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EARLY RAILROAD CORPORATE CHARTERS

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Title: EARLY RAILROAD CORPORATE CHARTERS


1
EARLY RAILROAD CORPORATE CHARTERS 1. Railroads
were a unique form of highway and no one knew
when they first began as businesses how they were
to so sharply diverge from turnpikes and canals.
2. Railroad corporate charters were granted by
the States. In the beginning, this required
special legislation but later on general laws
were enacted that set up a formal administrative
procedure to grant articles of incorporation.
The transcontinental Pacific railroads were the
only ones to receive charters from the Federal
Government.
2
  • A Corporation is a fictitious person created by
    law and endowed with many of the functions of a
    human being. It may possess property and a
    treasury distinct from its members, and debts due
    to or by the corporation are not debts due to or
    by the individuals composing it. Corporations
    can sue and be sued and they can be criminally
    prosecuted, fined, and dissolved by the
    sovereign. In U.S. law the Supreme Court has
    extended portions of the Bill of Rights to
    corporations (e.g., within limits, freedom of
    speech).
  • 4. The early railroad charters were very loosely
    written and gave the corporation great leeway.
    The charters usually set the number of directors,
    the amount of capital stock (this was oftentimes
    way out of line with the size of the railroad),
    the borrowing authority (usually very vague and
    subject to great abuse in the 19th Century),
    annual reports, the description of the route
    along with the required crossings.

3
  • Some of the early Charters used the Canal Model
    that is, the fees collected from shippers were
    divided into a Toll Charge (the fee for using the
    canal/railway) and a Transportation Charge (the
    fee charged by the canal boat operator/freight
    car operator).
  • 6. Most importantly, and the reason why
    railroads were very unusual, the State would
    grant the railroad the power of eminent domain
    (that superior dominion of the sovereign power
    over property within the State which authorizes
    it to appropriate it for public use). Without
    such power, the railroad could not construct its
    line over the best possible route without being
    blackmailed by property owners. However, it was
    a two edged sword as it made the railroads
    politically vulnerable to those who lived along
    its right-of-way.

4
  • Why Railroads had Political Problems
  • Unique Form of Highway They owned the highway
    and the vehicles on the highway As such they
    were Common Carriers (under the Common Law) and
    provided their services to the general public
    under authority provided by the State (see C.).
  • They Have Never Been fully Private Businesses
    They had to borrow the power of eminent domain
    From the Government (state and federal)
  • Price Discrimination against Places (Towns and
    Cities) People (businesses) and types of
    Traffic (value based pricing) (Topic 5)
  • They Could Not be Liquidated (i.e., declared
    bankrupt under normal Common Law) (Topic 5)
  • The Complaints of the Farmers (Topic 6)
  • F. Widespread Corruption (Topic 7)
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