1. The B. H. & E. Railroad, a corporation created by the
State of Connecticut, purchased the franchises and railroad of the
H. P. & F. Railroad, a corporation created under the laws of
Rhode Island and Connecticut. The Legislature of Rhode Island
ratified the sale, and authorized the B. H. & E. Company to
exercise the rights, privileges, and powers of the H. P. & F.
Company.
Held that the B. H. & E. Company thereby
became the legal successor of the H. P. & F. Company in Rhode
Island, and, in respect to its railroad in Rhode Island, a
corporation of that state.
2. The State of Rhode Island authorized by an act of its
legislature the B. H. & E. Company to extend within the limits
of the state the road thus acquired. The act further contained the
following proviso:
"This act shall not go into effect unless the said B. H. &
E. Company shall, within ninety days from the rising of this
General Assembly, deposit in the office of the General Treasurer
their bond, with sureties satisfactory to the governor of this
state in the sum of $100,000, that they will complete their said
road before the first day of January, A.D. 1872."
Within the time named, the requisite bond was filed in the sum
of $100,000 conditioned as follows:
"Now, therefore, if said B. H. & E. Company shall complete
their said railroad before the first day of January, A. n. 1872,
then the afore-written obligation shall be void; otherwise be and
remain in full force and effect,"
and as the requisite security for the payment of the bond, a
loan certificate of the City of Boston for $100,000 was deposited
with the state treasurer. The B. H. & E. Company became
bankrupt.
Page 108 U. S. 437
The assignees in bankruptcy filed a bill in equity to restrain
the treasurer of the state from collecting the certificate. The
treasurer demurred on the ground that the real party in interest
was the state. In the course of the proceedings, the money was paid
into court on an interlocutory decree. The state then came in and
claimed it.
Held:
(1) That the voluntary appearance by the state disposed of the
demurrer and conferred jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the rights
of the state. The case distinguished from
Georgia v.
Jesup, 106 U. S. 458.
(2) That the sum named in the bond in question was not a penalty
to secure the performance of a condition which could be discharged
on payment of such damages as might be proved to have arisen from
nonperformance, but that it was in the nature of a statutory
penalty for the nonperformance of a statutory duty, and that it was
not necessary for the state to show any actual damage or injury
from the breach in order to be entitled to recover when the breach
was proved.
The law and cases on this subject considered and reviewed.
Bill in equity by the assignees in bankruptcy of the Boston,
Hartford & Erie Railroad to restrain the Treasurer of the State
of Rhode Island from receiving $100,000 in the possession of the
court, the proceeds of a loan certificate of the City of Boston,
which was lodged with the state by the bankrupt as security for the
performance of its bond for that amount given to the state in
pursuance of law to secure the construction of an extension of its
road in Rhode Island, the extension never having been made. The
facts appear in detail in the opinion of the Court. The main
questions discussed in argument were the power of the corporation
to make the agreement with the state; the rights of the parties in
the absence of the state; the effect of an appearance by the state
for the purpose of claiming the fund after it had been paid into
court, and the measure of damages on the breach of the condition of
the bond.
Page 108 U. S. 442
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellees, who were complainants below, filed their bill in
equity as assignees in bankruptcy of the Boston, Hartford &
Erie Railroad Company, against Samuel Clark, General Treasurer of
the State of Rhode Island, and the City of Boston and Frederick U.
Tracey, its Treasurer. The bill alleged that the Boston, Hartford
& Erie Railroad Company was a corporation created by the States
of Connecticut and Massachusetts for the purpose of building,
acquiring, and operating a railroad from Boston, in Massachusetts,
to Willimantic, in Connecticut, and from Providence, in Rhode
Island, to Willimantic, and from Willimantic through Waterbury to
the state line of Connecticut, and thence to Fishkill, in New York;
that the directors of the company, without authority from the
corporation or by law, applied to the Legislature of Rhode Island
in 1869, and obtained the passage of an act entitled "An act in
addition to an act to ratify and confirm the sale of the Hartford,
Providence & Fishkill Railroad to the Boston, Hartford &
Erie Railroad Company," by which the company was authorized to
locate and construct a railroad in extension of their line of
railroad purchased of the Hartford, Providence & Fishkill
Railroad Company, commencing at their depot in Providence, thence
running to the easterly line of the state in or near the
Village
Page 108 U. S. 443
of Valley Falls, to meet and connect with a Massachusetts
railroad extending through North Attleborough from Boston, so as to
make a continuous line of railroad in a northerly and southerly
direction between Providence and Boston; that this act contained a
provision in the following terms:
"This act shall not go into effect unless the said Boston,
Hartford & Erie Railroad Company shall, within ninety days from
the rising of this General Assembly, deposit in the office of the
General Treasurer their bond, with sureties satisfactory to the
governor of this state, in the sum of $100,000, that they will
complete their said road before the first day of January, A.D.
