1. Where a precinct in an organized county in Nebraska voted,
pursuant to the statute of that state approved Feb. 16, 1809, to
aid a work of internal improvement, and bonds were, as in this
case, issued therefor by the county commissioners (
infra,
p.
105 U. S.
238),
held that, to enforce payment, the holder
of them must sue the county, and judgment, if rendered in his
favor, will be in form against it, and be collected by a tax upon
the taxable property of the precinct.
2. The courts of the United States cannot by mandamus compel the
collection of a tax to pay such bonds until a judgment upon them
shall be obtained.
County of Greens v. Daniel,
102 U. S. 187,
cited on this point and approved.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
By a statute of Nebraska, passed in 1869,
"to enable counties, cities, towns, and precincts to borrow
money on their bonds, or to issue bonds to aid in the construction
or completion of works of internal improvement in this state, and
to legalize bonds already issued for such purposes,"
the legal voters of counties and cities were authorized to vote
bonds for such purposes, and upon a favorable vote, the county
commissioners in case of a county, and the city council in case of
a city, were to issue the bonds as voted, which were to "continue a
subsisting liability against said city or county" until paid. It
was further made the duty of the proper officer annually to cause
to be levied, collected, and paid over to the holders of such bonds
"a special tax on all taxable property within said county or city,
sufficient to pay" the interest and principal as they fell due.
Sects. 6 and 7 of the act are as follows:
"SEC. 6. Any county or city which shall have issued its bonds in
pursuance of this act, shall be estopped from pleading want of
consideration therefor, and the proper officers of such county
or
Page 105 U. S. 238
city may be compelled, by mandamus or otherwise, to levy the tax
herein provided to pay the same."
"SEC. 7. Any precinct, in any organized county of this state,
shall have the privilege of voting to aid works of internal
improvement, and be entitled to all the privileges conferred upon
counties and cities by the provisions of this act; and in such case
the precinct election shall be governed in the same manner as is
provided in this act, so far as the same is applicable, and the
county commissioners shall issue special bonds for such precinct,
and the tax to pay the same shall be levied upon the property
within the bounds of such precinct. Such precinct bonds shall be
the same as other bonds, but shall contain a statement showing the
special nature of such bonds."
General Statutes of Neb. 448.
Under the authority of sec. 2, bonds were issued by the county
commissioners of Dodge County in the following form:
"UNITED STATES OF AMERICA"
"STATE OF NEBRASKA"
"It is hereby certified that Fremont Precinct, in the County of
Dodge, in the State of Nebraska, is indebted unto the bearer in the
sum of one thousand dollars, payable on or before twenty years
after date, with interest at the rate of ten percent per annum from
date. Interest payable annually on the presentation of the proper
coupons hereto annexed. Principal payable at the office of the
county treasurer in Fremont, Dodge County, Nebraska; interest
payable at the Ocean National Bank, in the city of New York."
"This bond is one of a series issued in pursuance of and in
accordance with a vote of the electors of said Fremont Precinct at
a special election held on the 11th day of November, 1870, at which
time the following proposition was submitted:"
"Shall the county commissioners of Dodge County, Nebraska, issue
their special bonds on Fremont Precinct, in said county, to the
amount not to exceed fifty thousand dollars, to be expended and
appropriated by the county commissioners, or as much thereof as is
necessary, in building a wagon bridge across the Platte River, in
said precinct; said bonds to be made payable on or before twenty
years after date, bearing interest at the rate of ten percent per
annum, payable annually? Which proposition was duly elected,
adopted, and accepted by a majority of the electors of said
precinct voting in favor of the proposition. "
Page 105 U. S. 239
"And whereas the Smith Bridge Company, of Toledo, Ohio, have
entered into a contract with said county commissioners to furnish
the necessary materials, and to build and construct said bridge
referred to in the foregoing proposition:"
"Wherefore this bond, with others, is issued in pursuance
thereof, as well as under the provision of an Act of the
Legislature of the State of Nebraska approved February 15th, 1869,
entitled"
"An Act to enable counties, cities, and precincts to borrow
money on their bonds, to aid in the construction or completion of
works of internal improvement in this state, and to legalize bonds
already issued for such purpose."
