1. Under the Constitution of Illinois in force in 1868, an act
authorizing a city council to borrow money on the credit of the
city and issue bonds under the seal of the city therefor did not
confer authority to subscribe to the stock of a railroad company,
and issue bonds therefor, even when the legal voters of the city at
a regular election voted to authorize such subscription, but the
want of power could be cured by an act declaring an election
theretofore held to be binding, and granting power to issue bonds
to pay for a subscription authorized thereat, and such a curative
act was within the legislative power, and that power was not taken
away by the Constitution of 1870.
2. An act entitled "An Act to amend the charter of the Cairo
& St. Louis Railroad Company," which legalized an election
previously held in a municipality at which the people voted to
subscribe to the stock of that company and to issue bonds for the
payment of the subscription, and which granted authority to issue
such bonds, is no violation of that provision in the Constitution
of Illinois, which provides that "No private or local law which may
be passed by the General Assembly shall embrace more than one
subject, and that shall be expressed in the title." Any provision
in the title of a bill which calls attention to its subject,
although in general terms, is all that is required by the
Constitution.
Bill in equity to obtain an injunction against assessing and
levying taxes to pay for the principal and interest of bonds issued
by a municipal corporation in payment of a subscription to stock in
a railroad company.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a decree in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Southern District of Illinois dismissing a
bill in equity filed by the City of Jonesboro in that state
Page 110 U. S. 193
against the Cairo & St. Louis Railroad Company, an Illinois
corporation, the Auditor of State, the county clerk, and Sheriff of
Union County, Illinois, and the "unknown holders of the Jonesboro
City bonds, issued in aid of the Cairo & St. Louis Railroad
Company." The suit was commenced in one of the courts of the state.
Its object was to obtain a decree perpetually enjoining the state
and county officers, who were made defendants, from levying,
certifying, and extending any tax for the payment either of the
principal or interest of said bonds. There was no defense upon the
part of those officers, and after publication against the "unknown
holders" of the bonds in the mode prescribed by the local statute,
a decree
pro confesso was passed giving the relief asked
and declaring the bonds invalid as against the city.
Subsequently Luther R. Graves, a citizen of Vermont, presented
his petition, in conformity with the state law, alleging his
ownership of some of the bonds and asking that the default be set
aside, with permission to him to plead, demur, or answer under the
orders of the court. The petition was granted, and he was made a
party defendant. Thereafter, on his further petition, the cause was
removed to the court from whose decree this appeal is taken.
The evidence shows that on the 2d day of March, 1868, a
resolution was passed by the City Council of Jonesboro submitting
to the legal voters of that municipality at its then next regular
election, held April 6, 1868, the question whether that city
should, upon certain named conditions, subscribe $50,000 to the
capital stock of the Cairo & St. Louis Railroad Company,
payable in bonds within twenty years after date at the option of
the city, with interest at the rate of eight percent per annum from
date of issue. The election was held at the time indicated.
Subsequently, by an act of the General Assembly of Illinois, which
became a law on March 3, 1869, entitled "An act to amend an act
entitled
An act to incorporate the Cairo & St. Louis
Railroad Company,'" approved February 16, 1865, authority was given
to the several towns, cities, and counties through or near which
that railroad might pass and to the
Page 110 U. S.
194
several townships in said counties which may have adopted or
might thereafter adopt township organization to subscribe for and
take stock in the company or to make a donation in aid of the
construction of the road, and issue bonds for such subscriptions or
donations, to be paid by taxation upon the property of the
municipality issuing them. It was provided that no subscription or
donation should be made nor bonds issued nor tax levied unless a
majority of the legal voters of the municipality, voting at an
election called and held as provided in the act, should assent to
the subscription or donation. But it was further provided in the
same act
"that all elections heretofore had in any county, city, or town,
in reference to a subscription to said railroad are hereby declared
legal and binding, and the county court of any county, and the
corporate authorities of any city or town in which such elections
have been already held, and a majority of the votes cast were for
subscription, shall have authority to issue bonds for such an
amount as was voted for, notwithstanding any insufficiency,
informality, or irregularity in such election or in the notice
thereof."
3 Pri.Laws Ill. 1869, pp. 256-258.
By an ordinance of the City Council of Jonesboro passed July 21,
1871 -- which referred to the resolutions of March 2, 1868, and
recited that at the election of April 6, 1868, all the votes cast
favored the subscription -- it was enacted that the proposed
subscription of $50,000 "be and is hereby made upon the conditions
specified in said resolutions," and that bonds be issued for the
purpose of paying the same. The clerk was directed to have them
prepared and delivered to John E. Naill, who by the ordinance
was
"appointed agent on behalf of the city to receive from the clerk
the said bonds and to deliver the same to the said company, its
authorized agent or officer, upon compliance by the said company
with the conditions in said resolutions specified, and at the same
time to receive from the said company its certificate or
certificates of stock (paid up) in said company to an amount equal
to the amount of the bonds so delivered, and that he immediately
deliver such certificate or certificates to the city council. "
Page 110 U. S. 195
Under date of July 1, 1872, there was executed and delivered to
Naill $25,000 of the bonds directed to be issued. They purport to
have been issued by the city, were signed by its mayor and
countersigned by its treasurer and clerk, and made payable to the
railroad company or bearer at the Bank of Commerce in New York.
