In Illinois, an incorporated "town" and an incorporated
"village" are one and the same thing.
We1ch v. Post, 99
Ill. 471, overruled, and
Martin v. People, 87 Ill. 524,
followed.
The provision in the Act of February 24, 1869, of the
Legislature of Illinois, giving authority to "any village, city,
county, or township organized under the township organization law
or any other law of the state along or near the route of the
railway" therein mentioned, "to subscribe to the stock of the
railroad company or make donations to it" applies to a town along
or near the route.
The proviso in the clause of the Constitution of Illinois
regarding municipal subscriptions to the stock of, or donations or
loan of credit to, railroads or private corporations, applies to
donations as well as to subscriptions to stock.
When a question in a certificate of division is stated in broad
and indefinite terms which admit of one answer under one set of
circumstances and of a different answer under another set of
circumstances, this Court must regard it as immaterial to the
decision of the case.
The pendency of a suit relating to the validity of negotiable
paper not yet due is not constructive notice to subsequent holders
thereof before maturity, and this general rule cannot he changed by
state laws or decisions so as to affect the rights of persons not
residing and not being within the state.
In Illinois, the making the place of payment of a municipal bond
at a place which is not the office of the treasurer of the
municipality does not affect the validity of the bond, or charge
the holder of such a bond, being negotiable and not yet matured,
with notice of judicial proceedings between a previous holder and
the municipality so as to work an estoppel.
This was an action at law to recover the amount of coupons cut
from bonds not yet matured, issued by the plaintiff in error, a
town in Illinois, and held by the defendant in error. Judgment for
plaintiff. Defendant sued out this writ of error. The case is
stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 119 U. S. 681
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought by C. N. Jordan against the Town of
Enfield to recover the amount of twenty-two interest coupons, for
fifty dollars each, made by the town on the 1st of January, 1871,
and payable in January and July, 1881, 1882, and 1883. The
defendant pleaded nonassumpsit, and on the trial a jury was waived,
and the cause was tried by the court, consisting of the circuit and
district judges. A finding of the facts was made, and, the judges
being divided in opinion as to certain questions of law arising
thereon, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff in
accordance with the opinion of the presiding judge. The principal
question of law was whether an "incorporated town," as Enfield was,
had power to make a donation of its bonds to the railroad company.
Questions of estoppel were also raised, as hereafter noticed.
The facts found by the court, in accordance with an agreed
statement presented by the parties, are substantially as
follows:
1. That the Town of Enfield was incorporated under an Act of the
General Assembly of the State of Illinois approved March 15, 1869.
This act is set out in full, and is entitled "An act to extend the
corporate powers of the Town of Enfield." It is an ordinary town
charter, making the town a corporation by the name and style of
"The Town of Enfield." Its territorial limits were then prescribed,
being one mile square, and the usual corporate powers were
conferred. A town council, consisting of five trustees, together
with a police magistrate, a treasurer, and a town constable, were
directed to be elected annually on the first Monday of May. The
powers given to the town council were similar to those usually
conferred upon municipal bodies, as the power to levy and collect
taxes, to appoint a clerk, supervisor of streets, and other
officers, to appropriate moneys to pay the debts and expenses of
the town, to make regulations for securing the general health; to
provide a supply of water; to make sidewalks, and to open, grade,
pave, and repair streets, to establish markets, to regulate the
public grounds, to organize a fire department, to regulate the
police, etc.
Page 119 U. S. 682
The findings next set forth at large an act of assembly of
Illinois incorporating the Illinois Southeastern Railway Company,
approved February 25, 1867. This act authorized the company to
construct a railroad from a point on the Illinois Central Railroad,
by way of Fairfield, in Wayne County, to the Ohio River. The route
designated would naturally pass in the neighborhood of Enfield, and
the railroad, when built, did pass through the town. The seventh
section authorized counties through which the road might pass to
donate to the company any sum not exceeding $100,000, and to give
its bonds therefor. The ninth section authorized any town in any
county under township organization to donate not to exceed $30,000,
but such donation was payable only by taxation, no authority being
given to issue bonds. This section related not to incorporated
towns, but to townships forming the territorial subdivisions of
counties. The eleventh section authorized "any incorporated city or
town" through or by which the railroad might run to make donations
not exceeding $10,000, on the same terms, propositions, conditions,
and under the same restrictions, as provided for townships.
