Railroad Company is not
sufficient to authorize the passage of the law in question.
I will only add, further, that the initiation of this species of
legislation by Congress is well calculated to excite alarm. It has the
effect of announcing to the world, and giving it to be understood,
that this government does not consider itself bound by its
engagements. It sets the example of repudiation of government
obligations. It strikes a blow at the public credit. It asserts the
principle that might makes right. It saps the foundations of public
morality. Perhaps, however, these are considerations more properly to
be addressed to the legislative discretion. But when forced upon the
attention by what, in my judgment, is an unconstitutional exercise of
legislative power, they have a more than ordinary weight and
significance.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD.
I also dissent from the judgment of the court in these cases.
The decision will, in my opinion, tend to create insecurity in the
title to corporate property in the country. It, in effect, determines
that the general government, in its dealings with the Pacific Railroad
Companies, is under no legal obligation to fulfil its contracts, and
that whether it shall do so is a question of policy and not of duty.
It also seems to me to recognize the right of the government to
appropriate by legislative decree the earnings of those companies,
without judicial inquiry and determination as to its claim to such
earnings, thus sanctioning the exercise of judicial functions in its
own cases. And in respect to the Central Pacific Company it asserts a
supremacy of the Federal over the State government in the control of
the corporation which, in my judgment, is subversive of the rights of
the State. I therefore am constrained to add some suggestions to those
presented by my associates, Justices Strong and Bradley. In what I
have to say I shall confine myself chiefly to the case of the Central
Pacific Company. That company is a State corporation, and is the
successor of a corporation of the same name, created before the
railroad acts of Congress were passed,
[99 U.S. 700, 751] and of four other
corporations organized under the laws of the State. No sovereign
attributes possessed by the general government were exercised in
calling into existence the original company, or any of the companies
with which it is now consolidated. They all derived their powers and
capacities from the State, and held them at its will.
The relation of the general government to the Pacific companies is
twofold: that of sovereign in its own territory and that of
contractor. As sovereign, its power extends to the enforcement of such
acts and regulations by the companies as will insure, in the
management of their roads, and conduct of their officers in its
territory, the safety, convenience, and comfort of the public. It can
exercise such control in its territory over all common carriers of
passengers and property. As a contractor it is bound by its
engagements equally with a private individual; it cannot be relieved
from them by any assertion of its sovereign authority.
Its relation to the original Central Pacific Company, and to the
present company as its successor, in the construction and equipment of
its road, and its use for public purposes, was and is that of a
contractor; and the rights and obligations of both are to be measured,
as in the case of similar relations between other parties, by the
terms and conditions of the contract.
By the first section of the original railroad act of Congress,
passed in July, 1862, certain persons therein designated were created
a corporation by the name of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, and
authorized to construct and operate a continuous railroad and
telegraph line from a designated point on the one hundredth meridian
of longitude west from Greenwich to the western boundary of Nevada
Territory, and were invested with the powers, privileges, and
immunities necessary for that purpose, and with such as are usually
conferred upon corporations.
By subsequent provisions of the act and the amendatory act of 1864,
three grants were made to the company thus created: a grant of a right
of way over the public lands of the United States for the road and
telegraph line; a grant of ten alternate sections of land on each side
of the road, to aid in its construction and that of the telegraph
line; and a grant of a certain
[99 U.S. 700, 752] number of subsidy bonds
of the United States, each in the sum of $1,000 payable in thirty
years, with semi-annual interest,-patents for the lands and the bonds
to be issued as each twenty consecutive miles of the road and
telegraph should be completed. These grants were made upon certain
conditions as to the completion of the road and telegraph line, their
construction and use by the government, and their pledge as security
for the ultimate payment of the bonds. They were the considerations
offered by the government to the company for the work which it
undertook.
By the act which thus incorporated the Union Pacific Company, and
made the grants mentioned, the United States proposed to the Central
Pacific that it should construct in like manner a railroad and a
telegraph line through the State of California from a point near the
Pacific coast to its eastern boundary, upon the same terms and
conditions, and after completing them across the State, to continue
their construction through the Territories of the United States until
they should meet and connect with the road and telegraph line of the
Union Pacific.
