Ejectment. The defendant claimed the land in controversy under a
tax sale which was made by a company incorporated by the
Legislature of Connecticut in 1796 called "The proprietors of the
half million of acres of land lying south of Lake Erie," and
incorporated by an act of the Legislature of Ohio, passed on 15
April, 1803, by the name of "The proprietors of the half million of
acres of land lying south of Lake Erie, called the sufferers'
land." In 1806, the Legislature of Ohio imposed a land tax and
authorized the sale of the lands in the state for unpaid taxes,
giving the owners the right to redeem within one year after the
determination of their minority. This act was in force in 1808. In
1808, the directors of the company, incorporated by the
Legislatures of Connecticut and Ohio, assessed two cents per acre
on the lands of the company, for the payment of the tax laid by the
State of Ohio, and authorized the sale of those lands on which the
assessments were not paid. The lands purchased by the defendant
were the property of minors at the time of the sale, they having
been sold to pay the said assessments under the authority of the
directors of the company.
Held that the sale of the land
under which the defendant claimed was void.
The provisions in the act of incorporation of Ohio that it
should be considered a public act must be regarded in courts, and
its enactments noticed without being specially pleaded, as would be
necessary if the act were private.
That a corporation is strictly limited to the exercise of those
powers which are specially conferred on it will not be denied. The
exercise of the corporate franchise, being restrictive of
individual rights, cannot be extended beyond the letter and spirit
of the act of incorporation.
From a careful inspection of the whole act, it clearly appears
that the incorporation of the company was designed to enable the
proprietors to accomplish specific objects, and that no more power
was given than was considered necessary to attain those
objects.
The words, "all necessary expenses of the company" cannot be so
construed to enlarge the power to tax, which is given for specific
purposes. A tax by the state is not a necessary expense of the
company, within the meaning of the act. Such an expense can only
result from the action of the company in the exercise of its
corporate powers.
The provision in the tenth section
"that the directors shall have power to do what ever shall
appear to them to be necessary and proper to be done for the well
ordering of the interests of the proprietors not contrary to the
laws of the state"
was not intended to give unlimited power, but the exercise of a
discretion within the scope of the authority conferred.
This was an ejectment for lands in the State of Ohio, and on the
trial in the circuit court the defendant excepted to the charge of
the court and prosecuted this writ of error.
Page 29 U. S. 153
The facts are fully stated in the opinion of the court.
Page 29 U. S. 164
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action of ejectment brought in the Circuit Court of
Ohio to recover possession of 1,200 acres of land, parcel of 2,400
acres, in what is called the Connecticut Reserve.
On the trial below, it was agreed that Jonathan Douglas the
ancestor of the plaintiff's lessors, became proprietor of the
premises in question, in May, 1792, under the laws of Connecticut
granting lands to certain sufferers, and died 6 March, 1800, vested
with the legal title, which he held in common with many other
proprietors, the land not being set apart or apportioned to any one
of the whole. That the lessors of the plaintiff were his heirs at
law, and held as partners or tenants in common.
On the trial, it was proved by the plaintiff below, that on 5
May, 1808, four of the lessors were minors.
The defendant set up a title under a tax sale, which was made by
the company incorporated for the management of said lands.
This company was first incorporated by the Connecticut
Legislature in the year 1796. No person is named in the act, but
the corporators are designated, as the "proprietors of the half
million of acres of land lying south of Lake Erie." Under this law
the corporation was organized. In 1797, the Connecticut Legislature
passed an amendment to this law.
Page 29 U. S. 165
On 15 April, 1803, the Legislature of Ohio passed an act
incorporating those owners and proprietors by the name of "the
proprietors of the half million of acres of land lying south of
Lake Erie, called sufferers' land," and by that name gave
succession to them, their heirs and assigns.
This was called the sufferers' land, from the circumstance of
its having been given by the State of Connecticut to indemnify the
losses its citizens had sustained in the Revolutionary War.
The act of incorporation by the Legislature of Ohio required
nine directors to be appointed, who were authorized to hold their
meetings out of the state. In the second section, power is given to
the directors to extinguish the Indian title; to survey the land
into townships or otherwise to make partition, as they should
order, among the owners in proportion to the amount of loss, and
amongst other things, the act provided,
"That to defray all necessary expenses of said company in
purchasing and in extinguishing the Indian claim of title to the
land, surveying, locating, and making partition thereof, as
aforesaid, and all other necessary expenses of said company, power
be and the same is hereby given to and vested in the said directors
and their successors in office to levy a tax or taxes (two-thirds
of the directors present agreeing thereto) on said land, and have
power to enforce the collection thereof."
The ninth section provides
"That all sales of rights or parts of rights of any owner or
proprietor in said half million acres of land made by the collector
shall be good and valid so as to secure an absolute title in the
purchaser unless the said owner and proprietor shall redeem the
same within six calendar months next after the sale thereof by
paying the taxes for which the said right or rights, or parts
thereof, had been sold, with twelve percent, interest thereon, and
costs of suit."
The act contains no provision in favor of the rights of infants
or
femes covert.
