1. Where judgment has been duly obtained in Missouri against a
county upon coupons detached from its bonds, no defense which
questions their validity can be pleaded to a mandamus commanding
the county court to pay the judgment from moneys in the treasury,
or raise the means therefor by the levy of a special tax.
2. If not restrained by some valid special limitation upon the
exercise of its taxing power, a county, authorized by law to
contract an extraordinary debt by the issue of negotiable
securities can levy a tax sufficient to meet the principal and
interest as they respectively mature.
United States v. New
Orleans, 99 U. S. 682,
cited upon this point and approved.
3. A general law confining the annual tax "to defray the
expenses of the county" to a fixed percentum is not applicable to
such a debt.
4. After the debt was created, laws passed depriving the county
court of the requisite power to levy the tax which it possessed
when the bonds were issued are invalid.
The facts were stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 29 of the act to incorporate the St. Louis and Keokuk
Railroad Company, approved Feb. 16, 1857, is as follows:
Page 105 U. S. 734
"It shall be lawful for the county court of any county in which
any part of the route of said railroad may be to subscribe to the
stock of said company, and it may invest its funds in the stock of
said company and issue the bonds of said county to raise funds to
pay the stock thus subscribed, and to take proper steps to protect
the interest and credit of the county. Such county court may
appoint an agent to represent the county, vote for it, and receive
its dividends."
Under this authority, the County Court of Ralls County
subscribed $200,000 to the stock of the company, and, during the
years 1870 and 1871, issued bonds of the county to pay the
subscription. Default having been made in the payment of coupons
for interest attached to some of these bonds, Douglass brought suit
against the county in the Circuit Court of the United States for
the Eastern District of Missouri for their recovery, and, on the
16th of October, 1878, obtained judgment for $17,158.43. That
judgment was affirmed in
County of Ralls v. Douglass,
supra, p.
105 U. S. 728.
After the judgment was rendered in the circuit court, the
present suit was begun by the United States on his relation to
require the county court, by mandamus, to pay the amount due out of
moneys in the treasury of the county or, if that could not be done,
to raise the necessary means by the levy of a special tax. In the
return to the alternative writ, many defenses were set up which
related to the validity of the coupons on which the judgment had
been obtained as obligations of the county. As to all these
defenses it is sufficient to say it was conclusively settled by the
judgment which lies at the foundation of the present suit, that the
coupons were binding obligations of the county, duly created under
the authority of the charter of the railroad company and, as such,
entitled to payment out of any fund that could lawfully be raised
for that purpose. It has been in effect so decided by the Supreme
Court of Missouri in
State v. Rainey, 74 Mo. 229, and the
principle on which the decision rests is elementary.
The present suit is in the nature of an execution, and its
object is to enforce the payment, in some way provided by law, of
the judgment which has been recovered. The only defenses that can
be considered are those which may be presented in
Page 105 U. S. 735
the proper course of judicial procedure against the collection
of valid coupons, executed under the authority of law and reduced
to judgment. While the coupons are merged in the judgment, they
carried with them into the judgment all the remedies which in law
formed a part of their contract obligations, and these remedies may
still be enforced in all appropriate ways, notwithstanding the
change in the form of the debt.
This brings us to consider what may be done to enforce the
judgment. The county court insists that its power of taxation is
limited to the levy of an annual tax of one-half of one percent on
the taxable property in the county, and that as this tax has always
been levied at the times provided by law, the duty of the court in
the premises has been fully performed. The relator, on the
contrary, claims that the limit of one-half of one percent only
applies to taxes to defray the general expenses of the county, and
that if the fund produced in this way is not sufficient to enable
the county to pay his judgment, an additional tax must be levied
and collected specifically for that purpose. This presents the real
controversy we have to settle.
When the charter of the St. Louis and Keokuk Railroad Company
was granted, when the subscription was made to its stock by the
county court, and when the bonds to pay the subscription were put
out, there were limitations on the powers of the county court for
the levy of taxes to defray the expenses of the county which
confined the tax for a year to one-half of one percent or less. The
question we have to consider is not whether this power has been
reduced below that limit, but whether the limit is applicable to
the obligation of the county created under the authority of the
particular charter now in question.
It must be considered as settled in this Court that when
authority is granted by the legislative branch of the government to
a municipality, or a subdivision of a state to contract an
extraordinary debt by the issue of negotiable securities, the power
to levy taxes sufficient to meet, at maturity, the obligation to be
incurred is conclusively implied unless the law which confers the
authority, or some general law in force at the time, clearly
manifests a contrary legislative intention.
Page 105 U. S. 736
The power to tax is necessarily an ingredient of such a power to
contract, as, ordinarily, political bodies can only meet their
pecuniary obligations through the instrumentality of taxation. This
general doctrine has been so many times announced, that it cannot
be necessary now to do more than refer to
Loan
Association v. Topeka, 20 Wall. 655, where the
opinion was given by MR. JUSTICE MILLER, and
United States v.
New Orleans, 98 U. S. 381, in
which MR. JUSTICE FIELD, speaking for the entire Court, went
elaborately over the whole subject. In
United States v. County
of Macon, 99 U. S. 582, there
was a special limitation on the power to tax coupled with the
authority to contract, and because the legislature saw fit to say
how much of a tax in addition to that otherwise provided might be
levied to meet the new and extraordinary obligation which was
contemplated, it was held that a prohibition against anything more
was necessarily to be inferred.