They, in effect, said to the company, that if it would construct a
railroad and a telegraph line from the Pacific Ocean eastward to a
connection with the Union Pacific,-the road to be in all respects one
of first class,-and keep them in repair, so that they could be used at
all times by any department of the government for the transmission of
despatches and the transportation of mails, troops, munitions of war,
supplies, and public stores, at reasonable rates of compensation, not
exceeding such as were charged private persons for similar services,
and allow the government at all times the preference in the use of the
road and telegraph,-they would grant the company a right of way over
the public lands for the construction of the road and telegraph line,
and grant to it ten alternate sections of land on each side of the
road, and give it their bonds, each for the sum of $1,000, payable
thirty years after date, with semiannual interest, such bonds to be
issued at the rate of sixteen, thirty-two, or forty-eight the mile,
according to the character of the country over which the road should
be constructed; and would issue patents for the lands, and the subsidy
bonds, as [99 U.S. 700,
753] each twenty consecutive miles of the road and
telegraph should be completed in the manner prescribed; t being agreed
that the company should pay the bonds as they should mature, and that
for the security of their payment they should constitute a second
mortgage upon the whole line of the road and telegraph, and that
one-half of the compensation earned for services to the government,
and, after the completion of the road, five per cent of its net
earnings should be retained and applied to the payment of the bonds;
and also, that the company should complete the road by the 1st of
July, 1876, and keep it in repair and use thereafter, or upon failure
to do so, that the government might take possession of the road and
complete it, or keep it in repair and use as the case might be. And
they further, in effect, said that if these terms and conditions were
satisfactory, the company should file its written acceptance thereof
with the Secretary of the Interior, within six months thereafter; and
that thereupon there should be a contract between them.
This proposition of the government the Central Pacific accepted,
and filed its acceptance as required; and thereupon the provisions of
the act became a contract between it and the United States, as
complete and perfect as could be made by the most formal instrument.
The United States thus came under obligation to the company to make
the grants and issue the bonds stipulated, upon the construction of
the road and telegraph line in the manner prescribed. The corporate
capacity of the company in no respect affected the nature of the
contract, or made it in any particular different from what it would
have been had a natural person been one of the parties. The company
was not a creature of the United States, and Congress could neither
add to nor subtract from its corporate powers. The exercise of the
right of eminent domain allowed in the Territories was not the
exercise of a corporate power. That right belongs to the sovereign
authority, and whoever exercises it does so as the agent of that
sovereignty. Nor was its character as a State institution changed by
the fact that it was permitted by Congress to extend its road through
the territory of the United States. This permission was no more than
the license which is usually extended by positive agreement, or by
comity in the absence of such agreement, by one State to the
corporations of [99 U.S.
700, 754] another State, to do business and own property
in its jurisdiction. Such license is not the source of the corporate
powers exercised. Insurance companies, express companies, and, indeed,
companies organized for almost every kind of business, are, by comity,
permitted throughout the United States, and generally throughout the
civilized world, to do business, make contracts, and exercise their
corporate powers in a jurisdiction where, in a strict legal sense,
they have no corporate existence. The Pacific Mail Steamship Company,
for example, to take an illustration mentioned by counsel, is a
corporation created under the laws of the State of New York, and, like
the Central Pacific, has been subsidized by the United States. Its
ships visit Central America, California, Japan, and China, and in all
these places it leases or owns wharves, and makes and enforces
contracts necessary to the transaction of its business, yet no one has
ever pretended or suggested that it derived any of its corporate
powers from the United States, or from the authorities of any of the
places named. By consent of those authorities, expressed in terms, or
implied in what is understood as their comity, it exercises powers
derived solely from the State of New York.
When, therefore, Congress assented to the extension into the
territory of the United States of the road which the Central Pacific
was authorized by its charter to construct in California, it was
deemed important for the company to obtain also the consent and
authority of the State to act without its limits and assume
responsibilities not originally contemplated. Accordingly, in 1864,
the legislature of the State, at its second session after the adoption
of the original railroad act of Congress, in order to enab e the
company to comply with its provisions and conditions, authorized the
company to construct, maintain, and operate the road in the territory
lying east of the State, and invested it with the rights, privileges,
and powers granted by the act of Congress, with the reservation,
however, that the company should be subject to all the laws of the
State concerning railroad and telegraph lines, except that messages
and property of the United States, of the State, and of the company
should have priority of transmission and transportation. The extent of
the power which was thus reserved we
[99 U.S. 700, 755] shall hereafter
consider. It is sufficient at present to observe that it was an ample
and complete as it is possible for one sovereignty to exert over
institutions of its own creation, and that its exercise is
incompatible with the control asserted by the law of Congress of 1878,
which has given rise to the present suit.