1872."
That this condition was not complied with, and that the said act
therefore never took effect and is wholly null and void; that after
the passage of the act, the directors and officers of the
corporation, without authority and in abuse of their trust and
duty, filed with one Samuel Parker, then the General Treasurer of
Rhode Island, a paper, purporting to be the bond of the
corporation, but without sureties, and fraudulently took of the
funds of the corporation the sum of $100,000, and deposited the
same with the City Treasurer of Boston in exchange for the
obligation of that city, a copy of which is as follows:
"
Temporary Loan, City of Boston"
"$100,000 No. 6"
"This certifies that, for value received, there will be due from
the City of Boston, payable at the office of the City Treasurer, on
demand, after the first day of December next, to the General
Treasurer of the State of Rhode Island, or order, the sum of
$100,000, with interest at the rate of seven percent per annum, in
current funds."
"This loan being authorized by an order of the city council
passed the ninth day of June, 1869, to anticipate the income of the
present financial year."
"Interest will not be allowed after this note is due."
"June 28, 1869"
"ALFRED T. TURNER,
Auditor"
"FRED. U. TRACEY,
Treasurer"
"NATH'L B. SHURTLEFF,
Mayor"
Page 108 U. S. 444
That the directors and officers of the company, without
consideration and without authority, deposited this certificate and
obligation with the said Parker, who received the same without
warrant of law, and thereupon held the same to the use of the
railroad company; that the corporation never accepted the act of
the legislature recited; that the railroad authorized thereby has
never been built, nor any work done thereon, nor has the State of
Rhode Island, nor any citizen thereof, suffered any damage or loss
by reason thereof; that the General Assembly of Rhode Island
considered that the filing of the certificate and obligation of the
City of Boston was not a compliance with the act, and did not
ratify the taking of the same till after the bankruptcy of the
railroad company; that said bankruptcy was adjudicated on October
21, 1870, and the complainants became assignees in bankruptcy of
said company from that date, and entitled to the money represented
by the said certificate; that Samuel Parker having died, the
respondent Clark succeeded him as General Treasurer of Rhode
Island, and came into possession of the said certificate, which, it
is alleged, however, he holds wrongfully, and in his individual and
not his official capacity, and to the use of the complainants, but
which, nevertheless, he threatens to collect and withhold from them
the proceeds thereof.
The prayer of the bill is
"That the said respondent Clark may be decreed to have no right,
title, or interest in or to the said paper writing A, or in or to
the said money so deposited with the said respondent Tracey, or to
any part thereof, and that he may be decreed to assign and deliver
over the said paper A to your orators, and may be enjoined and
restrained from presenting the same to the said respondent Tracey,
or to the said City of Boston, or from receiving any money or
payment whatsoever thereon or therefor, or any part thereof, or
from receiving or holding the said sum of $100,000, or any part
thereof, from the said respondent Tracey, or the said City of
Boston, and that the said respondent Tracey and the said City of
Boston may be decreed to pay over to your orators, as assignees as
aforesaid, the said sum of $100,000, with interest thereon, and may
be enjoined and restrained from paying the same, or any part
thereof,
Page 108 U. S. 445
or any money on account thereof, to the said respondent Samuel
Clark, the General Treasurer of the State of Rhode Island, and that
your orators may have such other and further relief as to your
honors shall seem meet, and as the nature and circumstances of the
case shall require."
To this bill a demurrer was filed by Clark for want of
jurisdiction, on the ground that it was, in substance, a suit by
citizens of one state against the State of Rhode Island. This
demurrer was overruled. Clark then filed his answer, denying the
material allegations of the bill, asserting that the transaction
was with the State of Rhode Island, through the treasurer in his
official capacity, and insisting upon the immunity of the state
from suit by citizens of other states as a defense. The cause came
on for hearing upon the pleadings and proofs, when an interlocutory
decree was passed, April 15, 1878, ordering the payment of the
money due from the City of Boston upon the loan certificate into
the registry of the court, with liberty to the defendant Clark to
take and file evidence in support of any claim for damages by
reason of the breach of the bond of the Boston, Hartford & Erie
Railroad Company to the State of Rhode Island, and further ordering
that on final hearing, and upon filing in court the certificate of
indebtedness, the General Treasurer of the State of Rhode Island
should have and recover of the said sum in the registry such
portion, or the whole thereof, as should amount to the sum, if any,
for which any surety might or for which the principal obligor in
said bond would be liable, upon the evidence, either for any
penalty or damages by reason of the nonperformance and breach of
the conditions of said bond.