By the tenth section of this law, it is provided
"That said directors shall have power and authority, and the
same is hereby given to them and their successors, to do whatever
shall to them appear necessary and proper to be done for
Page 29 U. S. 166
the well ordering and interest of said owners and proprietors
not contrary to the laws of the state."
The eleventh directs that
"Supplies of money which shall remain in the hands of the
treasurer after the Indian title shall be extinguished and said
land located, and partition thereof made, shall be used by said
directors for the laying out and improving the public road in said
tract, as this assembly shall direct."
The act is declared to be a public one in the twelfth
section.
An act imposing a land tax was passed by the Ohio legislature in
1806, which remained in force in 1808. This act required entry to
be made of lands for taxation. A perpetual lien was imposed on the
land, whether entered or not, for the amount of the tax, and minors
had a right to redeem their land sold for taxes within one year
after their minority expired. It appeared in proof at the trial
that at a meeting of the directors of the company convened at the
court house in New Haven, on Thursday, 5 May, 1808, agreeably to a
notification duly issued according to the ordinances of said
directors, it was unanimously voted by six directors, being all
that were present, that a tax of two cents on the pound, original
loss, be assessed on the original rights or losses, in said half
million acres of land, to be paid by each proprietor thereof, in
proportion to each person's respective share or loss, as set in the
grant of said lands made by the State of Connecticut, to be
collected and paid by the several collectors to the treasurer of
this company, on or before 1 July, 1808, to defray the expenses of
a tax laid by the Legislature of the State of Ohio, and other
necessary expenses, for the good of the proprietors of said
land.
The defendant gave in evidence the assessment of a tax upon the
rights of the said Jonathan Douglas the appointment of a collector,
the issuing of a warrant of collection, the advertisement of sale
for taxes, the sale of a part of the right of said Douglas
amounting to 1,200 acres for taxes to Elias Perkins, who conveyed
the tract to the defendant.
The circuit court instructed the jury, that the directors had no
power to assess said tax. And that the infant lessors were
Page 29 U. S. 167
not concluded or bound by such assessment. To these instructions
the defendant excepted. The jury found a verdict of guilty, and
judgment was rendered thereon.
A reversal of this judgment is prayed for by the plaintiff in
error on the following grounds:
1. The court erred in their instruction to the jury that the
directors had no legal authority to assess the tax.
2. That the minor proprietors were not bound and concluded by
the assessment and sale.
It is not contended in this case that this company could derive
corporate powers to do any act in Ohio, in relation to the
sufferers' land under the statute of Connecticut. All their powers
must be derived from the law of Ohio. This law, it is insisted, is
a private act, not designed for public purposes, and consequently
cannot affect the rights of any individual who did not assent to
its provisions. That the provision declaring it to be a public act
does not alter the principle, for the rights derived under it are
of a private nature, being limited to those who have an interest in
the land, and it is denied that any evidence of assent has been
shown by the lessors of the plaintiff or their ancestor.
Several authorities were cited as having a bearing upon the
objections thus stated. The names of the sufferers are published in
the Connecticut act or resolution in 1792, with the amount allowed
to each, as his indemnity for losses sustained. In this act is
found the name of the ancestor of the lessors of the plaintiff. His
right descended to them, subject to the same conditions by which it
was originally held.
The provision of the law of incorporation that it should be
considered a public act must be regarded in courts of justice, and
its enactments noticed, without being specially pleaded, as would
be necessary if the act were private.
That a private act of incorporation cannot affect the rights of
individuals who do not assent to it, and that in this respect it is
considered in the light of a contract, is a position too clear to
admit of controversy. But in the present case, this objection seems
not to have been made in the court below, where proof of the
assent, if necessary, might have been submitted to the jury.
Page 29 U. S. 168
From the nature of the right asserted, and the circumstances
under which it was originated, this Court cannot doubt that the
assent of the proprietors may be fairly presumed both to the act of
Connecticut and to that of Ohio. Rights have been protected and
regulated under those laws, and to the provisions of the latter are
the claimants indebted, in a great degree, for the present value of
the remainder of the land, which they still hold, and as has been
well argued, if they participate in the benefits of the law, they
can set up no exemption from its penalties.
The main question in the case is whether the directors have the
power, under the act of incorporation, to assess a tax on each
proprietor's share to pay a tax to the state. That a corporation is
strictly limited to the exercise of those powers which are
specifically conferred on it will not be denied. The exercise of
the corporate franchise, being restrictive of individual rights,
cannot be extended beyond the letter and spirit of the act of
incorporation. In the second section of the act, power is given to
the directors to extinguish the Indian title, under the authority
of the United States, when obtained; to survey and locate the land
into townships, or otherwise to make partition, and to defray all
necessary expenses in carrying these objects into effect, and to
meet these and "all other necessary expenses of said company," the
directors are authorized to levy a tax or taxes on said land, and
to enforce the collection thereof. As the power to tax for the
purpose of paying a tax to the state is not found among the
enumerated powers of the directors, it must be derived, if it
exist, under the words, "all other necessary expenses of said
company," or under the tenth section, which provides that
"the directors shall have power to do whatever to them shall
appear necessary and proper to be done, for the well ordering and
interest of the proprietors, not contrary to the laws of the
state."