The Central Pacific Company having accepted, as already stated, the
conditions proffered by Congress, proceeded at once to the execution
of its contract. In the face of great obstacles, doubts, and
uncertainties, its directors commenced and prosecuted the work, and
within a period several years less than that prescribed, its telegraph
line and road were completed, the latter with all the appurtenances of
a first-class road, and were accepted by the government. Patents for
the land granted and the subsidy bonds mentioned were accordingly
issued to the company. Since then the road and telegraph line have
been kept in repair and use, and the government has enjoyed all the
privileges in the transmission of despatches over the telegraph, and
in the transportation of mails, troops, munitions of war, supplies,
and public stores over the road, which were stipulated. There has been
no failure on the part of the company to comply with its engagements,
nor is any complaint of delinquency or neglect in its action made by
the government. The road is more valuable now than on the day of its
completion; it has been improved in its rails, bridges, cars, depots,
turnouts, machine-shops, and all other appurtenances. Its earnings
have been constantly increasing, and it constitutes to-day a far
better security to the United States for the ultimate payment of the
subsidy bonds than at any period since its completion, and to the
government it has caused, with the connecting road of the Union
Pacific, an immense saving of expense. The records of the different
departments show an annual saving, as compared with previous
expenditures, in the item of transportation alone of the mails,
troops, and public stores, of $5,000, 000, aggregating at this day
over $50,000,000.
Whilst the company was thus complying in all respects with its
engagements, the act of May 7, 1878, was passed, altering in essential
particulars the contract of the company, and greatly increasing its
obligations. By the contract, only one-half of the compensation for
transportation for the government is to
[99 U.S. 700, 756]
be retained and applied towards the payment of the bonds. By
the act of 1878, the whole of such compensation is to be retained and
thus applied. By the contract, five per cent only of the net earnings
of the road are to be paid to the United States to be applied upon the
subsidy bonds. By the act of 1878, twenty-five per cent of the net
earnings are to be thus paid and applied. By the contract, the only
security which the government had for its subsidy bonds was a second
mortgage on the road and its appurtenances and telegraph line; and the
company was allowed to give a first mortgage as security for its own
bonds, issued for an equal amount. By the act of 1878, additional
security is required for the ultimate payment of its own bonds, and
the subsidy bonds of the United States, by the creation of what is
termed a sinking-fund; that is, by compelling the company to deposit
$1,200,000 a year in the treasury of the United States, to be held for
such payment, or so much thereof as may be necessary to make the five
per cent net earnings, the whole sum arned as compensation for
services, and sufficient in addition to make the whole reach twenty-
five per cent of the net earnings.
It is not material, in the view I take of the subject, whether the
deposit of this large sum in the treasury of the creditor be termed a
payment, or something else. It is the exaction from the company of
money for which the original contract did not stipulate, which
constitutes the objectionable feature of the act of 1878. The act thus
makes a great change in the liabilities of the company. Its purpose,
however, disguised, is to coerce the payment of money years in advance
of the time prescribed by the contract. That such legislation is
beyond the power of Congress I cannot entertain a doubt. The clauses
of the original acts reserving a right to Congress to alter or amend
them do not, in my judgment, justify the legislation. The power
reserved under these clauses is declared to be for a specific purpose.
The language in the act of 1862 is as follows: 'And the better to
accomplish the object of this act, to promote the public interest and
welfare by the construction of said railroad and telegraph line, and
keeping the same in working order, and to secure to the government at
all times (but particularly in time of war) the use and benefits of
the same [99 U.S. 700,
757] for postal, military, and other purposes, Congress
may at any time-having due regard for the rights of said companies
named herein-add to, alter, amend, or repeal this act.' Sect. 18. The
language of the amendatory act of 1864 is more general: 'That Congress
may at any time alter, amend, or repeal this act.' The two acts are to
be read together; they deal with the same subject; and are to be
treated as if passed at the same time. Prescott v. Railroad Company,
16 Wall. 603. The limitations, therefore, imposed upon the exercise of
the power of alteration and amendment in the act of 1862 must be held
to apply to the power reserved in the act of 1864. They are not
repealed, either expressly or impliedly, by any thing in the latter
act. If this be so, the legislation of 1878 can find no support in the
clauses. The conditions upon which the reserved power could be
exercised under them did not then exist. The road and telegraph had
years before been constructed, and always kept in working order; and
the government has at all times been secured in their use and benefits
for postal, military, and other purposes.