On May 3, 1878, the City of Boston paid into court the sum of
$100,000, and, in addition, the interest accrued to December 1,
1869, and subsequently, on February 25, 1880, an additional amount
for interest in full. On March 17, 1880, the following claim of the
State of Rhode Island was filed by the allowance of the court as of
April 15, 1878, after the entry of the interlocutory decree of that
date:
Page 108 U. S. 446
"And now comes the State of Rhode Island, by the undersigned,
the same counsel who have appeared for the defendant Clark, General
Treasurer of said state, and, without prejudice to the demurrer of
said General Treasurer, claims the fund in the registry of the
court."
This was signed by counsel.
On final hearing, the fund was awarded to the appellees, and
from that decree Clark, General Treasurer of the State of Rhode
Island, and the State of Rhode Island appealed. The state itself is
a party to the appeal bond, which recites that the State of Rhode
Island was an intervenor and claimant of the fund in court and that
a decree was rendered against it as such.
The bond executed and delivered by the Boston, Hartford &
Erie Railroad Company to the State of Rhode Island is as
follows:
"Know all men by these presents that the Boston, Hartford &
Erie Railroad Company, a corporation created by the General
Assembly of the State of Connecticut, is held and firmly bound to
the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations in the sum of
one hundred thousand dollars, to be paid to said State of Rhode
Island and Providence Plantations, to which payment, well and truly
to be made, the said corporation doth bind itself and its
successors firmly by these presents."
"The condition of the aforewritten obligation is such that
whereas, by an act of the General Assembly of said State of Rhode
Island entitled 'An act in addition to an act entitled an act to
ratify and confirm the sale of the Hartford, Providence &
Fishkill Railroad to the Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad
Company,' passed at the January session, 1869, said Boston,
Hartford & Erie Railroad Company are authorized and empowered
to locate, lay out, and construct a railroad in extension of their
line of railroad purchased of the Hartford, Providence &
Fishkill Railroad Company, commencing at a point in their said
purchased railroad at or near their freight depot in the City of
Providence; thence running westerly and northerly by a line
westerly of the state's prison, a little easterly of the Rhode
Island Locomotive Works, and thence by nearly a straight line and
crossing or running near to Leonard's Pond, and thence passing
between the
Page 108 U. S. 447
Villages of Pawtucket and Lonsdale, and over and above the
Providence & Worcester Railroad; thence continuing to the
easterly line of the state, in or near the Village of Valley
Falls:"
"Now therefore if said Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad
Company shall complete their said railroad before the first day of
January, A.D. 1872, then the aforewritten obligation shall be void;
otherwise be and remain in full force and effect."
"In testimony whereof, said Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad
Company have caused this instrument to be signed by John S.
Eldredge, its president, and its corporate seal to be thereto
affixed, this twenty-third day of June, 1869."
"[L. S.]"
"BOSTON, HARTFORD AND ERIE R. CO.,"
"By JOHN S. ELDREDGE,
President"
"Executed in presence of --"
"SAMUEL CURREY"
"H. S. BARRY"
The testimony taken in the cause pursuant to the interlocutory
decree, it is admitted, failed to prove any damage or loss
occasioned to the State of Rhode Island or to any of its citizens
or inhabitants by reason of the failure of the railroad company to
comply with the conditions of this bond.
The first question for determination on this appeal is that of
jurisdiction, raised first by the demurrer and afterwards by the
answer of Clark, General Treasurer of the State of Rhode Island, on
the ground that the suit was in effect brought against a state by
citizens of another state, contrary to the Eleventh Amendment to
the Constitution of the United States.
We are relieved, however, from its consideration by the
voluntary appearance of the state in intervening as a claimant of
the fund in court. The immunity from suit belonging to a state,
which is respected and protected by the Constitution within the
limits of the judicial power of the United States, is a personal
privilege which it may waive at pleasure, so that in a suit,
otherwise well brought, in which a state had sufficient interest to
entitle it to become a party defendant, its appearance in a court
of the United States would be a voluntary submission to its
jurisdiction, while of course those courts are always open to it as
a suitor in controversies between it and
Page 108 U. S. 448
citizens of other states. In the present case, the State of
Rhode Island appeared in the cause and presented and prosecuted a
claim to the fund in controversy, and thereby made itself a party
to the litigation to the full extent required for its complete
determination. It became an actor as well as defendant, as by its
intervention the proceeding became one in the nature of an
interpleader, in which it became necessary to adjudicate the
adverse rights of the state and the appellees to the fund, to which
both claimed title. The case differs from that of
Georgia v.
Jesup, 106 U. S. 458,
where the state expressly declined to become a party to the suit,
and appeared only to protest against the exercise of jurisdiction
by the court. The circumstance that the appearance of the state was
entered without prejudice to the demurrer of Clark, the General
Treasurer does not affect the result. For that demurrer could not
reach beyond the question of the right to sue Clark by reason of
his official character, which became insignificant when the state
made itself a party, and in point of fact the bill was framed to
avoid the objection, by charging Clark as a wrongdoer in his
individual capacity. For the groundwork of the bill, whether it be
regarded as directed against the officer or the state, is that the
transaction throughout was void as
ultra vires the
corporation. And this presents the next question to be considered.