In the present case, there is no such special limitation. The
defense rests entirely on the power to tax to "defray the expenses
of the county," which it has always been the policy of the state to
restrict. The county court was, however, not only authorized to
issue bonds, but to "take proper steps to protect the interest and
credit of the county." It would seem as though nothing more was
needed. As the commercial credit of the county in respect to its
negotiable bonds could only be protected, under ordinary
circumstances, by the prompt payment of both principal and interest
at maturity, and there is nothing to show that payment was to be
made in any other way than through taxation, it necessarily follows
that power to tax to meet the payment was one of the essential
elements of the power to protect the credit. If what the law
requires to be done can only be done through taxation, then
taxation is authorized to the extent that may be needed, unless it
is otherwise expressly declared. The power to tax in such cases is
not an implied power, but a duty growing out of the power to
contract. The one power is as much express as the other. Here it
seems to have been understood by the legislature that the ordinary
taxes might not be enough to enable the county to meet the
extraordinary obligation that was to be incurred, and so, without
placing any restriction on the amount to be
Page 105 U. S. 737
raised, the county court was expressly empowered to do all that
was necessary to protect the credit of the county. We cannot agree
to the position taken by the counsel for the plaintiff in error,
that this power was exhausted when the bonds were issued to pay the
subscription. The faith of the county pledged by the subscription
was kept when the bonds were put out, but only by transferring the
credit to be protected from the subscription to the bonds. The
subscription was paid by the bonds, but the obligation to pay the
bonds, principal and interest, when they matured was legally
substituted.
We have been referred to many instances in which statutes were
passed authorizing special taxes to pay bonds which had long before
been issued under original authority like that contained in the
present charter, but this does not, in our opinion, change the
case. Such legislation seems to have been procured out of abundant
caution, but in none of the numerous cases in the Missouri reports
to which our attention has been directed is it anywhere said that
the requisite tax could not have been levied but for such
legislation. In
State v. Dallas County Court, 72 Mo. 329,
and some other cases before, it was held that such a provision as
that contained in the charter of the St. Louis and Keokuk Railroad
Company, now under consideration, was repealable, but none of the
judges whose decisions have been published intimate even that if
there had been no repeal, there could not be a tax. It has been
many times decided that county courts in Missouri, while acting as
the governing bodies of their counties, which are nothing more than
political subdivisions of the state, have no implied powers.
Authority must be conferred on them by law to act, or they cannot
act at all. This is not peculiar to the county officials of
Missouri. The same principle applies to all municipal organizations
in all the States, and in this respect it matters but little
whether the organization exists as a full corporation or a
quasi-corporation. The point is that all such
organizations for local government, by whatever name they may be
called, have only such powers as the legislatures of their
respective States see fit to delegate to them. But all powers that
are delegated may be exercised in any proper way and at all proper
times.
Page 105 U. S. 738
This makes it unnecessary to consider whether the power of
taxation given by the general railroad laws in force when these
bonds were made can be invoked in aid of the relator. It is enough
that we find sufficient power in the charter of the company itself,
without looking elsewhere. We ought perhaps to say, however, that
the remark in the opinion in
United States v. County of
Macon, 99 U. S. 582,
99 U. S. 591,
to the effect that the power to taxation granted by the general
railroad laws was confined to subscriptions authorized by them,
should be construed as made in a case where a special limitation on
the power to tax was contained in the charter which authorized the
issue of the bonds then in question, and that it was only necessary
to decide that the railroad laws did not enlarge that power. The
language there used may be broader than on further consideration we
shall be willing to agree to. That case is authority on this point
only to the extent it was necessary then to decide.
It follows from this that all laws of the state which have been
passed since the bonds in question were issued, purporting to take
away from the county courts the power to levy taxes necessary to
meet the payments, are invalid, and that, under the well settled
rule of decision in this Court, the circuit court had authority by
mandamus to require the county court to do all the law, when the
bonds were issued, required it to do to raise the means to pay the
judgment, or something substantially equivalent. The fact that
money has once been raised by taxation to meet the payment, which
has been lost, is no defense to this suit. The claim of the
bondholders continues until payment is actually made to them. If
the funds are lost after collection and before they are paid over,
the loss falls on the county, and not the creditors. The writ as
issued was properly in the alternative to pay from the money
already raised, or levy a tax to raise more. It will be time enough
to consider whether the command of the writ that the court cause
the tax to be collected is in excess of the requirements of the
law, when the justices of the court are called on to show why they
have not obeyed the order. The same may be said of the order to
draw the warrant on the treasurer. As at present informed, we see
no irregularity in anything that has been done.
Page 105 U. S. 739
The judgment of the Circuit Court will be affirmed and the cause
remanded with leave to the court to make such changes in the order
originally entered as may have become necessary by reason of the
time that has elapsed since the writ of error was brought; and it
is
So ordered.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD did not sit in this and the case
mentioned in the following note.
NOTE --
Lincoln County Court v. United States, error to
the same court, was argued at the same time any by the same counsel
as the preceding case.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE, on behalf of the Court, remarked that
the cases differed only in one particular. Here, the bonds were not
actually delivered until after the statute requiring registration
went into effect, though they were in the hands of the agent for
delivery before. It is contended that on this account no special
tax can be levied for their payment, notwithstanding the judgment
that has been recovered upon them. In our opinion, this is a
defense that cannot be taken advantage of after judgment. As has
been said in the
Ralls County case, it was conclusively
settled by the judgment, which this proceeding is to carry into
execution, that the coupons sued on were binding obligations of the
county, duly created under the authority of law, and as such are
entitled to payment out of any fund that can lawfully be created
for that purpose.
Judgment affirmed and the cause remanded, with the same
order as in that case.