The findings next set forth an amendment to the railroad
charter, approved February 24, 1869, by the tenth section of which
authority was given to
"any village, city, county, or township organized under the
township organization law, or any other law of the state, along or
near the route of the railway . . . or anywise interested
therein"
to subscribe to the stock of the railroad company or make
donations to it to aid in the construction and equipment of its
road, provided such subscription or donation was sanctioned by an
election of the people. This section gave power to issue bonds for
such subscriptions or donations, but towns are not included therein
by name.
The court further found that on the 1st of January, 1871, the
Town of Enfield issued and delivered to the officers of the
Springfield and Illinois Southeastern Railway Company, a company
formed by consolidation with the Illinois Southeastern Railway
Company, the bonds and coupons now in controversy, copies of which
are attached; that said bonds and coupons were
Page 119 U. S. 683
issued by said town by virtue of the power (if any) contained in
the acts aforesaid, approved February 25, 1867, and February 24,
1869, and that afterwards said bonds and coupons came to the
plaintiff through mesne transfers from said Springfield and
Illinois Railway Company, and that the bonds were registered in the
state auditor's office.
The findings further set forth copies of the order of the Town
Council of Enfield, made June 10, 1870, appointing judges of
election to be held in the town on the 11th of the same month, and
a copy of the returns of the vote at said election, for the purpose
of determining whether the town would donate the sum of $7,000 to
the Springfield and Illinois Southeastern Railway Company, the
result of which was: for donation, 64 votes; against it, 1 vote,
and that this was the only election held in relation to said
donation.
The court further found that at the June term, 1880, of that
court, judgment for the plaintiff against the defendant was
rendered upon coupons then due, detached from the same bonds from
which the coupons now sued on were taken. It was also admitted by
the plaintiff that the Enfield town bond represented by Post in the
case of
Welch v. Post, 99 Ill. 471, was one of the series
of seven bonds in controversy in this suit, but as to which bond it
was the plaintiff disclaimed any knowledge.
Upon these facts, the judges who tried the cause have certified
a difference of opinion upon the following questions, to-wit:
1st. Whether the incorporated Town of Enfield had power to vote
and issue the bonds and coupons in controversy under any of the
provisions of the acts above specified.
2d. More particularly, whether said town had said power under
the 10th section of the amendment of the railway company's charter,
approved February 24, 1869.
3d. Whether said town was not estopped from further defense by
the litigation theretofore had between it and plaintiff.
4th. In case, there was power in the town under said laws to
vote and issue said bonds and coupons, whether one of said
Page 119 U. S. 684
bonds, and the coupons thereto belonging, were void in the hands
of plaintiff in this suit by reason of one Post having litigated it
in the state courts of Illinois.
1. As to the first question, it is clear that the town derived
no authority to issue the bonds from anything contained in its own
charter. But by the 11th section of the act incorporating the
railway company, power is given to any incorporated city or town
through or by which the railroad might run to make donations to the
company and to pay the same by taxes assessed by the county clerk
at the request of the company. No authority, however, was given to
issue bonds in payment of such donations. The 10th section of the
amending act, approved February 24, 1869, contains the only
authority which can be invoked for that purpose. But that section
does not mention towns by name. It declares
"That any village, city, county, or township . . . along or near
the route of said railway or its branches, or that are in any wise
interested therein, may in their corporate capacity subscribe to
the stock of said company, or make donations to said company, to
aid in constructing and equipping said railway,"
with a proviso for holding an election on the subject, and
authorizing the issue of bonds in payment," said bonds to be
signed, in case of a village, by the chairman of the board of
trustees thereof; in case of a city, by the mayor thereof," etc.
