1. Under a statute of Michigan of March 22, 1869, authorizing
cities to pledge their aid "by loan or donation, with or without
conditions" in the construction of any railroad by a company
organized under the laws of the state, the electors of a city voted
to issue its bonds to aid such a company upon certain conditions,
touching the eastern terminus of the road, and providing that if
any citizen should subscribe and pay for stock in the company, the
latter should deliver him such bonds therefor, and that the
citizens should, within thirty days, have the right to subscribe
for the stock to the amount of aid voted. The bonds were delivered
to the company.
Held that the conditions were not
unauthorized by the statute, and constitute no defense to an action
on the bonds.
2. The Court adheres to the ruling in
Township
of Pine Grove v. Talcott, 19 Wall. 666, and
measures the rights and obligations of the parties under the
statute in question as it was there enforced and as it was acted
upon by all the departments of the state government at and before
the time when the company earned the bonds by the performance of
the prescribed conditions. The Court therefore declines to accept
the subsequent adjudications of the Supreme Court of Michigan
declaring the statute to be repugnant to the Constitution of the
state.
3. The courts of the United States, in cases within their
jurisdiction involving contract obligations and rights depending
upon the laws of the state, will conform to the settled
construction which the highest court of the state gave to those
laws at the time when the rights accrued or the obligations were
incurred.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by Taylor, a citizen of New York, to
recover from the City of Ypsilanti, a municipal corporation of
Michigan, the amount of certain coupons cut from bonds issued by
that city in aid of the construction of the Detroit, Hillsdale, and
Indiana Railroad. At the conclusion of the evidence, the jury,
being so instructed, returned a verdict in behalf of the city, upon
which judgment was entered.
Page 105 U. S. 61
The bonds purport to have been issued under the authority of a
general statute, approved March 22, 1869, declaring it to be
lawful, within prescribed limits as to amount, for any city or
township -- a majority of its electors voting, at a meeting called
for that purpose, assenting -- to pledge its aid, "by loan or
donation, with or without conditions," in the construction of any
railroad by a corporation organized under the laws of Michigan. The
electors voted aid to the extent of $50,000 in bonds of the city,
upon condition that the company should have and continue the
eastern terminus of its road in the city, or connect, within its
limits, with the Michigan Central Railroad, and upon the further
condition that if any citizen of Ypsilanti should subscribe and pay
for any share in the stock of the company, the latter
"shall deliver to the persons so subscribing and paying for such
share the bond or bonds of said city equal to the amount so
subscribed and paid for, not exceeding in all the amount of bonds
issued by said city to said railroad company, and that citizens of
said city shall have the right to subscribe to the stock of said
railroad company to an amount not exceeding $50,000 for thirty days
after such aid shall have been voted."
Upon each bond appears a declaration, under the official
signature of the mayor and clerk of the city, setting forth the
conditions attached by the popular vote to the issue and delivery
of the bonds.
In support of the judgment, it is contended that the city, in
giving aid to the construction of a railroad, was restricted to the
specific modes -- loan or donation -- designated in the statute;
that this transaction was neither a loan nor a donation; that it is
essential to a donation that it should not be made for a valuable
consideration or in execution of a contract embracing reciprocal
obligations, since, in a legal sense, it implies an act by which
the owner of a thing voluntarily transfers the title and possession
of the same from himself to another person without any
consideration, and consequently the city was without power to issue
bonds upon conditions such as those imposed by the electors. It is
argued that the conditions are inconsistent with any correct idea
of donation, and that the bonds based thereon are unauthorized by
law, and therefore invalid as obligations of the city.
Page 105 U. S. 62
In this conclusion we are unable to concur. The argument of
counsel fails to give proper effect to material portions of the
statute. Power was conferred, not simply to make a loan or
donation, but to make a loan or donation "with or without
conditions." The statute is silent as to the nature of the
conditions with which the loan or donation might be accompanied. It
was, in our opinion, a legitimate exertion of that power to secure,
in connection with a corporate donation, such advantages or special
privileges for the people of the municipality, not inconsistent
with public policy, as the railroad company was willing to concede.
