1. If the provisions of a statute which are unconstitutional be
so connected with its general scope that, should they be stricken
out, effect cannot be given to the legislative intent, the other
provisions must fall with them.
2. Neither the charter of the City of Louisiana, Missouri,
approved March 12, 1870, construed with art. 10, sec. 14, of the
state constitution adopted in 1820, nor sec. 17, chap. 63, of the
General Statutes of 1865, taken in connection with an amendment to
that chapter adopted as sec. 52, March 24, 1870, authorized the
city to subscribe to the capital stock of a railroad company
organized under the laws of Illinois.
3. A popular vote in favor of a municipal subscription for stock
of a railroad company cast at an election held without authority of
law does not bind the municipality nor confer the power to make the
subscription.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Art. 10, sec. 14, of the Constitution of Missouri, adopted in
1865, is as follows:
"The General Assembly shall not authorize any county, city, or
town to become a stockholder in, or to loan its credit to, any
company, association, or corporation unless two-third of the
qualified voters of such county, city, or town, at a regular or
special election to be held therein, shall assent thereto."
The charter of the City of Louisiana, approved March 12, 1870,
contained the following sections as secs. 8 and 9 of art. 3, and
sec. 14 of art. 7:
"SEC. 8. The bonded or funded debt of the city for all purposes,
including one hundred thousand dollars subscribed (or to be
lawfully subscribed) to railroads terminating at or passing through
the City of Louisiana, shall not exceed the sum of two hundred
thousand dollars,
provided, however, that said debt may be
increased to a sum not exceeding two hundred and fifty thousand
dollars in all, by ordinance or ordinances properly passed and
submitted
Page 103 U. S. 81
to an election under the authority of the city council of all
resident taxpayers of the city -- that is to say, of all adult
persons who shall have been assessed and actually paid a tax on
real or personal property for the year or the year previous to the
year in which such election shall be held -- and at such election
the judges holding the same shall require proof of the payment of
such tax before recording vote of any person offering to vote at
such election, and a majority of all the legal votes cast at said
election shall determine the question for or against such
ordinance."
"SEC. 9. The city shall have power to subscribe to stock in any
incorporated railroad company connecting with the City of
Louisiana, or give a bonus to any institution of learning by
submitting an ordinance making the appropriation or authorizing the
issue of bonds for any such purpose to a vote of the qualified
voters (as provided by section 8) of the city, at any general
election held in the city, or any special election expressly
ordered, at which election a majority of the votes cast shall be
for such ordinance."
"SEC. 14. The city shall not at any time become a subscriber for
any stock in any corporation, except as authorized by this or some
other act of the General Assembly, but said city may by ordinance
appropriate money to aid in opening any road leading to the city,
or in other improvements within the city, or in building any bridge
within two miles of the city, and which may be deemed of general
public benefit to the inhabitants of the city,
provided,
however, that no appropriation shall be made for any
improvement beyond the limits of the city unless a vote be taken on
such appropriation at some general election or special election
ordered for that purpose, and a majority of all votes polled be
cast in favor of that appropriation."
Under the authority of these provisions of the charter the city
council, on the 10th of August, 1871, passed an ordinance, sec. 1
of which is as follows:
"There shall be an election held at the several places in each
ward for the holding general election in the City of Louisiana on
the fifth day of September, 1871, on the proposition to take stock
in the Clarksville and Western Railroad Company, or in the Quincy,
Alton and St. Louis Railroad Company,
provided the said
Quincy, Alton and St. Louis Railroad Company shall cross the
Mississippi River and make its southern terminus within the
corporate limits of the said City of Louisiana at such place as
may
Page 103 U. S. 82
be agreed upon by the officers of said Quincy, Alton and St.
Louis company and the City Council of Louisiana, to an amount not
to exceed fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), said election to be
conducted by the same judges and at the same places as the general
election held on the Tuesday after the first Monday in March, 1871,
and the returns to be made and certified to the city council in the
same manner as that of any general election."
Other sections provided for the payment of the subscription in
bonds and for the form of the ballots. Sec. 4 provided that if on
counting the votes if appeared that two-thirds of the legal votes
cast at the election were in favor of the proposition, a
subscription might be made, and sec. 5 made provision for a
registration of the voters prior to the day of the election.