The Town of Enfield is not a township nor a county nor a city. If
it is within the purview of the act, it must be because it is a
village. The question then arises is the incorporated Town of
Enfield a village within the meaning of the act?
This question depends upon the use of the words "town" and
"village" in the laws of Illinois. The general and popular
distinction between them in English speech will not carry us far
toward a solution. The dictionaries tell us that the word "town"
signifies any walled collection of houses (Johnson). But that is
its antique meaning. By modern use, it is said to be applied to an
undefined collected of houses or habitations; also to the
inhabitants; emphatically to the metropolis (Richardson). Again, a
town is any collection of houses larger than a village, or any
number of houses to which belongs
Page 119 U. S. 685
a regular market, and which is not a city (Johnson, Webster,
Ogilvie). The same authorities define a village as a small
collection of houses in the country less than a town. According to
this distinction, the law, in giving power to "any village, city,
county, or township" to make donations and issue bonds to the
railroad company, confers the power upon bodies of higher and lower
degrees of municipal organization than towns, and leaves them out.
This is an incongruity which we can hardly suppose was intended.
The Supreme Court of Illinois, in a recent decision against the
power to which we shall presently refer, is obliged to say, "Why
incorporated towns were omitted in that act cannot now be
known."
In seeking aid from collateral sources, we shall probably derive
more light from the political use of the terms "town" and "village"
in this country than from general lexicography. In New England and
New York, towns are the political units of territory into which the
county is subdivided, and answer politically to parishes and
hundreds in England, but are vested with greater powers of local
government. In Delaware, the counties are divided into hundreds,
the words "town" and "village" being indiscriminately applied to
collections of houses. In Maryland and most of the southern states,
the political unit of territory is the county, though this is
sometimes divided into parishes and election districts for limited
purposes. The word "town" is used in a broad sense to include all
collections of houses from a city down to a village. Thus, in
Virginia, by an act passed in 1778, on the death or removal of
"anyone of the trustees and directors of the several towns within
this state, not incorporated," provision is made for filling the
vacancy. By act of 1793, "electors of towns entitled to
representation in the house of delegates" are authorized to vote at
their respective courthouses for representatives in Congress. By
Revised Code of 1819, "trustees of the respective unincorporated
towns of this commonwealth" are empowered to make bylaws to
prohibit horse-racing in the streets of the town. By the Revised
Code of 1849, in the chapter entitled "Of Towns," the council and
board of trustees
Page 119 U. S. 686
of any town heretofore or hereafter established, may cause to be
made a survey and plan of the town showing each lot, public street,
etc., to lay out, alter, improve, and light the streets, and to
adopt various municipal regulations relating to public grounds,
markets, health, nuisances, supply of water, fire departments, etc.
Most of these towns were nothing but villages. The close connection
between Virginia and Kentucky and the early settlement of Illinois
renders this use of the word "town" in the mother state apposite to
the question under consideration. In New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, and Illinois, the subdivisions of a
county, answering to the towns of New England and New York, are
called townships, though the word "town" is also applied to them in
Illinois. In these states, the words "town" and "village" are
indiscriminately applied to large collections of houses less than a
city.
These results are gathered from an examination of the laws and
constitutions of the states named, and we should have no hesitation
in saying that in Illinois an incorporated town and an incorporated
village were one and the same thing were it not for the decision of
the Supreme Court of that state to the contrary in the case of
Welch v. Post, 99 Ill. 471, already alluded to, which
decision was made in relation to the identical bonds in question in
this suit.