That question arises and is to be determined upon the following
statement of facts.
The Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad Company was originally
created a corporation by the laws of Connecticut. Its charter
conferred authority upon it in these terms:
"Said Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad Company may purchase
. . . the franchise, the whole or any part of the railway or
railway property of any railroad company located in whole or in
this state, whose line or a portion of whose line of railway,
constructed or chartered, now forms part of a railway line from the
harbor of Boston, passing through Thompson to Willimantic, and from
Providence through Willimantic to Hartford, Waterbury, and thence
toward the North River, with
Page 108 U. S. 449
the purpose of reaching a point at or near Fishkill in the State
of New York, . . . and said Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad
Company may make any lawful contract with any other railway company
with which the track of said railroad may connect in relation to
the business or property of the same, and may take lease of any
railroad, or may lease their railway to, or may make joint stock
with, any connecting railway company in the line of, and forming a
necessary part of, and running in the same general direction as,
their said route, and between its terminal points."
In pursuance of this authority, the Boston, Hartford & Erie
Railroad Company purchased the franchises and railroad of the
Hartford, Providence & Fishkill Railroad Company. This latter
company was a consolidated corporation, deriving its existence and
powers from the laws both of Connecticut and Rhode Island, whose
road, as defined in the acts of incorporation, constituted a line
within the general description contained in the section from the
charter of the Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad Company,
already quoted. By a subsequent act of the Legislature of Rhode
Island the sale and transfer of the Hartford, Providence &
Fishkill Railroad, its property and franchises, to the Boston,
Hartford & Erie Railroad Company was ratified and confirmed so
far as said railroad was situated in that state, and it was
thereupon further enacted that the
"Said Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad Company, by that
name, shall and may have, use, exercise, and enjoy all the rights,
privileges, and powers heretofore granted and belonging to said
Hartford, Providence & Fishkill Railroad Company and be subject
to all the duties and liabilities imposed upon the same by its
charter and the general laws of this state."
The Hartford, Providence & Fishkill Railroad Company was
without question, so far as it owned and operated a railroad within
the State of Rhode Island, a corporation in and of that state, and
the Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad Company became its legal
successor in that state as owner of its property, and exercising
its franchises therein, and became therefore in respect to its
railroad in Rhode Island, a corporation in and of that state.
Page 108 U. S. 450
Thereafter, in January, 1869, the Legislature of Rhode Island
passed the act out of which the present litigation has grown,
entitled
"An act in addition to an act entitled 'An act to ratify and
confirm the sale of the Hartford, Providence & Fishkill
Railroad to the Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad Company.'"
In its first section, it is enacted as follows:
"The Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad Company, a corporation
created by the General Assembly of the State of Connecticut, are
hereby authorized and empowered to locate, lay out, and construct a
railroad in extension of their line of railroad by them purchased
of the Hartford, Providence & Fishkill Railroad Company,
commencing at a point in their said purchased railroad at or near
their freight depot in the City of Providence; thence running
westerly and northerly by a line westerly of the state prison, a
little easterly of the Rhode Island Locomotive Works, and thence by
nearly a straight line, and crossing or running near to Leonard's
Pond (so called), and thence passing between the Villages of
Pawtucket and Lonsdale, and over and above the Providence &
Worcester Railroad; thence continuing to the easterly line of the
state in or near the Village of Valley Falls, there to meet and
connect with a railroad extending westerly through North
Attleborough from the direction of Boston, authorized by the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts."
The eighth section of the act is as follows:
"Said railroad, when the same shall have been constructed, shall
be managed and protected in all respects according to the
provisions of, and be subject to, an act entitled 'An act to
incorporate the Providence & Plainfield Railroad Company,' and
the several acts in addition to and amendment thereof, and the
general laws of the state."
The act thus referred to as the "Act to incorporate the
Providence & Plainfield Railroad Company" was the charter of
the corporation by that name in the State of Rhode Island, that, by
consolidation with a Connecticut company, formed the Hartford,
Providence & Fishkill Railroad Company.
Page 108 U. S. 451
The twelfth section of the act, recited in the complainant's
bill, is as follows:
"This act shall not go into effect unless the said Boston,
Hartford & Erie Railroad Company shall, within ninety days from
the rising of this General Assembly, deposit in the office of the
General Treasurer their bond, with sureties satisfactory to the
governor of this state, in the sum of $100,000, that they will
complete their said road before the first day of January, A.D.
1872."
This act of the Legislature of Rhode Island was duly accepted by
the stockholders of the Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad
Company; the bond required by the twelfth section, as already set
out, was executed and delivered, and the certificate of
indebtedness, in lieu of sureties, was given by the company and
accepted by the state.