But if the reserved power of alteration and amendment be considered
as freed from the limitations designated, it cannot be exerted to
affect the contract so far as it has been executed, or the rights
vested under it. When the road was completed in the manner prescribed
and accepted, the company became entitled as of right to the land and
subsidy bonds stipulated. The title to the land was perfect on the
issue of the patents; the title to the bonds vested on their delivery.
Any alteration of the acts under the reservation clauses, or their
repeal, could not revoke the title to the land or recall the bonds or
change the right of the company to either. So far as these are
concerned the contract was, long before the act of 1878, an executed
and closed transaction, and they were as much beyond the reach of the
government as any other property vested in private proprietorship. The
right to hold the subsidy bonds for the period at which they are to
run without paying or advancing money on them before their maturity,
except as originally provided, or furnishing other security than that
originally stipulated, was, on their delivery, as perfect as the right
to hold the title to the land patented unincumbered by
[99 U.S. 700, 758]
future liens of the government. Any alteration or amendment
could only operate for the future and affect subsequent acts of the
company: it could have no operation upon that which had already been
done and vested.
There have been much discussion and great difference of opinion on
many points as to the meaning and effect of a similar reservation in
statutes of the States, but on the point that it does not author ze
any interference with vested rights all the authorities concur. Such
was the language of Chief Justice Shaw in the case cited from the
Supreme Court of Massachusetts; and such is the language of Mr.
Justice Clifford in the cases cited from this court. And such must be
the case, or there would be no safety in dealing with the government
where such a clause is inserted in its legislation. It could undo at
pleasure every thing done under its authority, and despoil of their
property those who had trusted to its faith. Commonwealth v. Essex
Company, 13 Gray (Mass.), 239; Miller v. The State, 15 Wall. 478;
Holyoke Company v. Lyman, id. 500. See also Shields v. Ohio,
95 U.S. 319 , and Sage v. Dillard, 15 B. Mon. (Ky.) 349.
The object of a reservation of this kind in acts of incorporation
is to insure to the government control over corporate franchises,
rights, and privileges which, in its sovereign or legislative
capacity, it may call into existence, not to interfere with contracts
which the corporation created by it may make. Such is the purport of
our language in Tomlinson v. Jessup, where we state the object of the
reservation to be 'to prevent a grant of corporate rights and
privileges in a form which will preclude legislative interference with
their exercise, if the public interest should at any time require such
interference,' and that 'the reservation affects the entire relation
between the State and corporation, and place under legislative control
all rights, privileges, and immunities derived by its charter directly
from the State.' 15 Wall. 454. The same thing we repeated, with
greater distinctness, in Railroad Company v. Maine, where we said that
by the reservation the State retained the power to alter the act
incorporating the company, in all particulars constituting the grant
to it of corporate rights, privileges, and immunities; and that 'the
existence of the corporation,
[99 U.S. 700, 759] and its franchises and
immunities, derived directly from the State, were thus kept under its
control.' But we added, that 'rights and interests acquired by the
company, not constituting a part of the contract of incorporation,
stand upon a different footing.'
96 U.S. 499 .
Now, there was no grant by the United States to the Central Pacific
Company of corporate rights, privileges, and immunities. No attribute
of sovereignty was exercised by them in its creation. It took its
life, and all its attributes and capacities, from the State. Whatever
powers, rights, and privileges it acquired from the United States it
took under its contract with them, and not otherwise. The relation
between the parties being that of contractors, the rights and
obligations of both, as already stated, are to be measured by the
terms and conditions of the contract. And when the government of the
United States entered into that contract, it laid aside its
sovereignty and put itself on terms of equality with its contractor.
It was then but a civil corporation, as incapable as the Central
Pacific of releasing itself from its obligations, or of finally
determining their extent and character. It could not, as justly
observed by one of the counsel who argued this case, 'release itself
and hold the other party to the contract. It could not change its
obligations and hold its rights unchanged. It cannot bind itself as a
civil corporation, and loose itself by its sovereign legislative
power.' This principle is aptly expressed by the great conservative
statesman, Alexander Hamilton, in his report to Congress on the public
credit, in 1795: 'When a government,' he observes, 'enters into a
contract with an individual, it deposes, as to the matter of the
contract, its constitutional authority, and exchanges the character of
legislator for that of a moral agent, with the same rights and
obligations as an individual. Its promises may be justly considered
out of its power to legislate, unless in aid of them. It is, in
theory, impossible to reconcile the two ideas of a promise which
obliges with a power to make a law which can vary the effect of it.'