"In witness whereof we, the said county commissioners of said
Dodge County, have hereunto set our hands, this first day of
September, A. D. 1871."
"GEORGE F. BLANCHARD"
"A. C. BRIGGS"
"JOHN P. EATON"
"
County Commissioners"
"Attest:"
"[SEAL] A. G. BRUGH,
County Clerk"
Default having been made in the payment of sundry coupons
attached to these bonds, Davenport, the plaintiff in error, brought
suit against the county for the recovery thereof in the Circuit
Court of the United States for the District of Nebraska. The
petition set forth the issue of the bonds according to the facts
and prayed judgment
"for the sum of eight hundred and fifty dollars and costs of
suit, said judgment to be collected by a tax upon the taxable
property within the territory comprising said Fremont Precinct at
the time said bonds were voted and issued."
The county demurred to the petition, and at the hearing the
following questions arose:
"1. Whether upon the allegations of the amended petition filed
in said court on the twelfth day of May, 1881, the said County of
Dodge is liable to a suit in which judgment can be rendered against
said County of Dodge, on the bonds and coupons therein declared
upon and set out."
"2. Whether upon the allegations of the said petition the
plaintiff is entitled to recover a judgment in form against the
County of Dodge, to be satisfied or collected only by levy of
Page 105 U. S. 240
a tax on the taxable property in Fremont Precinct, as prayed for
in said petition."
Upon these questions the opinions of the circuit justice and
district judge holding the court were opposed, and that
disagreement has been duly certified here. The opinion of the
circuit justice being that the questions should be answered in the
negative, the demurrer was sustained and judgment given for the
defendant. From that judgment this writ of error has been brought,
and the case is now here for determination on the certificate of
division.
When county bonds are issued under the statute in question, it
is expressly provided that they shall constitute a debt against the
county, to be paid by the levy and collection of taxes on all the
taxable property within the county. If aid is voted by a precinct,
bonds also are to be issued, differing only from county bonds in
that they are to be paid from taxes levied on property within a
precinct. "As to the several duties of the county commissioners
respecting them," says the Supreme Court of Nebraska in
State
v. Thorne, 9 Neb. 458, 461,
"the law makes no distinction whatever between precinct and
county bonds. They must issue both, and when issued it is their
duty to keep a record of the kinds and amounts, as well as the
times and places of payment, and make provisions therefor, as the
statute directs. In the case of precinct bonds, the means of
payment must be raised by a tax levied by the commissioners 'upon
the property within the bounds of such precinct,' which must be
collected in the same manner as is the ordinary county revenue, and
through the agency of the county treasurer, whose only duty in
connection with the fund arising therefrom, when collected, is to
hold it subject to the order of the county commissioners directing
its application to the object for which it was intended. As before
stated, the management of this sort of precinct indebtedness is
made to conform to that of counties of like character. The sole
distinction is that it concerns a distinct portion only, instead of
the whole body of the county. The money with which to meet the
obligations of a precinct is raised and paid out with the same
formality, and through precisely the same agencies, as are the
ordinary county funds, and except when
Page 105 U. S. 241
there is some special provision of statute authorizing it,
payment therefrom can be legally made only on 'warrants by the
county commissioners according to law.'"
A bond implies an obligor bound to do what it is agreed shall be
done. Precincts in Nebraska are but political subdivisions of a
county. They have no corporate existence, and cannot contract or be
contracted with. They have no corporate officers, and can neither
sue nor be sued. Certain officers are elected by the voters of
precincts for political, administrative, and judicial purposes, but
they are in no sense the representatives of the people of the
territory as a municipality.