The requirement that the company should have and continue the
eastern terminus of its road in the city, or connect, within its
limits, with the Michigan Central Railroad, inured to the benefit
of the mass of the population interested in the growth and
prosperity of the city, while the stipulation that citizens of
Ypsilanti should be entitled, for a limited period -- thirty days
-- to receive the city's bonds to an amount equal to the stock they
might subscribe and pay for (not exceeding the amount of the bonds
donated) was of value to such persons only as chose to avail
themselves of the privilege thus secured. If the transaction has
any element of bounty to individual citizens, and was not for that
reason a donation within the technical meaning of that word, it is
quite sufficient to say that it is within the express statutory
authority to attach conditions to any donation which the people
might sanction. We are therefore of opinion that the donation by
the city of its bonds upon the condition prescribed by popular vote
was within the terms of the statute.
This brings us to the consideration of the proposition advanced
in behalf of the city that the Act of March 22, 1869, is repugnant
to the Constitution of Michigan as expounded by its highest
judicial tribunal in
People v. Salem, 20 Mich. 452;
Bay City v. State Treasurer, 23 Mich. 499, and subsequent
cases. These adjudications, it is claimed, constitute the law of
this case, and should be followed as of obligation without
reference to the time when they were made or to any opinion we may
entertain as to the soundness of the principles announced.
The specific provisions which, it is supposed, establish the
Page 105 U. S. 63
invalidity of the act in question are sections six, eight, and
nine of article fourteen, and section thirtytwo of article six.
They declare that "the credit of the state shall not be granted to,
or in aid of, any person, association, or corporation;" that "the
state shall not subscribe to, or be interested in, the stock of any
company, association, or corporation;" that
"the state shall not be a party to, or interested in, any work
of internal improvement, nor engaged in carrying on any such work,
except in the expenditure of grants to the state of land or other
property;"
and that "no person shall be . . . deprived of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law." These sections constitute a
part of the Constitution of 1850, which is still the fundamental
law of state.
It is not to be questioned that the Supreme Court of Michigan,
in the cases cited, has ruled that it was beyond the constitutional
power of the legislature to grant to a municipal corporation
authority to pledge its credit or issue bonds in aid of the
construction of railroads by corporations organized, owned, and
managed by private persons. Before examining the particular grounds
upon which those decisions rest, it is necessary that we should
ascertain what was, at the date of the passage of the act of March
22, 1869, the law of Michigan, declared and acted upon by the
several departments of its government, upon the general subject of
the relations between railroad corporations and the public. The
earliest case, to which our attention has been called is
Swan
v. Williams, 2 Mich. 427. It was determined in 1852. The
constitutional validity of an act incorporating a railroad company
insofar as it authorized the appropriation of private property for
the location, construction, and operation of the road authorized by
its charter was there assailed chiefly upon the ground that
property so appropriated is in no sense taken for public purposes,
but for the private profit and advantage of the corporators. But
the court declined to accede to that view. It held that counties,
towns, cities, and villages are political or municipal corporations
which, from their nature, are subject to the unlimited control of
the legislature; that corporations such as banking, insurance,
manufacturing, and trading companies were private corporations, the
private advantage of the corporators being the ultimate
Page 105 U. S. 64
as well as the immediate object of their creation, and the
resulting benefits to the public being merely incidental, and that
turnpike, bridge, canal, and railroad companies are more properly
styled public corporations since in their creation public duties
and public interests are involved, the discharge of those duties
and the attainment of those interests being the primary object to
be worked out through the powers delegated to them. The very
existence of the latter, said the court, was based as well upon the
delegation to them of the sovereign power to take private property
for public use, as upon the continued exercise of that power in the
use of property for the purposes for which it was condemned; that
such corporations are the means employed to carry into execution a
given power; that the character of a corporation is determined not
so much by the object sought by it as by that designed by the
legislature; that if that object be the public interest, to be
secured by the exercise of powers delegated for that purpose which
would otherwise repose in the state, the corporation is public,
although private interests may be incidentally promoted; that such
a corporation is essentially
"the trustee of the government for the promotion of the objects
desired, a mere agent to which authority is delegated to work out
the public interest through the means provided for that purpose and
broadly distinguished from one created for the attainment of no
public end, and from which no benefit accrues to the community
except such as results incidentally, and not necessarily, from its
operations."