Hamilton's Works, vol. iii. pp. 518, 519.
When, therefore, the government of the United States entered into
the contract with the Central Pacific, it could no more than a private
corporation or a private individual finally
[99 U.S. 700, 760]
construe and determine the extent of the company's rights and
liabilities. If it had cause of complaint against the company, it
could not undertake itself, by legislative decree, to redress the
grievance, but was compelled to seek redress as all other civil
corporations are compelled, through the judicial tribunals. If the
company was wasting its property, of which no allegation is made, or
impairing the security of the government, the remedy by suit was
ample. To declare that one of two contracting parties is entitled,
under the contract between them, to the payment of a greater sum than
is admitted to be payable, or to other or greater security than that
given, is not a legislative function. It is judicial action; it is the
exercise of judicial power,-and all such power, with respect to any
transaction arising under the laws of the United States, is vested by
the Constitution in the courts of the country.
In the case of The Commonwealth v. Proprietors of New Bedford
Bridge, a corporation of Massachusetts, the Supreme Court of that
State, speaking with reference to a contract between the parties, uses
this language: 'Each has equal rights and privileges under it, and
neither can interpret its terms authoritatively so as to control and
bind the rights of the other. The Commonwealth has no more authority
to construe the charter than the corporation. By becoming a party to a
contract with its citizens the government divests itself of its
sovereignty in respect to the terms and conditions of the contract and
its construction and interpretation, and stands in the same position
as a private individual. If it were otherwise, the rights of parties
contracting with the government would be held at the caprice of the
sovereign, and exposed to all the risks arising from the corrupt or
ill-judged use of misguided power. The interpretation and construction
of contracts when drawn in question belong exclusively to the judicial
department of the government. The legislature has no more power to
construe their own contracts with their citizens than those which
individuals make with each other. They can do neither without
exercising judicial powers which would be contrary to the elementary
principles of our government, as set forth in the Declaration of
Rights.' 2 Gray, 350.
In that case the charter of the corporation authorized the
[99 U.S. 700, 761]
building of a toll-bridge across a navigable river, with two
suitable draws at least thirty feet wide. A subsequent act required
draws to be made of a greater width; but the court held that the
question whether the draws already made were suitable, and constructed
so as not unreasonably or unnecessarily to obstruct or impede public
navigation, was not a question to be determined by the legislature, or
by the corporation, but by the courts. It was a question which could
not be authoritatively determined by either party so as to control and
bind the other. 'Like all other matters involving a controversy
concerning public duty and private rights,' said the court, 'it is to
be adjusted and settled in the regular tribunals, where questions of
law and fact are adjudicated on fixed and established principles, and
according to the forms and usages best adapted to secure the impartial
administration of justice.' In the case at bar, the government, by the
act of 1878, undertakes to decide authoritatively what the obligations
of the Central Pacific are, and in effect declares that if the
directors of the company do not respect its construction, and obey its
mandates, founded upon such construction, they shall be subject to
fine and imprisonment.
The distinction between a judicial and a legislative act is well
defined. The one determines what the law is, and what the rights f
parties are, with reference to transactions already had; the other
prescribes what the law shall be in future cases arising under it.
Wherever an act undertakes to determine a question of right or
obligation, or of property, as the foundation upon which it proceeds,
such act is to that extent a judicial one, and not the proper exercise
of legislative functions. Thus an act of the legislature of Illinois
authorizing the sale of the lands of an intestate, to raise a specific
sum, to pay certain parties their claims against the estate of the
deceased for moneys advanced and liabilities incurred, was held
unconstitutional, on the ground that it involved a judicial
determination that the estate was indebted to those parties for the
moneys advanced and liabilities incurred. The ascertainment of
indebtedness from one party to another, and a direction for its
payment, the court considered to be judicial acts which could not be
performed by the legislature. 3 Scam. 238. So also
[99 U.S. 700, 762]
an act of the legislature of Tennessee authorizing a guardian
of infant heirs to sell certain lands of which their ancestor died
seised, and directing the proceeds to be applied to the payment of the
ancestor's debts, was, on similar grounds, held to be
unconstitutional. Jones v. Perry, 10 Yerg. (Tenn.) 59. Tested by the
principle thus illustrated, the act of 1878 must be held in many ways
to transcend the legislative power of Congress.
