By the Covrt
"Wilson, Ch. J.Tbe Legislature of Minnesota, by an act approved March 3d, 1855, incorporated tbe Transit Railroad Company, conferring on it power to sue and be sued, contract and be contracted with, and authorizing and empowering it to build and operate a railroad westerly from Winona to tbe Minnesota River. Tbe company, having organized under tbe charter, by its bond duly executed in March 1858, bound itself to pay to tbe plaintiff tbe sum of $19,500, and interest, on or before tbe third day of April, 1859, on which bond this suit is brought.
To understand tbe issues involved in tbe case, it is necessary to follow tbe legislation with reference to tbe Transit Railroad Company, and tbe steps taken by tbe Company and its trustees, and by the State officers, in incumbering and disposing of tbe property and franchises of tbe Company.
Tbe United States, by an act of Congress approved March 3, 1857, made a grant of land to tbe Territory of Minnesota, for the purpose of aiding in tbe construction of certain rail*187roads; and the Territorial Legislature, by an act approved May 22, 1857, granted a portion of said lands to the Transit Railroad Company, to aid in the construction of the road which it was authorized to build.
In April, 1858, the constitution of the State of Minnesota was so amended as to authorize the State to loan its credit to certain railroad companies, of which the Transit Company was oneand the constitution as thus amended, provided, that “ as a further security, (for the payment of the interest and principal of the bonds of the State loaned and delivered to said companies,) an amount of first mortgage bonds on the roads, lands and franchises of the respective companies, corresponding to the State bonds issued, shall be transferred to the treasurer of the State, at the time of the issue of the State bonds, and in case either of said companies shall make default in the payment of either the interest or principal of the bonds issued to said companies, * * the governor shall proceed in such manner as may be prescribed by law, to sell the bonds of the defaulting company or companies, or the lands held in trust as above, or may require a foreclosure of the mortgage executed to secure the same.” The Legislature, by an act entitled “An act concerning land grant railroads,” approved August 12, 1858, provided that whenever default should occur in the payment of the interest or principal of the railroad bonds transferred to the State, the Governor should “immediately proceed to provide for such payment or payments, and to indemnify the State for such payment or payments, or responsibility, by sale of a sufficient amount of the bonds of the defaulting company, or by a sale of the. lands pledged, or foreclosure of the mortgage or deed of trust of such defaulting company, or by all or any of such means of indemnification.”
The Transit Railroad Company, by a trust deed delivered March 15, 1859, for the purpose of securing the payment of said State railroad bonds, and in pursuance of the requirements of the constitution and State laws, appointed two trustees, to *188whom it granted, bargained, transferred, and assigned in trust, the entire railroad of said company, built or to be built, together with all the other property, rights and franchises of said company of every nature and kind whatever, then owned or thereafter to be acquired, and authorized said trustees in case of the failure of the company to pay the interest or principal of said bonds, (or in case of their default, the Governor,) to sell said property and franchises conveyed in trust, and all benefit and equity of redemption of the company therein, and to execute and deliver to the purchaser a deed of conveyance of the same, which should embrace and pass to the grantee therein named, all the right, claim or demand of the company or trustees in or to said rights, property, or franchises.
The Legislature of the State, by an act approved March 6, 1860, after reciting the default of the land grant railroad companies to pay the interest on these bonds, and of the trustees appointed in the trust deed, (the trustees having neglected to proceed according to law,) made it the duty of the Governor to foreclose the trust deed, and upon a sale of the property, rights and franchises, to bid off and purchase the. same for the State, and to cause suitable and proper conveyance thereof to be made to the State.