State v. Dodge County, 10
Neb. 20. Precincts are governed by the county commissioners, the
governing board of the county, and by the appropriate officers of
the state. Their relation to a county is like that of a ward to a
city. Having no corporate existence, no separate municipal
authority, they cannot, says again the Supreme Court of the state
in the case last cited, "enter into contracts directly or
indirectly, nor assume obligations which a court might be called on
to enforce." Hence the precinct cannot become the obligor of
precinct bonds, and we think it follows that the county, which does
have a corporate existence and can contract and be contracted with,
and upon whose officers is imposed the duty not only of issuing the
bonds, but of providing for the payment of them, is the political
entity bound by the obligation and charged with the debt created
thereby. The only difference between the two kinds of debt is that
in one, all the taxable property of the county is charged with its
payment, and in the other, only a part. In both, the mandamus to
enforce the levy and collection of the necessary taxes lies to the
proper officers of the county alone. This remedy is expressly
provided for, and thus the presumption that might otherwise arise
of an intention to erect the precinct into a corporation for the
purpose of these obligations because, without it, the bonds could
not be enforced, is rebutted. We think therefore that the special
bonds which the county commissioners are to issue for the precincts
are in legal effect the special bonds of the county payable out of
a special fund to be raised in a special way. Although the form of
expression in the Nebraska statute
Page 105 U. S. 242
is somewhat different from that in Missouri which we were called
on to consider in
County of Cass v. Johnston, 95 U. S.
360, we think the legal effect of it is the same. In
Missouri, it was provided that the bonds should be in the name of
the county, but in Nebraska there can be no bond except it be of
the county, and as a bond is to be made, it necessarily follows
that the county must make it. In express terms it is stated that
precinct bonds shall be the same as other bonds -- that is to say,
county bonds -- but must contain a statement of their special
nature, which confines the area of taxable property to a part
rather than the whole of the county.
If there is nothing else in the case, therefore, we think it
comes within
County of Cass v. Johnston, supra, and that
an action at law will lie in the courts of the United states
against the county for the recovery of the special judgment asked
for.
County Commissioners v. Chandler, 96 U. S.
205, was upon coupons attached to some of this same
issue of bonds. Judgment had been rendered against the county in
the court below, and that judgment was affirmed here. No one seemed
to think then that the defense now relied on was good, for it was
not mentioned in this court or below. The defense then made related
only to the authority of a precinct to vote aid for the building of
a toll bridge.
It is contended, however, that as the statute which authorizes
the creation of the liability provides a special remedy for its
enforcement, this suit cannot be maintained. The remedy provided is
by mandamus to compel the proper officers to levy the necessary
tax. In
County of Greene v. Daniel, 102 U.
S. 187, a case similar to this in many of its features,
we said a suit to get judgment on bonds or coupons was part of the
necessary machinery which the courts of the United states must use
in enforcing this remedy, and that the jurisdiction of those courts
is not to be ousted simply because in the courts of the state the
mandamus could be granted without a judgment. In the state courts,
the liability may, as we understand the case of
State v. Dodge
County, supra, be determined in the proceedings for the
mandamus. Such is not, however, the rule in the courts of the
United states, where the writ of mandamus is only granted in aid of
an existing jurisdiction. In those
Page 105 U. S. 243
courts, the judgment at law is necessary to support the writ,
which is in the nature of an execution to carry the judgment into
effect.
County of Greene v. Daniel, supra; 82 U.
S. Norton, 15 Wall. 427;
Bath
County v. Amy, 13 Wall. 244. As the judgment asked
for is special, and will only entitle the plaintiff to payment
through the instrumentality of the special tax to be levied, the
suit as it now stands is in reality only a way of getting the
remedy the statute provides. The only execution that can issue on
the judgment will be the mandamus.
The Supreme Court of the state, in
State v. Dodge County,
supra, declined to issue a mandamus for the levy of taxes to
pay a judgment in the circuit court of the United states on some of
the coupons attached to this class of bonds, and in the opinion
declared the judgment a nullity; but this we must understand to
mean a nullity as the foundation of any proceedings in that court
for its enforcement. To enable the courts of the United states to
afford the remedy which the law has specially provided, such a
judgment is a necessary preliminary. In fact, a judgment is but one
of the steps in the proceeding to obtain the mandamus. The statute
has given a remedy by mandamus, but has not undertaken to regulate
the process by which it is to be secured. That depends on the
practice established in the several tribunals from which it is to
be obtained. The practice in the state courts requires one mode of
proceeding, that in the courts of the United states another; but
the result is the same in both -- to wit, the order for the levy
and collection of the requisite tax.
It follows that each of the questions certified must be answered
in the affirmative.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings
in accordance with this opinion.