It is now argued by counsel for the appellees that the party
which, in all these transactions, was dealing with the State of
Rhode Island, was the Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad Company,
in its character as a corporation of the State of Connecticut;
that, as such, it had no power, under the charter granted by that
state, to build or own a railroad directly connecting Boston and
Providence, nor had it, as such, any capacity to receive a grant of
such a franchise; that consequently everything done or attempted in
that behalf was
ultra vires and void.
But the Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad Company was also a
corporation of Rhode Island. As such, it owned and operated a
railroad within that state, and had received and exercised
franchises under its laws, to which it was in all respects subject.
It was the assignee of the road and rights connected therewith,
formerly belonging to the Hartford, Providence & Fishkill
Railroad Company, and it was this corporation, dwelling and acting
in Rhode Island, that the legislature, by the act in question,
authorized to exercise the additional powers it conferred.
If it had had no previous existence as a corporation under the
laws of Rhode Island, it would have become such by virtue of the
act in question. For although, as a Connecticut corporation,
Page 108 U. S. 452
it may have had no capacity to act or exist in Rhode Island for
these purposes, and no capacity by virtue of its Connecticut
charter to accept and exercise any franchises not contemplated by
it, yet the natural persons, who were corporators, might as well be
a corporation in Rhode Island as in Connecticut, and, by accepting
charters from both states, could well become a corporate body, by
the same name and acting through the same organization, officers,
and agencies, in each, with such faculties in the two jurisdictions
as they might severally confer. The same association of natural
persons would thus be constituted into two distinct corporate
entities in the two states, acting in each according to the powers
locally bestowed, as distinctly as though they had nothing in
common either as to name, capital, or membership. Such was in fact
the case in regard to this company, so that in Rhode Island it was
exclusively a corporation of that state, subject to its laws and
competent to do within its territory whatever its legislation might
authorize.
"Nor do we see any reason [as was said by this Court, Mr.
Justice Swayne, delivering its opinion in
Railroad Company v.
Harris, 12 Wall. 65,
79 U. S.
82], why one state may not make a corporation of another
state, as there organized and conducted, a corporation of its own,
quo ad hoc any property within its territorial
jurisdiction. That this may be done was distinctly held in
Ohio
& Mississippi Railroad Company v. Wheeler, 1
Black 297."
The same view was taken in
Railway Company v.
Whitton, 13 Wall. 270; in
Railroad Company v.
Vance, 96 U. S. 459,
and in
Memphis & Charleston Railroad Company v.
Alabama, 107 U. S. 581,
decided at the present term. The question of the powers of the
Boston, Hartford & Erie Railroad Company as a corporation in
Rhode Island and of the legal effect of its acts and transactions
performed in that state is to be determined exclusively by the laws
of that state, and not by those of Connecticut, which have no force
beyond its own territory. It results, therefore, that the doctrine
of
ultra vires, as here urged by the appellees, has no
place in this controversy.
Page 108 U. S. 453
It is, however, urged on behalf of the appellees -- and this was
the ground on which the decree below proceeded -- that the
obligation required by the statute and given by the company was a
bond, in the penal sum of $100,000, conditioned that the company
would completely build its road within the period limited, upon
which no recovery can be had, except for such damages as may be
shown to have resulted to the State of Rhode Island from the breach
of its condition; that no damage on that account is proven, it
being in fact admitted that none actually resulted; that the
certificate of indebtedness and the fund which has arisen from its
payment were pledged merely, in lieu of sureties, as collateral
security for the satisfaction of the bond, and that consequently
the claim of the State of Rhode Island against it having thus
failed, that fund reverts to the appellees.
The proposition of counsel for the appellees, as stated by them,
is that
"from a period at least as early the year 1650 down to the
present time, bonds have constituted a distinct class of
instruments, the effect of which is always the same, in the same
sense that the effect of a conveyance to A. and his heirs is always
the same. Such is the rule of equity. Such was the effect of the
statutes. Consequently, if in a particular case parties have
expressed their obligation in the form of a bond, their liability
is thereby determined to be an obligation to perform the condition
or pay the damages actually sustained from nonperformance
thereof,"
and, as a statement of the rule, they cite the following
passage, 2 Sedgwick Meas.Dam. (7th ed.) 259, note:
"Of course, in this class of agreements as in all others, when
the contract takes the ordinary form of a penal bond, the sum fixed
will invariably be regarded as a penalty, and this might well be
put at the present day, on the ground of intention, as derived from
the writing itself, for this form of instrument is in such common
use that persons who resort to it must be held to have in view its
legal consequences."
While this may be accepted as a sufficiently accurate statement
of the general rule as to bonds with conditions designed
Page 108 U. S. 454
as an indemnity between private persons for nonperformance of a
collateral agreement, yet in respect to such cases, it cannot be
considered as universally true.
