Holders of municipal bonds issued by a county in excess of its
authority cannot, by an offer to surrender and cancel so much of
such bonds as may, upon inquiry, be found to exceed the limit
authorized by law, invest a court of equity with jurisdiction to
ascertain the amount of such excess and to declare the residue of
such bonds valid and enforce the payment thereof against the
county.
Where a contract is void at law for want of power to make it, a
court of equity has no jurisdiction to enforce it, or, in the
absence of fraud, accident, or mistake, to so modify it as to make
it legal and then enforce it.
In equity. Decree dismissing the bill. Complainant appealed. The
case is stated in the opinion.
Page 150 U. S. 183
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented by the record in this case is whether
parties holding the greater part of a series of bonds issued by a
county in excess of the limit fixed by the constitution of the
state, and which for that reason are not enforceable at law, can
invoke the aid of a court of equity to afford them relief by first
ascertaining the extent of such excess or settling the amount of
bonds which the county could lawfully have issued, and then
proceeding to scale down the issue to the limit thus ascertained,
and to declare such excess, only, to be void, and thereupon decree
the residue of such bonds good and valid, and enforce payment of
such residue, with interest, against the county -- or in other
words, can the holders of bonds issued by a county in excess of its
authority, by an offer to surrender and cancel so much of such
bonds as may, upon inquiry, be found to exceed the limit authorized
by law, invest a court of equity with jurisdiction not only to
ascertain the amount of such excess, but to declare the residue of
such bonds valid and enforce the payment thereof against the
county?
The appellants, being the holders of nearly the entire issue of
$8,7000 in bonds of the County of Dixon, which were by that county
issued and donated to the Covington, Columbus and Black Hills
Railroad Company, January 1, 1876, filed their bill in May, 1888,
in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Nebraska setting forth, among other things, that by a vote of the
electors of the county held on December 27, 1875, the bonds in
question were authorized to be issued to the railroad company; that
they became the holders thereof, relying upon recitals contained
therein, and the certificates endorsed thereon, and believing them
to be binding and valid obligations of the county; that when the
interest coupons matured, payment was refused by the county
officials, who alleged that the bonds were invalid because they
exceeded in amount ten percent of the assessed valuation of the
property of the county at the time of their issuance. The bill
further alleges that complainants had offered to surrender up for
cancellation such amounts of the bonds as exceeded ten
Page 150 U. S. 184
percent. of the assessed valuation of the property of the
county, each holder surrendering his proportionate share of such
excess; that this offer was refused by the county, which,
complainants insist, cured any infirmity in the bonds, and that the
county was equitably bound to recognize as valid the residue
thereof because it and its citizens had received, in the
construction of the railroad which the bonds were issued to
promote, all the consideration that was intended to be secured
thereby. The prayer of the bill was that an account might be taken
to ascertain the excess of the issue over ten percent of the
assessed valuation of the property of the county; that such excess
might be distributed among the holders of the bonds, or be applied
to reduce the amount of each bond ratably, so as to bring the
entire issue within the limit authorized by law; that the residue
might be declared good and valid, and that the county might be
decreed to pay the same, with interest at the rate of ten percent
from January 1, 1876, to the date of the decree.
The county demurred to the bill on the ground that the
complainants had not, in and by their bill, stated such a case as
to entitle them to the relief sought. This demurrer was sustained
by the court, and, the defects being of such a character that they
could not be remedied by amendment, a decree was entered dismissing
the bill. 37 F. 304. From that decree the present appeal is
prosecuted.
The bonds in question were made payable to the Covington,
Columbus and Black Hills Railroad Company or bearer, and were put
in circulation by that company, with its endorsement thereon,
guarantying to the holders the payment of the principal and
interest of the bonds, according to the tenor thereof at the place
where, and as the same became, due and payable. The only
consideration received by the county in the transaction was the
incidental benefit derived from the construction of the railroad,
the proceeds of the bonds, when negotiated, being received directly
by the railroad company. The theory of the bill is that the bonds
are void only to the extent that they exceed ten percent of the
assessed valuation of the property of the county at the time of
their issuance, and upon
Page 150 U. S. 185
the abatement of that excess, the holders are entitled to have
the residue thereof which the county could have lawfully issued
treated as valid because of the incidental benefits derived from
the construction of the road, which was sought to be secured by the
donation of bonds.
The complainants, by their bill and exhibits thereto, have
presented the same state of facts which were considered in
Dixon Co. v. Field, 111 U. S. 83, where
the bonds in question were directly involved, and were held by this
Court to be void because they exceeded, in the aggregate, the sum
of ten percent of the assessed valuation of the property of the
county at the time of their issue. This decision was based upon
section 2, Art. XII, of the Constitution of the State of Nebraska,
which provides as follows:
"No city, county, town, precinct, municipality, or other
subdivision of the state, shall ever make donations to any railroad
or other works of internal improvement unless a proposition so to
do shall have been first submitted to the qualified electors
thereof at an election by authority of law,
provided that
such donations of a county, with the donations of such
subdivisions, in the aggregate shall not exceed ten percent of the
assessed valuation of such county."