That there might be no doubt as to the scope of the decision,
Martin, J., speaking for the whole court, further said:
"Nor can it be said that the property when taken is not used by
the public, but by the corporators for their own profit and
advantage. It is unquestionably true that these enterprises may be,
and probably always are, undertaken with a view to private
emolument on the part of the corporators; but it is nevertheless
true that the object of the government in creating them is public
utility, and that private benefit, instead of being the occasion of
the grant, is but the reward springing from the services. If this
be not the correct view, then we confess we are unable to find any
authority in the government to accomplish any work of public
utility through any private medium, or
Page 105 U. S. 65
by delegated authority; yet all past history tells us that
governments have more frequently effected these purposed through
the aid of companies and corporations than by their immediate
agents, and all experience tells us that this is the most wise and
economical method of securing these improvements. . . . The purpose
designed by the government in the construction of these roads is
the
use of the public, the expeditious communication from
point to point, and not revenue."
In 1859, the Legislature of Michigan passed an act providing for
the payment from the state treasury of a certain sum by way of
bounty for every bushel of salt manufactured by any individual,
company, or corporation, from water obtained by boring in Michigan,
and exempting from taxation property used for such purposes. Laws
Mich., 1859, p. 551. That law was subsequently amended, and in
People v. State Auditors, 9 Mich. 327, decided in 1861, it
was held that the relators, a manufacturing company, acquired a
vested right to the amount, offered by the original act, for all
salt manufactured prior to the amendatory statute reducing the
bounty. And the doctrines of that case were reaffirmed in
East
Saginaw Mfg. Co. v. City of East Saginaw, 19 Mich. 259,
decided in 1869, after the passage of the Act of March 22, 1869
The diligence of counsel, aided by our own researches, has not
disclosed any adjudication of the Supreme Court of Michigan, prior
to May 26, 1870, in which the doctrines of these cases were
recalled or, in any degree, modified -- doctrines constituting, as
will not be denied, the foundation upon which, in the courts of
this country, rests the power of the legislature, when unrestrained
by constitutional inhibitions, to authorize municipal aid to
railroad enterprises.
So far as the action of the legislative and executive
departments of Michigan is concerned, we find that from the
adoption of the Constitution of 1850 down to the passage of the act
in question, authority was given, in many instances, to municipal
corporations to aid in the construction of railroads and plank
roads by corporations organized and managed by private persons. And
by a general statute passed in 1855, providing for the
incorporation of railroad companies, authority was given
Page 105 U. S. 66
to condemn real estate, property, and franchises for the
purposes of the corporation, making compensation therefor in the
mode prescribed. That statute expressly declares that
"all real estate or property whatsoever, acquired by any
company, under and in pursuance of this act, for the purpose of its
incorporation, shall be deemed to be acquired for public use."
Compiled Laws of Mich., 1857, vol. i. pp. 638, 643. It was in
force when the act of March 22, 1869, was passed. But this is not
all. In the year 1867, a convention was held, charged with the duty
of revising the constitution of the state. The delegates in that
body were, of course, aware of the existence of numerous statutes,
public and private, authorizing railroad corporations to condemn
private property for the purpose of constructing and maintaining
railroads and empowering municipal corporations of the state to
pledge their credit in aid of their construction. If such
legislation was in opposition to the will of the people, or if it
was deemed to be forbidden by the letter or spirit of the existing
constitution, to remodel which was the object of the convention, we
should expect to find in the new constitution some distinct
provision reversing the policy which had been steadily pursued by
the legislative and executive departments of the state, and which
had been sustained as constitutional by the judiciary. But no such
provision was adopted. On the contrary, two sections were adopted,
relating to the subject of municipal aid to railroads, one
declaring that
"The legislature shall not authorize any city or township to
pledge its credit, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of
any railroad to such an extent that the outstanding indebtedness,
exclusive of interest, on account of aid to any and all railroads,
shall exceed ten percent of the assessed valuation of such city or
township,"
while the other affirmatively declared that the legislature
might authorize any city or township to raise money by taxation,
for such purposes, within the amount named. Although the
constitution submitted by the convention of 1867 was not adopted by
the people, the sections, to which we have referred, adopted by
delegates representing every portion of the state, show that there
was no purpose to take from the legislature the power, under all
circumstances, of authorizing municipal aid to railroad
corporations.