That case arose upon a bill filed in the Circuit Court of White
County by citizens, property owners, and taxpayers of the Town of
Enfield against the village and county collectors of taxes and the
unknown holders of the bonds to restrain the collection of taxes
for their payment on the ground that there was no authority of law
to issue them. The bill prayed that the bonds might be declared
null and void in whosesoever hands they might be. A decree was
taken for confessed in April term, 1877, but at the October term,
1879, one Post of New York presented a petition stating that he was
the owner of one of the bonds and praying that the cause might be
reinstated, which was done. The cause was then tried upon an agreed
statement of the facts (much the same as in the present case), and
the circuit court decided against the plaintiffs and
Page 119 U. S. 687
dismissed the bill. This decree was reversed by the supreme
court in June, 1881. The ground of this judgment, as stated in the
opinion of the court, was that the Town of Enfield had no authority
to issue the bonds; that no such authority was given in the charter
of the town, because none was expressed, and the making of
donations to railway corporations, and issuing interest-bearing
bonds in payment thereof, is not among the usual or implied powers
possessed by municipal corporations; that it was not given by the
act of 1867, incorporating the railway company, because the
donations authorized by that act to be made by incorporated cities
or towns were directed to be paid by taxation, and no authority was
given to issue bonds; that it was not given by the amending act of
February 24, 1869, because that act only gives the power to
villages, cities, counties, and townships, and does not mention
incorporated towns, and the act cannot be extended by implication.
The court says:
"Keeping in mind, as must be done, there is no implied authority
in municipal corporations to make donations to railway companies
and to issue interest-bearing bonds in payment, it must appear
there is express enabling legislation to that effect before
municipal corporations can properly assume to exercise such
extraordinary powers. No such authority is to be found anywhere, in
any public or private law of this state, applicable to the Town of
Enfield at the time that corporation undertook to and did issue the
bond held and owned by the respondent, and, having been issued
without authority of law, such bond constitutes no valid obligation
that can be enforced against the municipality."
Two justices, Dickey and Sheldon, dissented from this opinion
and adhered to an earlier ruling of the court, made in 1877, in the
case of
Martin v. People, 87 Ill. 524, in which it was
adjudged that the terms "towns" and "villages" are used
synonymously in the laws of Illinois. The proceeding in that case
was instituted by the Collector of Cook county for the collection
of certain special assessments levied by the Town of Lake upon the
real estate within its bounds, the mode of collection pursued being
that pointed out in article IX of the act entitled "An act to
provide for the incorporation of cities and
Page 119 U. S. 688
villages," approved April 10, 1872, conferring upon all cities,
towns, and villages which might adopt it (as all were authorized to
do) municipal powers of a very comprehensive character. It was
contended on the part of the defendants that as to towns the act
was unconstitutional and void, because "towns" are not mentioned in
the title, but only "cities" and "villages." The Supreme Court of
Illinois, however, did not concur in this view, but held that an
incorporated town and incorporated village, in the laws of that
state, are one and the same thing. The court said:
"The word 'town,' as found in our statutes, is not always used
in the same senses. In the act relating to township organization,
it is provided that counties adopting that system for the
management of county affairs shall be divided 'into towns' [sect.
5, p. 1067, Rev.Stat. 1874], consisting, generally, of a township
according to the government surveys. These towns are a species of
municipal incorporations, and constitute an integral part of the
county, and are closely interwoven with the management of county
affairs. In the statute found in Rev.Stat. 1845, p. 111, the word
'town' is used in a very different sense. It there plainly means a
village, or a small collection of residences, and by that act it is
provided that the inhabitants of any such town may, under certain
circumstances, 'become incorporated for the better regulation of
their internal police,' under the management of a board of
trustees, with capacity to sue and be sued, to keep a record of
their proceedings, and with power to make bylaws and ordinances, to
prevent nuisances, to prohibit gambling and other disorderly
conduct, to prevent fast driving and indecent exhibitions, to
license public shows, to regulate markets, to sink public wells, to
keep open and repair streets, to protect the town from fires, to
levy and collect taxes, to enforce their ordinances, etc. Such an
organization, in our statutes, was formerly always called an
'incorporated town,' but in later statutes they are sometimes
called 'village,' and their trustees are called 'village trustees.'