Each one recites that
"This bond is issued under and by virtue of the charter of said
city, and of ordinances passed in pursuance thereof, in payment of
so much of the subscription by said city for fifty shares of the
capital stock of said Cairo & St. Louis Railroad Company. The
proposition to subscribe for said stock having been first
submitted, as required by law, to the qualified voters of said city
for their approval or rejection at a special election regularly
held for that purpose at the various voting precincts or wards in
and of said city, on the sixth day of April, A.D. 1868, and more
than two-thirds of said voters having at said election assented
thereto, and said majority of voters also being a majority over all
the votes cast at the last preceding regular election held in and
for said city, and said Cairo and St. Louis Railroad Company having
duly performed all the conditions of said subscription to be
performed on its part before said bond was to be issued."
On the 13th day of October, 1874, there was filed in the office
of the Auditor of State the official sworn certificate of the then
Mayor of Jonesboro (who as clerk had attested the bonds when
issued), attested by the city clerk, to the effect that the
before-mentioned bonds, amounting to $25,000, were entitled to
registration in the office of the auditor under the Act of April
16, 1869, entitled "An act to fund and provide for paying the
railroad debts of counties;" that they were issued by said city to
said railroad company
"under and by authority of the provisions of an act of the
General Assembly of Illinois, approved March 3, 1869, and by a vote
of the people of said city at an election held on the 6th day of
April, 1868."
The certificate concluded:
"And I, as mayor of said city, do hereby certify that all the
preliminary conditions in the act in force April 16, 1869, required
to be done to authorize the registration of these bonds, and
Page 110 U. S. 196
to entitle them to the benefits of said act last referred to,
have been fully complied with to the best of my knowledge and
belief."
On the day that certificate was filed, the Auditor of State
endorsed on each bond that it had been registered in his office
pursuant to the provisions of the said act in force April 16, 1869.
It was stipulated in the cause that the interest on the bonds so
issued had been regularly paid by the city from date of their
delivery to the issuing of the injunction by the state court in
September, 1882.
1. It is entirely clear that when the vote of April 6, 1868, was
taken, the City of Jonesboro was not authorized by its charter or
by any statute of Illinois to make a subscription to the capital
stock of the Cairo and St. Louis Railroad Company. The power given
to its city council, "to borrow money on the credit of the city and
issue their bonds under the seal of the city therefor," did not
alone confer authority to subscribe to the stock of a railroad
company, and issue bonds in payment thereof. The bonds upon their
face showed that they were not issued for an ordinary municipal
purpose.
Lewis v. Shreveport, 108 U.
S. 282.
2. But the Act passed April 15, 1869, and which became a law on
March 3, 1869, declared legal and binding all elections theretofore
held in any county, city, or town, in reference to a subscription
to the stock of the Cairo and St. Louis Railroad Company, and gave
power to the county court of any county, and the corporate
authorities of any city or town in which such elections had already
been held, and a majority of the votes cast were for subscription,
to issue bonds for the amount voted, "notwithstanding any
insufficiency or informality or irregularity in such election, or
in the notice thereof." The election of April 6, 1868, was
something more than informal or irregular. It was insufficient in
itself as authority for an issue of bonds. But its insufficiency
was removed by the act of 1869, if the General Assembly of Illinois
had the power to do so. That it had such power cannot well be
doubted. It
Page 110 U. S. 197
has been frequently decided by the Supreme Court of that state
-- and upon that point there has been no disagreement between that
learned tribunal and the courts of the Union -- that prior to the
adoption of the Illinois Constitution of 1870, an incorporated
city, its corporate authorities being thereunto authorized by the
legislature, could make a subscription to the capital stock of a
railroad company without referring the question of subscription to
a popular vote.
Keithsburg v. Frick, 34 Ill. 405, 421;
Quincy, Missouri & Pacific Railroad Company v. Morris,
84 Ill. 410;
Marshall v. Silliman, 61 Ill. 218, 225;
Quincy v. Cooke, 107 U. S. 549. The
legislature therefore could make the election of 1868 legal and
binding as expression of the popular will, and upon the basis of
the election thus legalized, empower or authorize the corporate
authorities of the municipality to issue the bonds for the amount
indicated by the popular vote. There is no question here, such as
has arisen in some cases in the Supreme Court of Illinois and in
this Court, as to the power of the legislature, prior to the
adoption of the Constitution of 1870, to compel the corporate
authorities of a municipality to issue bonds in aid of the
construction of a railroad. While the act of 1869 legalized the
election of 1868, it did not require an issue of bonds, but only
gave power to the corporate authorities of the municipality to do
so; such authorities, in the case of an incorporated city, being
not the voters, but its mayor and council.