Page 105 U. S. 67
The effort was only to restrict the power theretofore exercised
by the legislature.
The Act of March 22, 1869, contains no clause of an unusual
character. It is general in its application to all the townships,
villages, and cities of the state. It requires all bonds executed
under its provisions to be delivered to the state treasurer, to be
by him held, as trustee for the municipality and the railroad
company, until all the conditions prescribed by popular vote or by
the statute were performed. It declares that the railroad company
for which the bonds were voted shall be entitled to receive them
whenever the governor certified that all conditions have been
performed. The bonds having been deposited with the state
treasurer, the company entered upon the work of construction in the
winter of 18691870. The road was completed prior to Jan. 1, 1871,
and has been in operation over since. But prior to May 26, 1870, it
had been so far constructed that the railroad company became
entitled under its contract to the bonds voted by the City of
Ypsilanti. And on the 10th of June, 1870, the governor gave his
certificate under the state seal, stating that the company had
performed all conditions prescribed by the statute, and by the vote
of the people, and was entitled to receive the bonds voted by the
city. On the 21st of June, 1870, the treasurer delivered them to
the company, endorsing upon each that it was delivered by him, on
that day, under the provisions of the act of March 22, 1869. Thus
the city and the railroad company received all for which they
respectively bargained.
On the twentysixty day of May, 1870 -- after, let it be
observed, the railroad company had earned the bonds under its
contract with the city, and was entitled to the required
certificate from the governor -- the case of
People v.
Salem was determined in the supreme court of the state. It
involved the constitutional validity of an act passed in 1864,
authorizing certain townships to pledge their credit, and the
County of Livingston to raise by tax a loan of money, in aid of the
construction of a railroad. The court, Graves, J., dissenting, held
the act to be unconstitutional. The point was distinctly made in
argument that municipal aid to railroads was prohibited by secs. 6,
8, and 9 of art. 14 of the state constitution. It was
Page 105 U. S. 68
claimed that those sections would be rendered nugatory if so
construed as to recognize the power of the legislature to
authorize, or compel, each city and township in the state to grant
or loan its credit to, or subscribe to the stock of, railroad or
other companies, to the amount of a fixed or uniform percentage of
the assessed valuation of its taxable property. But the court did
not rest its decision upon any specific provision of the state
constitution. Its conclusion was placed upon what were declared to
be fundamental maxims of all taxation. It held the exercise, by a
municipal corporation, of the power to pledge its credit to be an
incipient step in the exercise of taxation; that it is essential to
a valid exercise of the power of taxation that it be for a public
purpose; that a corporation created for the purpose of constructing
a railway, to be owned and operated by the corporators, is a
private corporation; that taxation for such a purpose is no more
for a public purpose than would be taxation in behalf of the
proprietors of a mill, or hotel, or newspaper establishment, or
other similar enterprise, which, while private in its nature,
supplied a public need. The conclusion of the court was distinctly
placed upon general principles, and not upon grounds of local law
or upon any special provision of the state constitution, as is
manifest from the last paragraph in the leading opinion, in these
words:
"As therefore it appears that the first and most fundamental
maxim of taxation is violated by the act in question, it becomes
superfluous to consider whether the act would also violate the
maxim of apportionment or be obnoxious in its application because
the burden, even if public, could not also be regarded as local and
peculiar to this township. Equally superfluous is it to consider in
detail the several express provisions of the state constitution
which the respondents suppose to be violated. If the authority
exercised is not within the taxing power of the state, it is quite
needless to discuss whether, if it were within it, there are not
restrictions which prohibit its exercise."