I cannot assent to the doctrine which would ascribe to the Federal
government a sovereign right to treat as it may choose corporations
with which it deals, and would exempt it from that great law of
morality which should bind all governments, as it binds all
individuals, to do justice and keep faith. Because it was deemed
important, on the adoption of the Constitution, in the light of what
was known as tender laws, appraisement laws, stay laws, and instalment
laws of the States, which Story says had prostrated all private credit
and all private morals, to insert a clause prohibiting the States from
passing any law impairing the obligation of contracts, and no clause
prohibiting the Federal government from like legislation is found, it
is argued that no such prohibition exists.
'It is true,' as I had occasion to observe in another case,
'there is no provision in the Constitution forbidding in express
terms such legislation. And it is also true that there are express
powers delegated to Congress, the execution of which necessarily
operates to impair the obligation of contracts. It was the object of
the framers of that instrument to create a national government,
competent to represent the entire country in its relations with
foreign nations, and to accomplish by its legislation measures of
common interest to all the people, which the several States in their
independent capacities were incapable of effecting, or if capable,
the execution of which would be attended with great difficulty and
embarrassment. They therefore clothed Congress with all the powers
essential to the successful accomplishment of these ends, and
carefully withheld the grant of all other powers. Some of the powers
granted, from their very nature, interfere in their execution with
contracts of parties. Thus war suspends intercourse and commerce
between citizens or subjects of belligerent nations; it renders
[99 U.S. 700, 763]
during its continuance the performance of contracts
previously made, unlawful. These incidental consequences were
contemplated in the grant of the war power. So the regulation of
commerce and the imposition of duties may so affect the prices of
articles imported or manufactured as to essentially alter the value
of previous contracts respecting them; but this incidental
consequence was seen in the grant of the power over commerce and
duties. There can be no valid objection to laws passed in execution
of express powers, that consequences like these follow incidentally
from their execution. But it is otherwise when such consequences do
not follow incidentally, but are directly enacted.'
'The only express authority or any legislation affecting the
obligation of contracts is found in the power to establish a uniform
system of bankruptcy, the direct object of which is to release
insolvent debtors from their contracts upon the surrender of their
property.' 12 Wall. 663. From this express grant in the case of
bankrupts the inference is deducible, that there was no general
power to interfere with contracts. If such general power existed,
there could have been no occasion for the delegation of an express
power in the case of bankrupts. The argument for the general power
from the absence of a special prohibition proceeds upon a
misconception of the nature of the Federal government as one of
limited powers. It can exercise only such powers as are specifically
granted or are necessarily implied. All other powers, not prohibited
to the States, are reserved to them or to the people. As I said in
the case referred to, the doctrine that where a power is not
expressly forbidden it may be exercised, would change the whole
character of our government. According to the great commentators on
the Constitution, and the opinions of the great jurists, who have
studied and interpreted its meaning, the true doctrine is, that
where a power is not in terms granted, and is not necessary or
proper for the exercise of a power thus granted, it does not exist.
It would not be pretended, for example, had there been no amendments
to the Constitution as originally adopted, that Congress could have
passed a law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting
the free exercise thereof, or abridging the freedom of speech, or
the right of the people
[99 U.S. 700, 764] to assemble and
petition for a redress of grievances. The amendments prohibiting the
exercise of any such power were adopted in the language of the
preamble accompanying them, when presented to the States, 'in order
to prevent misconception or abuse' of the powers of the
Constitution.
Independent of these views, there are many considerations which
lead to the conclusion that the power to impair contracts, by direct
action to that end, does not exist with the general government. In the
first place, one of the objects of the Constitution, expressed in its
preamble, was the establishment of justice, and what that meant in its
relations to contracts is not left, as was justly said by the late
Chief Justice, in Hepburn v. Griswold, to inference or conjecture. As
he observes, at the time the Constitution was undergoing discussion in
the convention, the Congress of the Confederation was engaged in
framing the ordinance for the government of the Northwestern
Territory, in which certain articles of compact were established
between the people of the original States and the people of the
Territory, for the purpose, as expressed in the instrument, of
extending the fundamental principles of civil and religious liberty,
upon which the States, their laws and constitutions, were erected. By
that ordinance it was declared, that, in the just preservation of
rights and property, 'no law ought ever to be made, or have force in
the said Territory, that shall, in any manner, interfere with or
affect private contracts or engagements bona fide and without fraud
previously formed.' The same provision, adds the Chief Justice, found
more condensed expression in the prohibition upon the States against
impairing the obligation of contracts, which has ever been recognized
as an efficient safeguard against injustice; and though the
prohibition is not applied in terms to the government of the United
States, he expressed the opinion, speaking for himself and the
majority of the court at the time, that it was clear 'that those who
framed and those who adopted the Constitution intended that the spirit
of this prohibition should pervade the entire body of legislation, and
that the justice which the Constitution was ordained to establish was
not thought by them to be compatible with legislation of an opposite
tendency.' 8 Wall. 623.