An examination of the special charter of the Town of Lake (4
Special Laws 1869, p. 324) shows it to be a municipal corporation
of the latter character, and insofar as its organization under that
charter is
Page 119 U. S. 689
concerned, it is merely an incorporated town, or, in other
words, 'an incorporated village.' Before that charter was enacted,
the Town of Lake was merely a municipal corporation under the laws
relating to township organization. By this charter, the inhabitants
of that town took another form of corporate existence, and became
also, in contemplation of law, what, in the Revised Statutes of
1874, is known as a village."
The court then, after enumerating the powers conferred by the
town charter, added:
"All the powers are of the kind usually conferred upon cities or
villages, and of the character conferred upon cities or villages by
the general law of 1872, of which this article 9 is a part. Before
the adoption of our present constitution, many special charters
conferring like powers were granted by the General Assembly, and in
most cases such corporations are called towns, but in some cases
they are called villages; but the character and nature of these
corporations, whether called in their charters towns or villages,
were in all cases substantially the same."
After referring to a number of these charters, the titles of
which ran, "An act to incorporate the village of A. or B.," but in
the body of which the several communities were called villages and
towns indiscriminately, the court concluded as follows:
"We therefore hold that the Town of Lake was and is a village in
the sense in which that word is used in § 168 of the general
act of 1872 relating to cities and villages; that it therefore is
one of the municipal incorporations which, by that section, are
authorized to avail themselves of the provisions of article 9 of
that act as an amendment to their charters."
We have quoted more fully from the judgment in this case because
it is not only directly in point, but it shows historically the use
of the terms "town" and "village" in the legislation of Illinois.
Its bearing on the present case is enhanced by the fact that the
Towns of Lake and Enfield were incorporated at the same session of
the legislature, and invested with like powers and form of
organization.
Both of the cases to which we have referred arose after the
bonds and coupons now in controversy were issued, and neither of
them can control our decision upon the rights of the parties
Page 119 U. S. 690
here any further than as they address themselves to our judgment
upon the true construction of the law, and we feel compelled to say
that we regard the views expressed in the case of
Martin v.
People as the most sound and convincing of the two. It seems
to us that the Legislature of Illinois, in the act for the
incorporation of cities and villages, intended to avoid hereafter
the use of the ambiguous word "town," as applied to the smaller
class of incorporated municipalities, and to designate them by the
single term of "village." This conclusion is on the whole so
obvious that we do not hesitate to adopt it, and to hold that the
Town of Enfield is a village within the meaning of the Amending Act
of February 24, 1869. We may add as a strong corroboration of what
has been said that in the 9th section of that act, the word "town"
is used indiscriminately with the word "village." The language
is:
"It shall be lawful for the incorporate authorities of any
incorporate city or village through which said railway
shall be located, to donate or lease to said railway company, as a
right of way, the right to lay a single or double track through
said
city or incorporated village or any portion of the
same or any street or highway that the said railway company shall
elect for that purpose, except at the option of the said railway
company and corporate authorities of
such towns or
cities."
An additional point, however, is made in relation to the
authority of the town to issue the bonds under consideration.
Supposing that such authority is found in the acts referred to, it
is still contended that it was abrogated by the constitution of the
state adopted on the 2d day of July, 1870. By a section of that
constitution it is declared that
"No county, city, town, township, or other municipality shall
ever become subscriber 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
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."
It is urged that while the proviso of this section saves the
power to make
Page 119 U. S. 691
subscriptions to the capital stock of private corporations, it
does not save the power to make donations to them. We did so decide
in the case of
Town of Concord v. Portsmouth Savings Bank,
92 U. S. 625, but
in the subsequent case of
Fairfield v. County of Gallatin,
100 U. S. 47, that
decision was overruled in deference to several decisions of the
Supreme Court of Illinois to the effect that donations as well as
subscriptions were within the meaning of the proviso. The
authorities are collected in the latter case, and need not be
repeated here. We held, as we had often held before, that this
Court will follow the construction which has been uniformly given
by the highest court of a state to its constitution and laws.
In the first and second questions, therefore, our answer is that
the Town of Enfield had power, under the 10th section of the
amending act approved February 24, 1869, to vote and issue the
bonds and coupons in controversy.