The Quincy, Alton and St. Louis Railroad Company was an Illinois
corporation, one terminus of whose road was on the bank of the
Mississippi River, in the State of Illinois opposite the City of
Louisiana. Before the day of election, a full registration of the
voters of the city was made from which it appeared that there were
three hundred and fifty-six qualified voters then in the city. On
the day appointed, an election was held at which there were three
hundred and thirty-six votes cast in favor of the subscription and
ten against it. Afterwards the stock was subscribed to the Quincy,
Alton and St. Louis company, and the company having complied with
the terms and conditions of the subscription, the bonds were
delivered by the city, amounting in the aggregate to $50,000, in
the following form:
"Know all men by these presents that the City of Louisiana, in
the State of Missouri, is indebted to _____ or bearer in the sum of
one thousand dollars, lawful money of the United States of America,
which the said City of Louisiana promises to pay on the second day
of October, 1891, at the treasurer's office in the City of
Louisiana, Mo., with interest thereon at the rate of eight percent
per annum, payable annually on the first day of January in each
year upon presentation and surrender of the annexed coupons, as
they severally become due and payable. This bond is issued by the
City of Louisiana, under authority of the General Assembly of the
State of Missouri, entitled 'An Act to amend and reduce into one
the several acts incorporating the City of Louisiana,' approved
Page 103 U. S. 83
March 25, 1870; also an ordinance of the city council of the
City of Louisiana, No. 628, passed Sept. 26, 1870."
"In witness whereof, the City of Louisiana has caused its seal
to be hereto affixed, and the same to be signed by the mayor, and
countersigned by the clerk of the city council, at the City of
Louisiana, Mo., the fourth day of November, in the year of our Lord
eighteen hundred and seventy-one."
"[SEAL]"
"WM. PARKER"
"
Mayor of City of Louisiana"
"Countersigned,"
"N. H. GRIFFITH"
"
Clerk City Council"
The city paid without objection the first installment of
interest as it fell due, but since that time has been in default.
This suit was brought on seventy-nine coupons, past due, of which
the plaintiff's intestate was a purchaser for value before maturity
without notice.
Upon this state of facts, the circuit court gave judgment for
the defendant, and to reverse that judgment this writ of error has
been brought.
The question which lies at the foundation of this case is
whether the Legislature of Missouri has, by a valid law, authorized
the City of Louisiana to subscribe to the capital stock of the
Quincy, Alton and St. Louis Railroad Company, an Illinois
corporation. It is conceded that if there was no such law, the
judgment below was right. It is also conceded that such a
subscription could not be made on the vote of a majority of the
taxpayers of the city, because the General Assembly is prohibited
by the constitution from granting authority for that purpose except
upon the assent of two-thirds of the qualified voters. Neither is
it contended that the qualified voters whose vote is to be taken
under sec. 9 of the charter are not the resident taxpayers
specified in sec. 8, but the claim is that if this unconstitutional
provision is disregarded, enough can be found in the other parts of
the sections to authorize the subscription.
It is an elementary principle that the same statute may be in
part constitutional and in part unconstitutional, and that if the
parts are wholly independent of each other, that which is
constitutional may stand while that which is unconstitutional
Page 103 U. S. 84
will be rejected. "But," as was said by Chief Justice Shaw in
Warren v. Mayor and Aldermen of Charlestown, 2 Gray
(Mass.) 84,
"if they are so mutually connected with and dependent on each
other as conditions, considerations, or compensations for each
other as to warrant a belief that the legislature intended them as
a whole, and that, if all could not be carried into effect, the
legislature would not pass the residue independently, and some
parts are unconstitutional, all the provisions which are thus
dependent, conditional, or connected must all with them."
The point to be determined in all such cases is whether the
unconstitutional provisions as so connected with the general scope
of the law as to make it impossible, if they are stricken out, to
give effect to what appears to have been the intent of the
legislature.
It is contended that, with a proper application of these
principles, sufficient authority for this subscription can be found
either in secs. 8 or 9, art. 3, or sec. 14, art. 7.