In favor of this construction, it has been ingeniously argued
that partition not having been made of the land, it could not be
entered for taxation as required by the law of the state. That the
half million of acres must be entered on the duplicate of the
collector as one tract, and that it would be
Page 29 U. S. 169
impracticable for the collector to ascertain and collect from
each proprietor his just proportion of the tax. That many of the
proprietors are nonresidents, and that any proportion of them,
being desirous of paying their part of the tax, would not be
discharged by doing so, as a part of the entire tract, involving
their interests, would be liable to be sold for any balance of the
tax which remained unpaid.
Whether partition was made of the land when the directors
assessed the tax does not appear, nor is it considered a fact of
much importance in the case. No argument drawn from convenience can
enlarge the powers of the corporation. Was the tax imposed a
"necessary expense of said company" within the meaning of the
act?
That these words would cover the expense of necessary agents to
assess and collect a tax legitimately imposed by the directors is
clear, and also other incidental expenses, arising from carrying
into effect the powers expressly given, but do they invest the
directors with a new and substantive power? If they do, how is the
exercise of the power to be limited? Must it depend upon the
discretion of the directors to determine all necessary expenses of
the company?
Ample provisions are found in the state law imposing a land tax,
for the assessment and collection of the tax. A lien is held on all
the taxable land in the state, whether entered for taxation or not,
and if the tax should not be paid by a time specified, the
collector was authorized, after giving notice, to sell the smallest
part of the tract which would bring the amount of the tax.
For the convenience of nonresidents, district collectors were
appointed who were required to hold their offices at places named
in the act. The collector for the district including the sufferers'
land held his office at Warren within what is called the
Reservation of Connecticut.
The law imposing the tax operates upon the land in controversy,
and raises a lien, the same as on any other taxable lands in the
state.
It appears, therefore, that it was not the intention of the
legislature to look to the corporation for the payment of the tax
assessed under the law, but to the land, as in all
Page 29 U. S. 170
other cases. And if any part of the land had been sold by the
state in which minors had an interest under the law, they had a
right to redeem it within a year after they became of age. This is
an important provision, and is not contained in the act of
incorporation.
The agents of the state were paid for their services out of the
tax collected, those of the corporation by the company. It would
seem, therefore, that the tax collected by the state would be less
expensive to the proprietors than if collected by their own agents,
and less hazardous to their rights, as the interests of minors were
protected. If, therefore, the argument drawn from convenience could
have any influence, it could not operate favorably to the power of
the directors.
The power to impose a tax on real estate and to sell it where
there is a failure to pay the tax is a high prerogative, and should
never be exercised where the right is doubtful.
In the preamble to the Ohio act of incorporation there is a
reference to the Connecticut act and to the cession of the reserve
by that state to the Union, and a statement that it was annexed to
the State of Ohio. And as a reason for the passage of the act, it
is stated that said
"half million of acres of land are now within the limits of
Trumble County in said state, and are still subject to Indian
claims of title, wherefore, to enable the owners and proprietors of
said half million acres of land, to purchase and extinguish the
Indian claim of title to the same (under the authority of the
United States when the same shall be obtained) to survey and locate
the said land, and to make partition thereof to and among said
owners and proprietors, in proportion to the amount of losses,
which is or shall be by them respectively owned,"
&c. These are the objects to be accomplished by the act of
incorporation, and which could not be attained by the individual
efforts of the proprietors. In the eleventh section of the act it
is provided
"That supplies of money which shall remain in the hands of the
treasurer, after the Indian title shall be extinguished, and said
land located and partition thereof made, shall be used by said
directors for the laying out and
Page 29 U. S. 171
improving the public roads in said tract, as the legislature
should direct."
From a careful inspection of the whole act, it clearly appears
that the incorporation of the company was designed to enable the
proprietors to accomplish specific objects, and that no more power
was given than was considered necessary to attain these
objects.
The words "all necessary expenses of the company" cannot be so
construed as to enlarge the power to tax, which is given for
specific purposes. A tax to the state is not a necessary expense of
the company within the meaning of the act. Such an expense can only
result from the action of the company in the exercise of its
corporate powers.
The provision in the tenth section that the
"directors shall have power to do whatever shall appear to them
to be necessary and proper to be done for the well ordering of the
interest of the proprietors not contrary to the laws of the
state"
was not intended to give unlimited power, but the exercise of a
discretion within the scope of the authority conferred.
If the words of this section are not to be restricted by the
other provisions of the statute, but to be considered according to
their literal import, they would vest in the directors a power over
the land, only limited by their discretion. They could dispose of
the land and vest the proceeds in any manner which they might
suppose would advance the interest of the proprietors. It is only
necessary to state this consequence to show the danger of such a
construction. The restrictions imposed in other parts of the
statute very clearly demonstrate that it was not the intention of
the legislature to invest the directors with such a power. Upon a
full view of the various provisions of the act of incorporation,
the Court does not find a power given to the directors to assess a
tax, as has been done in the case under consideration, to pay a tax
to the state. The judgment of the circuit court must therefore
be
Affirmed with costs.