The third question is whether the town was not estopped from
further defense by the previous litigation in this (the circuit)
court upon the pleadings and facts stipulated and judgment rendered
therein. The stipulation and finding on which this question is
raised is as follows, to-wit:
"That at the June term, 1880, A.D. of this Court, judgment for
the plaintiff against the defendant herein was rendered upon
coupons then due, detached from the same bonds from which the
coupons in evidence in this suit were taken."
The coupons on which said former judgment was rendered were
different coupons from those involved in the present suit. This
suit therefore was brought upon a different cause of action from
that upon which the former suit was brought. Whether the same
issues were raised and passed upon in that suit which are raised in
this the stipulation does not inform us. The question is too
general in its terms to admit of a precise answer. If the defendant
sought to set up in this suit some new defense which was not made
in the former one and not necessarily decided therein, it should
have been allowed to do so, under the ruling of this Court in
Cromwell v. Sac County, 94 U. S. 354.
But we are left in entire ignorance on the subject. As no
Page 119 U. S. 692
proper answer can be given to a question stated in such broad
and indefinite terms, which admits of one answer under one set of
circumstances and of a different answer under another, we must
necessarily pass it by as immaterial to the decision of the case in
this Court.
The fourth and last question propounded by the judges below is
whether one of the bonds, and the coupons thereto belonging, are
void in the hands of the plaintiff in this suit by reason of one
Post's having litigated it in the state courts of Illinois. The
finding on which this question is based is as follows, to-wit:
"It is admitted by the plaintiff in this suit that the Enfield
town bond represented by Post in the case of
Welch v. Post
99 Ill. 471, was one of the series of seven bonds now in
controversy in this suit, but in making said admission, plaintiff
disclaims any knowledge of which one it was, or any connection with
said suit."
It is rather a singular proceeding to refer this Court to a
volume of reports to eke out the record on which it is to pass
judgment. The reported case is not even printed in the record
before us, and we do not feel called upon to give it a very
critical examination in reference to the point now raised, and
might well refuse to consider it at all. It consists merely of the
opinion of the court already referred to and commented on. The
nature and object of the suit and the principal proceedings had
therein have already been stated. For the purpose in hand it is
sufficient to remark that the bond held by Post was not matured,
and will not mature till the year 1891, and therefore a decree
against Post has no binding effect on a subsequent holder of the
bond purchasing the same before maturity and without notice. To
have made the decree effectual against the bond itself, Post should
have been required to produce it in court, in order that it might
have been cancelled. If he parted with the bond pending suit, it
would make no difference. The subject of notice by
lis
pendens in relation to negotiable securities was considered by
this Court in the cases of
Warren County v. Marcy,
97 U. S. 96, and
Carroll County v. Smith, 111 U. S. 556, and
needs no further discuss on. The general rule announced in those
cases is that the pendency of a suit relating
Page 119 U. S. 693
to the validity of negotiable paper not yet due is not
constructive notice to subsequent holders thereof before maturity.
This general rule cannot be changed by state laws or decisions so
as to effect the rights of persons not residing and not being
within the state, any more than publication of suit can be made
constructive service of process upon such persons. Rights to real
property and personal chattels within the jurisdiction of the
court, and subject to its power, may be affected by
lis
pendens, but not those acquired by the transfer of negotiable
securities or by the sale of articles in market overt in the usual
course of trade.
See Brooklyn v. Insurance Co.,
99 U. S. 362;
Empire v. Darlington, 101 U. S. 87;
Pana v. Bowler, 107 U. S.
545.
But it is contended by the plaintiff in error that the bonds on
their face show an illegality as to the place of payment sufficient
to put a purchaser upon inquiry, and therefore to subject him to
notice of the proceedings by which the bond held by Post was
declared void. This argument is based upon the fact that the bonds
are payable not at the office of the Treasurer of the Town of
Enfield, but "at the First National Bank of Shawneetown, Illinois,"
the principal town in the adjoining county, about thirty miles
distant, and the terminus of the railroad passing through Enfield.