While the complainants concede that the issue of bonds was in
excess of what the county was authorized to donate under this
provision of the Constitution, and for that reason were invalid at
law, they insist that a promise to pay so much thereof as could
have been lawfully issued should be implied, and enforced against
the county under the principle applied in
Louisiana v.
Wood, 102 U. S. 294, and
in
Read v. Plattsmouth, 107 U. S. 568.
Those cases are clearly distinguishable from the present. In
Louisiana v. Wood, by the act of the city, the bonds bore
a false date which apparently made them obligatory and binding.
They were sold by the city, and purchased by the holder in good
faith, and the money paid therefor went directly into the city's
treasury. This Court held that the city was in the market as a
borrower, and received the money in that character, notwithstanding
the transaction assumed the form of a sale of her securities,
which, being
Page 150 U. S. 186
defectively executed, a suit could not be maintained thereon,
and that the holder was entitled to recover the money paid, with
interest thereon from the time the obligation of the city to pay
was denied.
In
Read v. Plattsmouth, the bonds were issued by a city
for the purpose of raising money wherewith to construct a
highschool building within her limits. The bonds were sold, and the
proceeds applied to that purpose. The legislature subsequently
legalized the proceedings of the city in the premises, but this act
of the legislature was passed after the constitution of the state
went into effect, declaring that the "legislature shall pass no
special act conferring corporate powers," and that "no bill shall
contain more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in
its title." A purchaser of the bonds, for value, without notice of
any infirmity in their issue, brought suit to recover the amount of
the coupons then due and unpaid. It was held that as, by force of
the transaction, the city was bound to refund the moneys paid it in
consideration of its void bonds, and as the act, by confirming
them, merely recognizes the existence of that obligation, and
provides a medium for enforcing it according to the original
intention of the parties, no new corporate powers were thereby
conferred. In this case, as in
Louisiana v. Wood, the city
got the full pecuniary consideration for the bonds, and applied the
money to the very purpose for which they were issued, and upon well
settled principles, if the securities given for the money so
obtained proved invalid or defective for any reason, there was a
clear legal, as well as moral, obligation to refund the money which
had been so advanced to and received by the city. The circumstances
and conditions which gave the holders of the bonds an equitable
right in those cases to recover from the municipality the money
which the bonds represented do not exist in the case under
consideration, where the county received no part of the proceeds of
the bonds, and no direct money benefit, but merely derived an
incidental advantage arising from the construction of the railroad,
upon which advantage it would be impossible for the court to place
a pecuniary estimate or to say that it would be equal to such
Page 150 U. S. 187
portion of the bonds in question as the county could lawfully
have issued.
Moreover, by the provisions of the Constitution of the State of
Nebraska and by the express terms of the proposition submitted to
the vote of the people of Dixon County, the bonds in question were
issued
as a donation to the railroad company, and being
intended as a donation, it cannot properly be said that the
purchasers of these bonds from the railroad company paid any
consideration therefor to the county, so as to raise any equity, as
against it, for the amount represented by the bonds or any part
thereof. Any equitable demand which might under the circumstances
have existed against the county on the theory of consideration
received was in favor of the railroad company which constructed the
railroad, and thereby conferred all the incidental benefits which
the county derived from the transaction. If any equitable claim
arises in favor of the holders of the bonds, it must be against the
railroad company, from whom the bonds were purchased, and by whom
their payment was guarantied, as that company was the recipient of
the legal consideration realized upon the negotiation of the
bonds.
Again, the constitution of the state having prescribed the
amount which the county might donate to a railroad company, that
provision operated as an absolute limitation upon the power of the
county to exceed that amount, and it is well settled that no
recitals in the bonds or endorsed thereon could estop the county
from setting up their invalidity based upon a want of
constitutional authority to issue the same. Recitals in bonds
issued under legislative authority may estop the municipality from
disputing their authority as against a
bona fide holder
for value, but when the municipal bonds are issued in violation of
a constitutional provision, no such estoppel can arise by reason of
any recitals contained in the bonds.
Lake County v.
Rollins, 130 U. S. 662;
Lake County v. Graham, 130 U. S. 674;
Sutliff v. Lake County Commissioners, 147 U.
S. 230/
But aside from this view of the subject, the bill proceeds upon
the false assumption that the bonds in question were partly valid
and partly void, and that the case is brought
Page 150 U. S. 188
within the principle announced in
Daviess County v.
Dickinson, 117 U. S. 657. In
that case, under authority conferred by statute, the county voted a
subscription of $250,000 to a railroad company, which was made,
and, by order of the county court, bonds of the county to that
amount were ordered to be sold and disposed of by a committee for
the purpose of paying such subscription. The officers of the
county, without authority, executed and issued bonds in the amount
of $300,000. The bonds, as they were delivered, were separately
numbered and entered upon the county register. The Court held that
the power to issue bonds was limited to $250,000, and that the
bonds issued in excess of that amount were unlawful and void. It
was further held that bonds to the amount authorized, which were
first issued and delivered, were valid and entitled to payment. In
that case, there was a clear and well defined line between the
legal and illegal issues, which enabled the court to declare
invalid such of the bonds as exceeded the amount authorized and to
hold that the illegal excess did not vitiate the bonds which were
authorized, and legally issued. There was no scaling of the entire
issue in that case so as to bring it within the limits of the
county's authority. The $250,000 which the Court pronounced valid
had been expressly authorized by the county, and the bonds for that
amount were readily separated from the $50,000 excess, which had
not been authorized. It did not, therefore, involve any
investigation on the part of the court to ascertain what the county
could lawfully issue, but was merely the identification of the
bonds which it intended to issue. Again, the amount of the bonds
issued was not based upon the assessed valuation of the property of
the county, but was limited to the amount which the people of the
county, by an election duly held, had determined should be issued.