The conclusion in that case, as thereafter declared in
Bay
City v. State Treasurer, struck at the root of all legislation
in aid of railroad companies.
We remark in passing that the doctrines of
People v.
Salem were, when announced, in direct conflict with those
previously
Page 105 U. S. 69
promulgated as well by this Court as by the highest courts of a
large majority of the states. It was said by Mr. Justice Clifford,
speaking for the Court in
Rogers v.
Burlington, 3 Wall. 654, decided in 1865, that the
rule that the legislature, in the absence of constitutional
prohibitions, could authorize municipalities to aid in the
construction of railways owned and managed by private corporations
pervaded the jurisprudence of the United States. We will not at
this late day enter upon the vindication of that rule. And we may
add that under the later doctrines announced by the Supreme Court
of Michigan, it is difficult to perceive how railroads can be
regarded as public highways, subject, in the interest of the
public, to governmental control and regulation.
Subsequently, in
Bay City v. State Treasurer, the
Supreme Court of Michigan reaffirmed the doctrines of
People v.
Salem. In that case, however, the invalidity of municipal aid
and taxation for the construction of railroads by railroad
corporations was apparently placed upon these additional grounds:
1. that such taxation, being inadmissible under the fundamental
principles announced in People v. Salem, was to be deemed unlawful
confiscation, and, therefore, inhibited by sec. 32 of art. 6 of the
state constitution, protecting all persons against deprivation of
property without due process of law; 2. that taxation for such
purposes was also in violation of secs. 6, 8, and 9 of art. 14 of
the state constitution. It is unnecessary to notice the
declarations of the state court in subsequent cases, since they are
in line with those made in the two to which we have referred.
In January, 1872,
Talcott v. Township of Pine Grove was
determined in favor of the plaintiff in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Western District of Michigan. The question
there was as to the constitutional validity of the identical Act of
March 22, 1869, under the authority of which the bonds in suit were
issued. That court, the circuit and district judges concurring,
declined to follow the case of
People v. Salem, upon the
ground, among others, that the act was valid as well under the laws
of Michigan, declared and acted upon by all the departments of the
state government at the time of its passage, as under the
principles announced in this Court
Page 105 U. S. 70
and in the highest courts of most of the states. Upon writ of
error, the judgment was affirmed in this Court at its October Term,
1873.
Township of Pine Grove v.
Talcott, 19 Wall. 666. In the argument here,
attention was called to the decisions in
People v. Salem
and
Bay City v. state Treasurer, and it was earnestly
contended to be the duty of the courts of the Union to accept the
declarations of the state court as to the want of power in
municipal corporations of Michigan to pledge their credit or aid in
the construction of railroads by corporations owned and managed by
private persons. After adverting to the principle that a statute
was not to be pronounced void unless the repugnancy to the
Constitution be clear and the conclusion that it exists inevitable,
this Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Swayne, affirmed the judgment,
holding the act to be consistent with the Constitution of Michigan.
Railroad Company v. County of
Otoe, 16 Wall. 667;
Olcott v.
Supervisors, 16 Wall. 678. Under the circumstances,
it was said that we could not yield to the authority of the
decisions of the state court without abdicating the performance of
one of the most important duties with which this tribunal is
charged.
Of the bonds here in suit, Taylor became the purchaser, for a
valuable consideration, in the year 1877. He was aware at the time
of his purchase of the beforementioned decisions of the Supreme
Court of Michigan adjudging municipal aid to railroad corporations
to be forbidden by law and bonds issued therefor to be invalid. But
it is to be presumed he was also aware that this court, affirming
the judgment of the Circuit Court of the United States sitting in
that state had, at a subsequent sequent period, and long before his
purchase, distinctly refused to follow the later decisions of the
state court, and had adjudged the Act of March 22, 1869, to be in
conformity with the fundamental law of Michigan. The present case
then appears to be this: testing the rights and obligations of the
parties by the law of the state as declared by this court, and as
declared and acted upon by all the departments of the state
government at and before the time when the railroad company entered
upon the execution of its contract with the city, we should be
obliged to reverse the judgment of the court below,
Page 105 U. S. 71
whereas, if we accept the decision of the Supreme Court of
Michigan, made after those rights accrued and after the railroad
company had earned the bonds, as conclusive evidence of the
constitutional invalidity of the act of March 22, 1869, the
judgment must be affirmed.