As the statute which gave the authority to issue the bonds is
silent as to the place of their payment, we are at a loss to see
how the place named therein can have the effect supposed. Counsel
admit in argument that it does not render the bonds void, but
insist that the town had no power to make them payable at any other
place than the office of the town treasurer. For this they cite
People v. County of Tazewell, 22 Ill. 147;
Pekin v.
Reynolds, 31 Ill. 529, and
Sherlock v. Village of
Winnetka, 68 Ill. 530. In these cases, it is true, the Supreme
Court of Illinois held that a municipal corporation cannot lawfully
make its obligations payable at any other place than the office of
its treasurer, but the court also held that the making of them
payable elsewhere does not affect their validity. The case last
cited was a bill by
Page 119 U. S. 694
taxpayers to enjoin the collection of taxes levied to pay
interest on certain bonds of the village, the validity of which was
questioned. They had been issued to pay for erecting a building for
educational purposes, which the court held the village had no power
to erect. The question of the place of payment of the bonds only
came up incidentally, as one of the arguments of counsel used
against their payment. On this point the court said:
"The objection that the bonds are illegally made payable at a
bank in Chicago does not invalidate them, as was held in
Johnson v. Stark County, 24 Ill. 75. The agreement to pay
at that place is void, but the balance of the coupons and bonds are
not rendered invalid for that reason. In paying the interest, the
treasurer should not obey that agreement in the bond, but pay it at
the village treasury. If he were to deposit the money in the bank
for the purpose, and it were to break or the money should otherwise
be lost, he and his sureties would no doubt be liable for the loss
growing out of his illegal act in placing the money in a place
unauthorized by law."
The court did not regard this as a ground for enjoining the
collection of taxes, but enjoined their collection upon other
grounds.
Now, giving to these cases all the effect due to them, we do not
see how the fact that the bonds and coupons of the Town of Enfield
were made payable at Shawneetown can prejudice a
bona fide
holder thereof or charge him with notice of prior proceedings
against other parties who once held them. The most that can be said
is that a person purchasing the bonds may be bound to know that the
place named for payment therein is not binding on the county, and
that, though made payable elsewhere, their legal place of payment
is at the office of the Treasurer of Enfield. The question whether
a municipal corporation, authorized to issue bonds, may or may not
make them payable at a place other than its own Treasury (there
being no statutory direction on the subject) is one of general
jurisprudence, in reference to which the courts of Illinois take a
particular view. Other courts take a different view. There is
nothing in the Constitution of the municipal bodies of that state,
so far as this particular power is concerned,
Page 119 U. S. 695
different from that of similar bodies in other states. When the
bonds of an Illinois municipality are offered for sale in the
market, and on their face are made payable at a different place
from the treasury of such municipality, even though it be conceded
that a purchaser is bound to know that, by the jurisprudence of
Illinois, the bond is legally payable at such Treasury, that is all
he is bound to know. The same jurisprudence informs him that the
naming of a different place for payment does not affect their
validity, nor the obligation of the municipality to pay them. At
all events, we are of opinion that the place of payment named in
the bond which was formerly in the hands of Post did not affect the
present holder with notice of the proceedings in which Post was a
party. Those proceedings are an estoppel against
Post even
though, in our judgment, the decision was based on an erroneous
view of the law, and they would be an estoppel against Jordan if he
had notice of them when he took the bond. But there is no evidence
that he had any such notice, and we think that the fact of the
bond's being payable at a place where the Town of Enfield had no
authority to make it payable -- a fact which it is admitted does
not affect its validity -- was not sufficient to put Jordan on
inquiry. Though made payable in Shawneetown, it is legally payable
at Enfield, and is as valid and binding on the town as if it were
in terms made payable there.
The answer to the fourth question therefore is that one of the
bonds, and the coupons thereto belonging, are not void in the hands
of the plaintiff by reason of Post's having litigated the bond in
the state courts of Illinois.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.