Williams v. Town of
Roberts, 88 Ill. 22;
Quincy v. Cooke, supra. If the
conditions attached to the subscription by popular vote, or by the
ordinance of the City Council of Jonesboro, had not been complied
with when the curative act of 1869 was passed, then the railroad
company would not have been entitled to have the bonds issued. This
shows that the curative act does not belong to that class which the
supreme court of the state has, in some cases, held to be beyond
the constitutional power of the legislature to pass.
3. The next question to be considered is whether the
Constitution of Illinois adopted in 1870 took from the City of
Jonesboro the power thereafter to issue the bonds voted by the
Page 110 U. S. 198
election of 1868 and authorized by the act of 1869. That
instrument declares that
"no county, city, town, township, or other municipality shall
ever become subscribers to the capital stock of any railroad or
private corporation, or make donation to or loan its credit in aid
of such corporation,
provided however that the adoption of
this article shall not be construed as affecting the right of any
such municipality to make such subscriptions where the same have
been authorized, under existing laws, by a vote of the people of
such municipalities prior to such adoption."
We are of opinion that the right of the city to make the
subscription in question, and to issue bonds in payment thereof,
was saved by the proviso of that section. Before and at the time of
the adoption of the Constitution of 1870, the city, by its
corporate authorities, had power to subscribe to the stock of this
railroad company. Power to that end was conferred by the act of
1869, which was itself based upon a vote of the people of
Jonesboro. The vote, when taken, was, it is true, without legal
sanction, but it was made effective as an expression of the popular
will by the statute subsequently passed and in force before the
Constitution of 1870 was adopted. The phrase "under existing laws"
in the section of the constitution referred to relates, we think,
to the time of the adoption of the constitution, rather than to the
time when the vote of the people was in fact taken. Looking at the
purpose of the proviso in the Constitution of 1870, we cannot
suppose that the framers of that instrument intended to make a
difference in the operation of that proviso between a subscription
authorized by a vote legally taken and a subscription authorized by
a vote taken without legislative authority, but subsequently, and
before the Constitution went into operation, legalized by a valid
act of assembly.
4. But it is insisted that that part of the act of 1869
legalizing the election of 1868 and conferring authority to issue
bonds for the amount voted at that election was in violation of
section 23 of article 3 of the Illinois Constitution of 1848, which
provides that
"No private or local law which may be
Page 110 U. S. 199
passed by the General Assembly shall embrace more than one
subject, and that shall be expressed in the title."
The title of the act is "An act to amend the charter of the
Cairo and St. Louis Railroad Company." The contention is that the
legalization of an election previously held, and at which the
people voted in favor of a subscription of stock to that company
and the granting of authority to issue bonds in payment of such
subscription, is not a subject expressed by the title of the act.
In this view we do not concur, and our conclusion is justified by
the later decisions of the Supreme Court of Illinois construing a
similar provision in the state Constitution of 1870. It was held in
Johnson v. People, 83 Ill. 431, that the Constitution
"does not require that the subject of the bill must be
specifically and exactly expressed in the title; hence we conclude
that any expression in the title which calls attention to the
subject of the bill, although in general terms, is all that is
required."
People v. Loewenthal, 93 Ill. 205. The authority of
municipalities to make subscriptions in aid of the construction of
railroads in Illinois has frequently, if not generally, been given
in the charters of the respective railroad corporations. Whether a
particular municipality has legislative authority for a
subscription to the stock of a particular railroad company can be
determined ordinarily by referring to the charter of that company.
The general subject of municipal subscriptions to the stock of this
particular company was therefore germane to and fairly embraced by
the title of the act of 1869. Upon like grounds, a provision in the
same act legalizing a previous election at which the people voted
in favor of a subscription, and giving authority to issue bonds for
the amount indicated by the popular vote, was sufficiently covered
by a title showing that the act in question was amendatory of the
original charter of the company -- this because the validity of
bonds so issued would depend upon the existence of legislative
authority to issue them, and the existence of such authority would
ordinarily be ascertained by reference to the charter and amended
charter of the railroad corporation. Our decision in
Montclair
v. Ramsdell, 107 U. S. 147,
expresses substantially the same views upon this general subject as
those
Page 110 U. S. 200
announced by the Supreme Court of Illinois in
Johnson v.
People.
We are of opinion that no error was committed in dismissing the
bill so far as it questioned the authority of the state officers to
assess, levy, and extend taxes in payment of the bonds held by the
appellee Graves.
The decree is consequently affirmed.
It is so ordered.