The position taken by counsel for the city is that the
established settled construction, given by the highest court of a
state, of the laws and constitution of that state must be deemed in
all cases binding upon the courts of the Union, this because the
statute defining and regulating the jurisdiction of the federal
courts declares that the laws of the several states, when they
apply, shall constitute rules of decision in cases at common law
tried in those courts. This proposition, in the general terms in
which it is announced, is undoubtedly supported by the language of
some of the opinions which have emanated from this Court. But all
along through the reports of our decisions are to be found
adjudications in which, upon the fullest consideration, it has been
held to be the duty of the federal courts, in all cases within
their jurisdiction, depending upon local law, to administer that
law, so far as it affects contract obligations and rights, as it
was judicially declared to be by the highest court of the state at
the time such obligations were incurred or such rights accrued. And
this doctrine is no longer open to question in this Court. It has
been recognized for more than a quarter of a century as an
established exception to the general rule that the federal courts
will accept or adopt the construction which the state courts give
to their own constitution and laws. "The sound and true rule," said
Mr. Chief Justice Taney in
Ohio life Ins. Co. v.
Debolt, 16 How. 416,
57 U. S.
432,
"is that if the contract when made is valid by the laws of the
state, as then expounded by all the departments of its government,
and administered in its courts of justice, its validity and
obligation cannot be impaired by any subsequent act of the
legislature of the state or decision of its courts altering the
construction of the law."
So, in
The City v.
Lamson, 9 Wall. 477,
76 U. S. 485,
Mr. Justice Nelson, speaking for the Court, said:
"It is urged also that the Supreme Court of Wisconsin has held
that the act of the legislature conferring authority upon the city
to lend its credit and issue the bonds in question was
Page 105 U. S. 72
in violation of the provisions of the constitution above
referred to. But at the time this loan was made and these bonds
were issued, the decisions of the courts of the state favored the
validity of the law. The last decision cannot, therefore, be
followed."
Again, in
Olcott v. The Supervisors, supra, the Court,
speaking through Mr. Justice Strong, said:
"This Court has always ruled that if a contract when made was
valid under the constitution and laws of a state as they had been
previously expounded by its judicial tribunals and as they were
understood at the time, no subsequent action by the legislature or
the judiciary will be regarded by this Court as establishing its
invalidity."
To the like effect are some very recent decisions of this Court.
In
Douglass v. County of Pike, 101 U.
S. 67, upon a review of some of the previous cases, the
Court, speaking by the present CHIEF JUSTICE, said that
"The true rule is to give a change of judicial construction in
respect to a statute the same operation on contracts and existing
contract rights that would be given to a legislative amendment --
that is to say, make it prospective, but not retroactive. After a
statute has been settled by judicial construction, the construction
becomes, so far as contract rights acquired under it are concerned,
as much a part of the statute as the text itself, and a change of
decision is to all intents and purposes the same in its effect on
contracts as an amendment of the law by means of a legislative
enactment. So far as this case is concerned, we have no hesitation
in saying that the rights of the parties are to be determined
according to the law as it was judicially construed to be when the
bonds in question were put on the market as commercial paper."
For these reasons, and without reference to any other questions
discussed, we are of opinion that the rights of the plaintiff, as
the owner of bonds issued under a statute which, when passed, was
valid by the laws of Michigan, as declared and acted upon by the
several departments of its government, are not affected by
decisions of the supreme court of the state rendered after the
railroad company, to whose rights the plaintiff succeeded, has
earned the bonds under contract with the city made in conformity
with the statute. Upon the case as
Page 105 U. S. 73
presented, the jury should have been instructed to find for the
plaintiff rather than for the defendant.
Judgment reversed with directions to set aside the verdict
and for such further proceedings as may be consistent with this
opinion.