"It is often a doubtful question [said the Supreme Judicial
Court of Massachusetts in
Hodges v. King, 7 Met. 583,
587], whether the sum stipulated to be paid on the nonperformance
of a condition is in the nature of a penalty, or is the amount
settled by the parties for the purpose of making that certain which
would be otherwise uncertain. . . . The bond has indeed a
condition, but that is a matter of form and cannot turn that into a
penalty which, but for the form, is an agreement to pay a precise
sum under certain circumstances."
So that it cannot correctly be said to be true in all such cases
that the intention to treat the sum named in the bond as a penalty
to secure the performance of the condition, and to be discharged on
payment of damages arising from nonperformance, can be inferred as
a rule of law or a conclusive presumption from the mere form of the
obligation.
Originally at law, in case of breach of the condition of a bond,
the amount recoverable was that named in the obligation. So that if
the condition is impossible either in itself or in law, the
obligation remains absolute. As
"if a man be bound in an obligation, etc., with condition that
if the obligor do go from the Church of St. Peter in Westminster to
the Church of St. Peter in Rome within three hours, that then the
obligation shall be void. The condition is void and impossible, and
the obligation standeth good."
So, again, if the condition is against a maxim or rule in law,
as
"if a man be bound with a condition to enfeoff his wife, the
condition is void and against law because it is against the maxim
in law, and yet the bond is good."
Co.Lit. 206
b. So where the condition is possible at the
date of the instrument and becomes impossible subsequently, the
obligation does not become thereby discharged unless the
impossibility of performance was the act of God, or of the law, or
of the obligee. Accordingly, it was held by this Court in
Taylor v.
Taintor, 16 Wall. 366, that when a person arrested
in one state on a criminal charge, and released under
Page 108 U. S. 455
his own and his bail's recognizance that he will appear on a day
fixed and abide the order and judgment of the court on process from
which he has been arrested, goes into another state, and, while
there, is, on the requisition of the governor of a third state, for
a crime committed in it, delivered up, and is convicted and
imprisoned in such third state, the condition of the recognizance
has not become impossible by act of law so as to discharge the
bail;
"the law which renders the performance impossible, and therefore
excuses failure, must be a law operative in the state when the
obligation was assumed, and obligatory in its effects upon her
authorities."
The ground, nature, and limits of the jurisdiction of courts of
equity to relieve against penalties in such instruments is well
stated by Mr. Justice Story in this language:
"In short, the general principle now adopted is that, wherever a
penalty is inserted merely to secure the performance or enjoyment
of a collateral object, the latter is considered as the principal
intent of the instrument, and the penalty is deemed only as
accessory, and therefore as intended only to secure the due
performance thereof or the damage really incurred by the
nonperformance. In every such case, the true test generally, if not
universally, by which to ascertain whether relief can or cannot be
had in equity, is to consider whether compensation can be made or
not. If it cannot be made, then courts of equity will not
interfere. If it can be made, then, if the penalty is to secure the
mere payment of money, courts of equity will relieve the party upon
paying the principal and interest. If it is to secure the
performance of some collateral act or undertaking, then courts of
equity will retain the bill, and will direct an issue of
quantum damnificatus, and when the amount of the damages
is ascertained by a jury, upon the trial of such an issue, they
will grant relief upon payment of such damages."
Eq.Jur. § 1314.
And Mr. Adams, in his Treatise on Equity, 6th Am. ed. 107, says,
on the same subject:
"The equity for relief against enforcement of penalties
originates in the rule which formerly prevailed at law, that, on
breach of a contract secured by penalty, the full penalty might be
enforced, without regard to the damage sustained. The court of
Page 108 U. S. 456
chancery, in treating contracts as matters for specific
performance, was naturally led to the conclusion that the
annexation of a penalty did not alter their character; and, in
accordance with this view, would not, on the one hand, permit the
contracting party to evade performance by paying the penalty, and,
on the other hand, would restrain proceedings to enforce the
penalty on a subsequent performance of the contract itself,
viz., in the case of a debt, on payment of principal,
interest, and costs, or in that of any other contract, on
reimbursement of the actual damage sustained."
It has accordingly been uniformly held, in cases too numerous
for citation, that courts of equity will not interfere in cases of
forfeiture for the breach of covenants and conditions where there
cannot be any just compensation decreed for the breach, for, as was
said by Lord Chancellor Macclesfield, in
Peachy v. Duke of
Somerset, 1 Strange 447;
S.C. Prec.Ch. 568; 2
Eq.Cas.Abr. 227, "it is the recompense that gives this Court a
handle to grant relief."
The application of this principle becomes more manifest in cases
where a public interest or policy supervenes, as where, for
noncompliance by stockholders in corporations engaged in
undertakings of a public nature, with the terms of payment of
installments due on account of their shares, by which a forfeiture
of the stock and of all previous payments thereon has been incurred
and declared, the courts refuse to grant relief.