The Governor after having given due notice thereof, on the 23d day of June, 1860, sold at public auction all the rights, properties, lands, privileges and franchises, enumerated in the trust deed, and purchased and bid in the same for, and caused a conveyance thereof to be made to, the State. The State thus having acquired all the property, rights and franchises of any and every nature and kind of the Transit Railroad Company, the Legislature, by an act entitled “An act to facilitate the construction of a railroad from Winona westerly by the way of St. Peter,” provided, “That all the rights, benefits, privileges, property, franchises and interests of the Transit Railroad Company, acquired by the State of Minnesota, by virtue of any acts, deeds, agreement or things, by the said State or *189company heretofore done or suffered, or by virtue of any laws of the State or former Territory of Minnesota, or by reason of the sale of said road or any part thereof, by the Governor of said State, or by reason of any provision of the constitution of said State, be, and the same are hereby granted, transferred and continued to William Lamb, S. S. L’ITommedieu, John W. Kirk, Herman Gebhart, and H. C. Stimson, for the purpose and on the terms and conditions hereafter in this act provided, free and clear of all claims or liens thereon, and free and discharged from all claims of the State of Minnesota against the same, except as hereinafter provided. And the said persons, by the name and style of The Winona and St. Peter Railroad Company, are hereby invested with the right to enter upon, use and enjoy, all and singular, the road, property, franchises and immunities heretofore possessed by or granted to the Transit Railroad Company, by an act approved March 3, 1855, and by an act approved May 22, 1857, and all other acts granting privileges to said company, and all the corporate rights and franchises of said Transit Railroad Company are hereby vested in and continued to the said William Lamb, S. S. L’Hommedieu, John W. Kirk, Herman Gebhart, and H. C. Stimson^ their associates, successors and assigns, by the name and style of the Winona and St. Peter Railroad Company.”
The only question of importance in this case is, whether the State, by this cited act, revived the Transit Railroad Company, and continued and re-granted said franchises, rights and property in and to it, under a new name. If this was not the intention of the legislature, and is not the force and effect of the act, the plaintiff cannot recover. It is not important for us in the consideration of this case, to inquire whether the foreclosure by the State was valid, or whether the State in any way acquired a valid title to the lands, franchises and property of the Transit Railroad Company, for it is not claimed that the plaintiff can recover except on the ground that the Winona *190and St. Peter Railroad Company and the Transit Railroad Company are the same identical corporation; and it may be be admitted, at least for the decision of this case, that if that identity is proven, the plaintiff can recover. Nor is it necessary to determine whether the legislature, at the time of the passage of the act of 1862, had, under the constitution, the power to create a private corporation. If, in disregard of the inhibition of the constitution, it attempted to confer corporate powers on the defendant, then of course the plaintiff cannot recover; for, in addition to the objection that the defendant is not the legal entity contracted' with by plaintiff, the other objection at once suggests itself, that the defendant is not a person, having power to contract, or be contracted with, sue or be sued. What then was the intention of the legislature, by the act of 1862 ? Manifestly, the legislature intended by said act to transfer to the defendant the franchises and property formerly owned by the Transit Railroad Company: of this there can be no doubt. But it is claimed by the plaintiff that said act revived said Company, and transferred and continued to it, under the name of the Winona and St. Peter Railroad Company, the property and franchises which it had forfeited to the State; that the defendant and said Transit Railroad Company are the same identical corperation. After a careful consideration of the act, we find not one sentence or section that justifies this conclusion; the tenor of the whole act seems to us inconsistent with such view. The rule is cardinal and universal, that if a statute is plain and unambiguous, and its literal expression leads to no unjust or absurd consequences, there is no room for construction or interpretation. Newell v. The People, 3 Seld. page 97. In delivering the opinion of the Court, Johnson, J., says : “ Whether we are considering an agreement between parties, a statute or a constitution, with a view to its interpretation, the thing we are to seek is the thought which it expresses. To ascertain this, the first resort in all eases is to the natural signification of the words employed *191in the order and grammatical arrangement in which the framers of the instrument have placed them. If thus regarded, the words embody a definite meaning which involves no absurdity, and no contradiction between different parts of the same writing, then that meaning apparent upon the face of the instrument is the one which alone we are at liberty to say was intended to be conveyed. In such a case there is no room for construction. That which the words declare, is the meaning of the instrument; and neither courts nor legislatures have the right to add or to take away from that meaning.”