[99 U.S. 700, 765] Similar views are found expressed in
the opinions of other judges of this court. In Calder v. Bull, which
was here in 1798, Mr. Justice Chase said, that there were acts which
the Federal and State legislatures could not do without exceeding
their authority, and among them he mentioned a law which punished a
citizen for an innocent act; a law that destroyed or impaired the
lawful private contracts of citizens; a law that made a man judge in
his own case; and a law that took the property from A. and gave it to
B. 'It is against all reason and justice,' he added, 'for a people to
intrust a legislature with such powers, and therefore it cannot be
presumed that they have done it. They may command what is right and
prohibit what is wrong; but they cannot change innocence into guilt,
or punish innocence as a crime, or violate the right of an antecedent
lawful private contract, or the right of private property. To maintain
that a Federal or State legislature possesses such powers if they had
not been expressly restrained, would, in my opinion, be a political
heresy altogether inadmissible in all free republican governments.' 3
Dall. 388.
In Ogden v. Saunders, which was before this court in 1827, Mr.
Justice Thompson, referring to the clauses of the Constitution
prohibiting the State from passing a bill of attainder, an ex post
facto law, or a law impairing the obligation of contracts, said:
'Neither provision can strictly be considered as introducing any new
principle, but only for greater security and safety to incorporate
into this charter provisions admitted by all to be among the first
principles of our government. No State court would, I presume,
sanction and enforce an ex post facto law, if no such prohibition was
contained in the Constitution of the United States; so, neither would
retrospective laws, taking away vested rights, be enforced. Such laws
are repugnant to those fundamental principles upon which every just
system of laws is founded.'
In the Federalist, Mr. Madison declared that laws impairing the
obligation of contracts were contrary to the first principles of the
social compact and to every principle of sound legislation; and in the
Dartmouth College Case Mr. Webster contended that acts, which were
there held to impair the obligation of contracts, were not the
exercise of a power properly legislative,
[99 U.S. 700, 766]
as their object and effect was to take away vested rights. 'To
justify the taking away of vested rights,' he said, 'there must be a
forfeiture, to adjudge upon and declare which is the proper province
of the judiciary.' Surely the Constitution would have failed to
establish justice had it allowed the exercise of such a dangerous
power to the Congress of the United States.
In the second place, legislation impairing the obligation of
contracts impinges upon the provision of the Constitution which
declares that no one shall be deprived of his property without due
process of law; and that means by law in its regular course of
administration through the courts of justice. Contracts are property,
and a large portion of the wealth of the country exists in that form.
Whatever impairs their value diminishes, therefore, the property of
the owner; and if that be effected by direct legislative action
operating upon the contract, forbidding its enforcement or transfer,
or otherwise restricting its use, the owner is as much deprived of his
property without due process of law as if the contract were impounded,
or the value it represents were in terms wholly or partially
confiscated.
In the case at bar the contract with the Central Pacific is, as I
have said, changed in essential particulars. The company is compelled
to accept it in its changed form, and by legislative decree, without
the intervention of the courts, that is, without due process of law,
to pay out of its earnings each year to its contractors, the United
States, or deposit with them, a sum that may amount to $1,200,000, and
this, twenty years before the debt to which it is to be applied
becomes due and payable by the company. If this taking of the earnings
of the company and kee ing them from its use during these twenty years
to come is not depriving the company of its property, it would be
difficult to give any meaning to the provision of the Constitution. It
will only be necessary hereafter to give to the seizure of another's
property or earnings a new name,-to call it the creation of a
sinking-fund, or the providing against the possible wastefulness or
improvidence of the owner,-to get rid of the constitutional restraint.