Sparks v.
Proprietors of Liverpool Waterworks, 13 Ves. 428;
Prendergast v. Turton, 1 You. & Col.Ch. 98;
Naylor
v. South Devon Railway Company, 1 De G. & Sm. 32;
Sudlow v. Dutch Rhenish Railway Company, 21 Beav. 43.
In the case of
Sparks v. Proprietors of Liverpool
Waterworks, 13 Ves. 433, Sir Wm. R. Grant, M.R., said:
"The parties might contract upon any terms thought fit, and
might impose terms as arbitrary as they pleased. It is essential to
such transactions. This struck me as not like the case of
individuals. If this species of equity is open to parties engaged
in these undertakings, they could not be carried on. . . . Why is
not this equity open to contractors for government
Page 108 U. S. 457
loans? Why may not they come here to be relieved when they have
failed in making their deposit? And if they could have relief, how
could government go on? It would be just as difficult for these
undertakings to go on. If compensation cannot be effectually made,
it ought not to be attempted."
Accordingly, where any penalty or forfeiture is imposed by
statute upon the doing or omission of a certain act, there courts
of equity will not interfere to mitigate the penalty or forfeiture,
if incurred, for it would be in contravention of the direct
expression of the legislative will. Story's Eq.Jur. § 1326. Lord
Chancellor Macclesfield said, in
Peachy v. Duke of
Somerset, 1 Strange 477:
"Cases of agreements and conditions of the party and of the law
are certainly to be distinguished. You can never say the law has
determined hardly, but you may that the party has made a hard
bargain."
In
Powell v. Redfield, 4 Blatchford 45, an application
was made in equity to restrain suits upon a bond given in pursuance
of the revenue laws of the United States, which was denied on the
ground that a court of equity had no right to interfere, and, by
injunction or decree, to virtually repeal the express provisions of
a positive statute or defeat their operation in the particular
case.
In
Benson v. Gibson, 3 Atk. 395, Lord Hardwick
said:
"Nor is it like the case of bonds given as a security not to
defraud the revenue, because there, where a person is guilty of a
breach, it is considered in law as a crime, and this court will not
relieve for that reason."
The case of
Treasurer v. Patten, 1 Root 260, was an
action for the penalty of a bond given to oblige the defendant to
observe the laws respecting excise, in which there was a verdict
for the plaintiff and the �200 penalty. Defendant moved the court,
says the report, to chancer said bond.
"By the Court. There is no power short of the legislature can do
it, for it is the sum prescribed by an act of the legislature.
"
Page 108 U. S. 458
So in
Keating v. Sparrow, 1 Ball & Beatty 367, the
Lord Chancellor Manners said:
"It has been argued on the part of the plaintiff that this Court
leans against forfeiture, if the party can be compensated, and that
he can in this case, where interest and septennial fines may be
given to the landlord. That principle is applicable to cases of
contract between the parties, but not to the provisions of an act
of Parliament or conditions in law."
The fact that the obligation is in the form of a bond to the
state does not make its penalty less a statutory forfeiture, and so
outside the jurisdiction of a court of equity. In the case of
United States v. Montell, Taney 47, it was held that the
sum secured by a bond with sureties, under the Act of Congress of
December 31, 1792, c. 1, sec. 7, 1 Stat. 290, conditioned that the
registry of a vessel should be used solely for the vessel for which
it is granted, and should not be disposed of to any person
whatsoever, and if the vessel be lost, or prevented by disaster
from returning to the port, and the registry shall be preserved, or
if the vessel be sold, that the registry shall be delivered up to
the collector, is a penalty or forfeiture inflicted by the
sovereign power for a breach of its laws, not a liquidated amount
of damages due under a contract, but a fixed and certain punishment
for an offense, and not the less so because security is taken
before the offense is committed in order to secure the payment of
the fine if the law should be violated. Chief Justice Taney, in his
opinion, said:
"Penalties and forfeitures imposed by statute are not usually
provided for by bond and security given in advance. The sum
recovered from Montell is recovered upon a contract; the action was
brought upon a contract, and was not and could not have been
brought in any of those forms which are usually necessary for the
recovery of fines or forfeitures imposed by law. Yet this sum was,
in truth, forfeited by Montell, by reason of his violation of a
duty imposed by the act of Congress; it was a specific penalty upon
the owner and master, for the commission of a particular offense
against the policy of that law. And although the amount was secured
by bond given for the performance of the
Page 108 U. S. 459
duty, yet this duty was a part of the same policy with other
duties mentioned in the act and for which other penalties are
inflicted. . . ."