The act of 1862, by language apt, plain and appropriate, “ granted, transferred and continued to (the persons named by the name and style of the Winona and St. Peter Eailroad Company,) all the rights, benefits, privileges, property, franchises and interests ” of the Transit Eailroad Company which had been acquired by the State. The meaning of this language is plain and unmistakable. According to the rules of legal hermeneutics, one true sense being given to the words, and that being apparent and obvious, we cannot properly seek for another. MoClosky v. Cromwell, 1 Kern, page 603. This rule is especially applicable where the sense sought is only to be drawn from the language used by a forced and unnatural construction. No portion of the act of 1862, according to a natural or fair construction, conveys the idea that the legslature intended to declare the defendant and the Transit Eailroad Company one and the same, 'and it seems very unreasonable to suppose that the legislature, if it had so intended, would have failed to express clearly such intention. This was a matter of too much importance to the State, the Transit Eailroad Company, the defendant and private individuals, to have been left even in doubt. Nor can any argument be predicated in favor of the plaintiff’s thereory, on the ground that the defendant has acquired the same property, rights and franchizes which the Transit Eailroad Company had.
*192It does not admit of doubt but that any other company or corporation had the right to purchase such franchises and property at the foreclosure sale; and it is equally clear that the State, after having acquired, had the right to transfer and dispose of said property and franchises, either by returning them to the old, or granting them to another company; and this being admitted, it necessarily follows that their possession is no evidence that the possessor is the Transit Railroad Company. It is not the franchises that constitute, or the conferring of franchises that create the corporation. “ The artificial person called a corporation is composed of natural persons, and the law deems it to be first brought into existence, and then clothes it with the granted franchises and property.” Dartmouth Col. v. Woodward, 4 "Wheat, page 691.
This artificial being may be dissolved, or in some other way may forfeit its franchises, and the State, under such circumstances, may permit them to merge, and thus become extinguished, or may revive the old corporation, and again confer on it the same franchises, or it may grant them to a different corporation. “ To ascertain whether a charter creates a new corporation, or merely continues the existence of an old one, we must look to its terms, and give them a construction consistent with the legislative intent, and the intent of the corporators.” Bellows v. Hallowell Bank, 2 Mason, pages 43, 44, per Story, J.; Angell & Ames on Corp., Sec. 780.
But it is argued that the legislature, under our constitution, had not the power at the time of the passage of the act of 1862, to create, but that it had the power to revive a corporation of this kind, and therefore that we should hold that it intended to act within the scope of its power, and only to revive and continue the Transit Railroad Company.
Laws should be construed according to the intent of the legislature that framed them; and in explaining this intention, it is doubtless the duty of the courts, when an act admits of two constructions, one of which would render it invalid for re*193pugnancy to the constitution to adopt the other; for a court should not presume that the legislature was ignorant of, or intended to violate the constitution. In this case, we think there is no ambiguity in the language of the act of 1862, nor can we entertain the least doubt as to the intenion of the legislature in enacting it; and therefore we think said rule of statutory construction inapplicable, for it is only in cases of doubt as to the meaning of the legislature that there is any room for construction. But an application of the rule in this case would not help the plaintiff. His case is supported by this argument: The act of 1862 revived and continued the Transit Bailroad Company, and the constitution forbidding the enactment of any law impairing the obligation of contracts, while the Company exists the legislature have not the power to absolve it from its debts and liabilities. By reference to the act we find that it does transfer to the defendant the property and franchises owned by the Transit Bailroad Company, “free and discharged from all claims and Mens thereonP We must therefore suppose either that the legislature did not by said act intend to revive the old corporation, or that it attempted to transcend its powers in re-granting to it its franchises “free and discharged from all claims and hens thereon.” The latter supposition not being admissible, according to the rule invoked by the plaintiff, we must adopt the former. In any point of view, we think a fair and natural construction of the act of 1862 negatives the idea that the legislature intended to revive the Transit Bailroad Company, or to re-grant and continue to it the franchises and property which it had forfeited.
We do not decide in this case whether the legislature had, at the time of the pa'ssage of the act of 1862, power to create a corporation of this kind, that question, in our opinion, not being involved in the case.
The order appealed from is affirmed.