To my mind the evasion of that clause, the frittering away of all
sense and meaning to it, are insuperable objections to the legislation
of Congress. Where contracts are impaired, or when operating against
the government [99 U.S.
700, 767] are sought to be evaded and avoided by
legislation, a blow is given to the security of all property. If the
government will not keep its faith, little better can be expected from
the citizen. If contracts are not observed, no property will in the
end be respected; and all history shows that rights of persons are
unsafe where property is insecure. Protection to one goes with
protection to the other; and there can be neither prosperity nor
progress where this foundation of all just government is unsettled.
'The moment,' said the elder Adams, 'the idea is admitted into society
that property is not as sacred as the laws of God, and that there is
not a force of law and public justice to protect it, anarchy and
tyranny commence.'
I am aware of the opinion which prevails generally that the Pacific
railroad corporations have, by their accumulation of wealth, and the
numbers in their employ, become so powerful as to be disturbing and
dangerous influences in the legislation of the country; and that they
should, therefore, be brought by stringent measures into subjection to
the State. This may be true; I do not say that it is not; but if it
is, it furnishes no justification for the repudiation or evasion of
the contracts made with them by the government. The law that protects
the wealth of the most powerful, protects also the earnings of the
most humble; and the law which would confiscate the property of the
one would in the end take the earnings of the other.
There are many other objections to the act of Congress besides
those I have mentioned, each to my mind convincing; but why add to
what has already been said? If the reasons given will not convince,
neither would any others which could be presented. I will, therefore,
refer only to the interference of the law with the rights of the State
of California.
The Central Pacific being a State corporation, the law creating it
is, by the Constitution of California, subject to alteration,
amendment, and repeal by its legislature at any time,-a power which
the legislature can neither abdicate nor transfer. In its assent given
to the company to extend its road into the territory of the United
States,-the general government having authorized the extension,-the
legislature reserved the same control which it possesses over other
railroad and telegraph companies
[99 U.S. 700, 768] created by it. That
control under the new constitution goes, as is claimed, to the extent
of regulating the fares and freights of the company, thus limiting its
income or earnings; and of supervising all its business, even to the
keeping of its accounts, making disobedience of its directors to the
regulations established for its management punishable by fine and
imprisonment; and the legislature may impose the additional penalty of
a forfeiture of the franchises and privileges of the company. The law
in existence when the corporation was created, and still in force,
requires the creation of a sinking-fund by the company to meet its
bonds, and under it large sums have been accumulated for that purpose,
and still further sums must be raised. In a word, the law of the State
undertakes to control and manage the corporation, in all particulars
required for the service, convenience, and protection of the public;
and can there be a doubt in the mind of any one that over its own
creations the State has, within its own territory, as against the U
ited States, the superior authority? Yet the power asserted by the
general government in the passage of the act of 1878 would justify
legislation affecting all the affairs of the company, both in the
State and in the Territories of the United States. It could treble the
amount of the sum to be annually deposited in the sinking-fund; it
could command the immediate deposit of the entire amount of the
ultimate indebtedness; it could change the order of the liens held by
the government and the first-mortgage bondholders; it could extend the
lien of the government beyond the property to the entire income of the
company, and, in fact, does so by the act in question (sect. 9); it
could require the transportation for the government to be made without
compensation; and it could subject the company to burdens which, if
anticipated at the time, would have prevented the construction of the
road. A power thus vast, once admitted to exist, might be exerted to
control the entire affairs of the company, in direct conflict with the
legislation of the State; its exercise would be a mere matter of
legislative discretion in Congress. Yet it is clear that both
governments cannot control and manage the company in the same
territory, subjecting its directors to fine and imprisonment for
disobeying their regulations. Under the Constitution the management of
local [99 U.S. 700, 769]
affairs is left chiefly to the States, and it never
entered into the conception of its framers that under it the creations
of the States could be taken from their control. Certain it is that
over no subject is it more important for their interests that they
should retain the management and direction than over corporations
brought into existence by them. The decision of the majority goes a
great way-further, it appears to me, than any heretofore made by the
court-to weaken the authority of the States, in this respect, as
against the will of Congress. According to my understanding of its
scope and reach, the United States have only to make a contract with a
State corporation, and a loan to it, to oust the jurisdiction of the
State, and place the corporation under their direction. It would seem
plain that if legislation, taking institutions of the State from its
control, can be sustained by this court, the government will drift
from the limited and well-guarded system established by our fathers
into a centralized and consolidated government.
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