"It certainly is not to be regarded as a bond with a collateral
condition, in which the jury are to assess the damages which the
United States shall prove that they have sustained, for, according
to that construction, the amount of damages would not depend upon
the amount of the penalty described in the section, which is
graduated according to the size of the vessel, but would depend
upon the discretion of different juries, and larger damages might
be given where the penalty was only four hundred dollars than in a
case where the penalty was two thousand dollars. This obviously is
not the intention of the law, and the United States are entitled to
recover the whole sum, for which the party is bound, if anyone of
the conditions are broken. Besides, how could the United States
prove any particular amount of damages to have been sustained by
them in a suit on this bond? What do they lose? It would be
difficult, we think, by any course of proof or any process of
reasoning to show that the United States had sustained any
particular amount of damages in a case of this description, or to
adopt any rule by which the damages could be measured by a jury, or
be liquidated by agreement between the parties."
"The sum, for which the parties are to become bound is
manifestly a penalty or forfeiture, inflicted by the sovereign
power for a breach of its laws. It is not a liquidated amount of
damages due upon a contract, but a fixed and certain punishment for
an offense. And it is not the less a penalty and a punishment
because security is taken before the offense is committed, in order
to secure the payment of the fine if the law should be
violated."
Recurring now to the particular circumstances of the present
case, with a view to the application of these principles and
decisions, we are satisfied that the proper solution of the
question now under examination is to be found in two principal
considerations.
The first of these is that it was not intended by the parties,
the State of Rhode Island on the one hand, and the Boston, Hartford
& Erie Railroad Company on the other, that the obligation
Page 108 U. S. 460
given and accepted should be for an indemnity against any loss
or damage expected to be suffered by the state, in the event that
the railroad company should fail to build the railroad as required.
It is found as a fact that no such loss or damage has in fact
ensued. It is equally plain that none could possibly have arisen.
The security is not to be extended to any supposed damage to
private interests legally affected by the process of constructing
the work. All damage of this kind to private persons was carefully
provided for in other parts of the act. As to the state itself, the
real party to the arrangement and contract, it could gain nothing
in its political and sovereign character by the construction of the
road; it could lose nothing by the default. If it could be supposed
as possible that the state had in view the public interests of
commerce and trade in the construction of the proposed railroad,
and meant to provide for loss and damage to them by reason of its
failure, the obvious answer is that no computation and assessment
of actual damages on that account would be practicable, leaving as
the alternative that the state, in fixing the penalty of the bond
in the statute, had established its own measure of the public loss.
The question of damages and compensation was not, because it could
not have been, in contemplation of the parties. There was no room
for supposing that there could be any. To assume that the statute
required this bond and security in this sense, in full view of the
legal conclusion which it is said necessarily flows from its form,
and that in the event contemplated, of the failure to build the
road, all that remained to be done was that the state should hand
back cancelled the obligation and security it had been at such
pains to exact, is to put upon the transaction an interpretation
altogether inadmissible. It would have been, upon such an
assumption, a vain and senseless thing, and however private persons
may be sometimes supposed to act improvidently, we are not to put
such constructions, when it is legally possible to avoid them, upon
the deliberate and solemn acts and transactions of a sovereign
power, acting through the forms of legislation. The conclusion, in
our opinion, cannot be resisted that the intention of the parties
in the transaction in question was that if the railroad should
Page 108 U. S. 461
not be built within the time limited, the corporation should pay
to the state, absolutely and for its own use, the sum named in the
bond and secured by the deposited certificate of indebtedness. The
supposition is not open that the penalty was prescribed merely
in terrorem, to secure punctuality in performance, with
the reserved intention of permitting subsequent performance to
condone the default, for a distinct section of the statute (sec. 9)
declares that in case of failure to complete the road within the
time limited, the act itself should be void and of no effect.
In the second place, we think that the sum named in the statute
is imposed by it as a statutory penalty for the nonperformance of a
statutory duty. The obligation required is that the railroad
company shall give a bond, with satisfactory security, that they
will obey the law; that they will complete their road as required
by it. The language evidently means that in case they fail to do
so, they shall forfeit and pay the sum named, and in order to
insure its payment, additional parties to the bond, as sureties,
are required. It is admitted that if it does not mean this it does
not mean anything, and we have already said that we are not at
liberty to adopt that alternative. We must construe it
ut res
magis valeat quam pereat, and the rule of strictness, in the
construction of penal statutes, does not require an interpretation
which defeats the very object of the law. The State of Rhode Island
was dealing with one of its own corporations, and it had perfect
right to act upon its own policy and prescribe its own terms, as
conditions of powers and privileges sought from its authority.
For these reasons the decree of the circuit court is reversed,
and the cause is remanded, with instructions to enter a decree in
favor of the State of Rhode Island for the sum of $100,000, payable
out of the fund in court, with so much interest thereon, if any, as
has accrued on that sum since the first day of January, 1872, which
is the date when the amount became due.
And it is accordingly so ordered.