State ex rel. Minnesota Midland Railway Co. v. Town of Highland

Berry, J.

Laws 1877, c. 106, (Gen. St. 1878, c. 34, §§ 92-105,) entitled “An act to authorize municipal corporations-to aid in the construction of railroads,” authorizes (in section 1) any town in this state “to aid in the construction of any railroad in this state to be constructed by any railroad company for public use, by authority of any law of this state, in-the manner” prescribed in subsequent portions of the chapter. Section 2 provides that “the aid to be contributed to-the construction of any such railroad,” by any town, shall be by its bonds, to be issued to or for the use of such company. Section 3 adds that no such bonds shall be issued until a mutual agreement in relation thereto shall have been arrived at, in one of two modes thereafter specified. Section 4 provides that whenever any such railroad company “shall desire-aid in the construction of its railroad,” from any town, it shall make and deliver to the town clerk a definite proposition in writing which “shall contain a statement of the amount of' bonds desired * * * and * * a statement specifying when said bonds are to be delivered, with reference to the time of the entire or partial construction of said railroad,” and “the clerk with whom any such proposition shall be filed shall immediately endorse thereon the date of its receipt by him, and transcribe the same into the record book of the-town.” Section 7 provides that one mode of arriving at the mutual agreement required shall be as follows: 1st: That the railroad company, within three months after the filing of' any such proposition, as aforesaid, shall give notice that, after a day named, a petition to certain authorities of the town, asking them to agree to such proposition, will be presented to-the resident tax-payers of the town for their signatures, and such petition shall be appended to a substantial copy of such proposition. “2d: If, within four months after the filing of such proposition with any such * * * town clerk, * * the said railroad company shall deliver to such clerk a substantial copy or copies of such proposition so filed, with such *359petition to the proper authorities of such * * town * * asking such authorities to agree to such proposition appended thereto, bearing the signatures of a majority of the persons residing in such * * town * * who were assessed for taxes upon real or personal estate in such * * town, * * as shown by the last assessment-roll of the district of which aid is. desired, which signatures shall be verified by the affidavit of some person witnessing such signatures, then such mutual agreement for the issue of bonds by such municipality, and of stock by such railroad company, shall be deemed and considered to have been arrived at and perfected; and thereupon such bonds shall be issued and delivered, in conformity with the true intent and meaning of such proposition, and with the provisions of this act.” Section 6 declares that “no bonds shall be delivered to the company, under such proposition, until the road, branch or extension thereof, for the construction of which the aid has been granted, shall have been completed, ready for the passage of the cars continuously, from one terminus through to the district granting the aid, or to the nearest point in its line to such district, or from such terminus to such point as the company in its proposition shall have proposed to construct said road, where the line of the road shall not lie through the district.”

From this abstract, we think the following propositions are clearly deducible:

First. The statute authorizes a town to aid the construction of roads. It does not authorize aid to roads already constructed. The idea of the law-maker unquestionably was to authorize aid to be given to roads which were believed to require aid, in order to secure their construction, and not to roads which had been constructed without such aid.

Second. The aid is to be rendered by the making of a mutual agreement between the town and the railroad company, by which the town is legally bound to issue its bonds to or for the use of the company, upon performance by the *360latter of its part of the agreement, and by the issue of bonds accordingly.

Third. Until the mutual agreement is “arrived at and perfected,” as provided in section 7, no legal liability or obligation whatever is imposed upon or incurred by the town in the premises. In other words, unless an agreement is “arrived at and perfected,” as there provided, all.steps which may have been taken with the intent of arriving at and perfecting one, or looking in that direction, are absolute nullities.

As a consequence of these propositions, it follows that to be of any effect to bind a town, the agreement to issue bonds must be. “arrived at and perfected,” before the construction of the road or piece of road, the construction of which the agreement is designed to aid.

This is decisive of this case. The writ shows that the proposition of the relator, the Minnesota Midland Railway Company, to the respondent, contained a statement specify, ing that the bonds asked for should be issued and delivered to the company when it should have constructed its railroad, with the cars running thereon, from the city of Wabasha, through the town of West Albany, to the south line of section 34 in said town of West Albany, and that the company would, in consideration of the issue and delivery of said bonds, construct its railway, and have the cars running thereon, to said line, by the first day.of May, 1878. The writ further shows that the relator had, on May 1, 1878, constructed, completed and equipped its road, in full compliance with the statement contained in its said proposition.

The writ further shows that on May 13, 1878, the relator delivered to the town clerk of the town of Highland, (the respondent,) a substantial copy of the proposition thereto-' fore filed with him, with the petition thereto appended, asking the respondent’s board of supervisors to agree to said proposition, which petition bore the signatures of a majority of the resident tax-payers, etc. It-appears, then, from the writ, that the relator asked a certain amount of bonds from *361■ the respondent, and, in consideration of their issue, proposed to build and equip a certain length of road. This, so far as the matter of road construction is concerned, is the extent of • the proposition. The • aid which was asked, and which the relator would have received, and would have been entitled to receive, if the agreement had been seasonably “arrived at rand perfected,” would have been aid for the construction of the length of road thus proposed to be constructed, and not . aid for the construction of any other part of the road which the relator was authorized to construct. Now it appears from the writ that the length of road thus proposed to be ■ constructed and equipped, was completely constructed and equipped, on May 1, 1878, as provided in the relator’s prop- ■ osition, but that the filing, with the town-clerk, of the petition and other papers, was not made until May 13, 1878, so that no agreement had been arrived at or perfected before that date. At that date, the length of road, aid in the eon- • struction of which was asked, had already been constructed, . and, therefore, as we have before seen, it was not a road or piece of road to aid the construction of which the town was -authorized by the statute to issue, or to agree to issue, its bonds. The authority of a town to issue bonds in aid of the • construction of a railroad, being wholly derived from statute, can only be exercised in the cases and in the manner which the statute permits and provides. Upon the facts stated in the writ, it therefore follows that the respondent has made no legal agreement to issue its bonds to the relator, and the .motion to quash the writ is accordingly granted.*

A motion to quash, a similar writ issued on the relation of the same •railway company to the town of West Albany was argued and submitted with the foregoing case, with the same' result.

B. B. Galusha and Young & Neioel, for relator.

H. JD. Stocker and W. J. Hahn, for respondent.