As to sec. 8. This section provides in substance that the bonded
or funded debt of the city, including $100,000 subscribed or
lawfully to be subscribed to railroads terminating at or passing
through the city, shall not exceed $200,000 without the assent of a
majority of the resident taxpayers, but that with the assent of the
taxpayers, given in the way pointed out, the debt may be increased
to $250,000. It authorizes no subscription to railroad
corporations, but recognizes the fact that under certain
circumstances, such a subscription may be lawfully made, and limits
the permanent debt to be incurred for that and other purposes to
$200,000 without the consent of the taxpayers and to $250,000, with
their consent. In other words, it is charter provision against
incurring a bonded debt beyond the prescribed amounts. That is the
whole scope and effect of this section.
As to sec. 9. This, when taken in connection with the
requirements of the constitution, cannot be construed as being of
itself a grant of authority to subscribe, because it makes a
subscription dependent on a majority vote of the resident
taxpayers, while the constitution requires the assent of two-thirds
of the qualified voters. In the construction of a statute, every
word is, if possible, to be given some effect. Nothing is to be
Page 103 U. S. 85
stricken out if it can be avoided. It is not to be presumed that
the legislature intended any part to be without meaning. In the
light of these maxims of interpretation, the substantial object of
this section evidently was to limit to a greater extent than had
been done by the constitution the power to subscribe to the stock
of railroad companies connecting with the city. Under the
constitution, a two-thirds vote of the qualified voters, taken
under the authority of law, would be enough; but under the charter,
the two-thirds vote of the qualified voters required by the
constitution, and a majority vote of the taxpayers, were both
necessary. The charter limitation could be repealed. It was in the
nature of a legislative regulation which could be dispensed with
whenever, in authorizing a particular subscription or otherwise,
the legislature should so declare. As it stands, it operates as a
charter protection to the taxpayers against the imposition of
burdens of this kind by the qualified voters alone, but of itself
it authorizes no subscription.
Had there been no constitutional restriction put on the
legislature in matters of this kind, the language employed might
have been susceptible of a different meaning; but with the
constitution as it is, the entire provision as to the majority vote
of the taxpayers, to which the legislature evidently attached
special importance, must be stricken out, and that of the
constitution as to the two-thirds vote of the qualified voters
inserted by implication, before it can be said that what now
appears to be a limitation was, in fact, a positive grant of power.
We are clearly of the opinion that this cannot be done consistently
with the evidence purpose of the law, and as a consequence that no
authority for the subscription can be found in this section of the
charter.
As to sec. 14, art. 7. This clearly gives no affirmative power
to subscribe. It is in effect nothing more than a provision that no
subscription shall be made unless expressly authorized by law,
which is but an enactment of what had before become a well
established rule of decision. It authorized appropriations of money
for the purposes specified on a majority vote of the qualified
voters at a general or special election, and it recognized the
fact, which is no longer disputed, that the legislature might
authorize the city, in a proper way, to become
Page 103 U. S. 86
a subscriber to stock in some corporations. This is the full
extent of the operation of that section.
These, so far as we can discover from the record, were the only
provisions of law relied on in the court below to sustain the
subscription for the payment of which the bonds now in question
were issued. In this Court, however, it is contended that power to
make the subscription may be found in sec. 17, chap. 63, of the
General Statutes of Missouri, of 1865, taken in connection with an
amendment to that chapter, adopted as additional sec. 52, March 24,
1870. Session Acts, pp. 89, 90. Upon this point it is sufficient to
say that the Quincy, Alton and St. Louis company was an Illinois
corporation, and under sec. 17 authority was only given to
subscribe to the stock of companies organized under the laws of
Missouri. By the amendment of 1870 (sec. 52), under certain
circumstances, railroad companies of other states might extend
their roads into Missouri,
"and for that purpose . . . possess and exercise all the rights,
powers, and privileges conferred by the general laws of this state
[Missouri] upon railroad corporations organized thereunder,"
but this did not make them corporations "organized under the
laws of Missouri." If, as is argued, the foreign corporation got,
as one of the privileges conferred on it by this law, the right to
receive municipal subscriptions, it was of no practical value as a
privilege until the power to subscribe was in some form given to
the municipalities.
It is of no importance that two-thirds of the qualified voters
of the city gave their assent to the subscription at the election
which was called. It has been uniformly held that until the
legislature authorizes an election, a vote of the people cannot be
taken which will bind the municipality or confer upon the municipal
authorities the power to make such a subscription. The legislative
authority to obtain the popular assent is as essential to the
validity of the election as it is to the subscription.
Judgment affirmed.