There is a radical difference in these respects between that case
and the one under consideration.
What the county authorized and carried into execution in the
present case, both by the vote and by the donation, was one entire
transaction, and if it should be so reformed as to curtail the
entire issue of bonds to such an amount as was within the
constitutional limits of the county to donate, it
Page 150 U. S. 189
would be something different from that which was voted by the
county and carried into effect by the issue of the bonds. This
would involve the making of a different donation from what the
county voted and intended to make to the railroad company.
It is urged that the vote and the issue of the bonds constituted
a contract between the railroad company and the county, and that
the bonds issued in pursuance thereof should be scaled, as sought
by the bill, to bring the contract within the authority of the
county; that, as the county intended to make a valid donation, such
reduction of the amount of the issue, which the complainants offer
to make, should be sanctioned by the court, and the residue
declared valid. But the difficulty in the way of this suggestion is
that, treating the transaction as a contract, it is not within the
power of a court of equity to change its terms and provisions.
Besides, it is not shown that the county would have voted a
different amount from what was issued, or that it intended to issue
a less amount. It is too well settled to need citation of
authorities that a court of equity, in the absence of fraud,
accident, or mistake, cannot change the terms of a contract.
Again, if a right to the equitable relief sought by the
complainants could be worked out on the theory of a contract
between the county and the railroad company, it would be necessary
to establish that such contract actually existed, and was valid. In
the present case, however, the county had no authority to vote the
donation. In
Reineman v. Covington, Columbus & Black Hills
Railroad, 7 Neb. 310, where an excessive issue of bonds had
been voted by the county in aid of internal improvements, it was
held by the Supreme Court of Nebraska that the vote was simply a
void act, and conferred no authority on the county officials to
issue the bonds of the county, either to the amount voted or for
any amount. It was urged in that case, as in this, that even if it
should be held that the proposition submitted to the electors was
in excess of the amount authorized to be voted, still, to the
extent that the county could have lawfully voted and issued such
bonds, they should be treated as constituting a contract between
the county
Page 150 U. S. 190
and the railroad company, and to that extent be upheld. The
supreme court of the state declined to accede to this view of the
subject and ruled that
"the proposition submitted to the electors was an entirety, and
indivisible. It exceeded the statutory limit, and was therefore
wholly unauthorized. The election was simply a void act, conferring
no authority whatever upon the county commissioners to issue bonds
of the county in any amount whatever."
Several state decisions have been cited in support of the bill.
Johnson v. County of Stark, 24 Ill. 75;
City of Quincy
v. Warfield, 25 Ill. 319;
Briscoe v. Allison, 43 Ill.
291;
State v. Allen, 43 Ill. 456;
Stockdale v. Wayland
School District, 47 Mich. 226. But they mostly relate to taxes
imposed beyond authority, and stand upon a different doctrine from
that involved in the present case. We do not, however, deem it
necessary to review them, for if they can be construed to support a
bill like the one under consideration, we think they are not
founded upon correct principles, and are not in harmony with the
decisions of this Court.
In
Buchanan v. Litchfield, 102 U.
S. 278, bonds were issued by the City of Litchfield
under authority of a statute of Illinois and an ordinance of the
city, for the construction of a system of waterworks for the use of
the municipality. Neither the statute nor the ordinance contained
any reference to the provisions of the constitution prohibiting any
county, city, township, or school district from becoming indebted
in any manner or for any purpose to an amount, including existing
indebtedness, in the aggregate, exceeding five percent of the
taxable property therein. The ordinance of the city made no
reference to or mention of the indebtedness of the city, although
at that time it exceeded the constitutional limit. A
bona
fide holder of the bonds brought suit upon the unpaid coupons
thereto attached, and it was held that they were void and could not
be recovered. In this case, the city was directly benefited by the
issue of the bonds, which were negotiated for the sole purpose of
erecting a system of public works. The holders of the bonds
thereafter sought relief by a bill in equity against the City of
Litchfield to enforce the payment
Page 150 U. S. 191
of the money loaned or which the city had received upon the
issue of the bonds and used in the construction of its public
works. The question of their right to recover on the equitable
consideration came before this Court in
Litchfield v.
Ballou, 114 U. S. 190, and
it was held that a provision in a state constitution that a
municipal corporation shall not become indebted in any manner, or
for any purpose, to an amount exceeding five percent of its taxable
property therein, forbids implied as well as express liability for
the amount or amounts received on bonds issued contrary to such
provision, and that a court of equity could not afford relief in
such a case either on an express or implied obligation; that the
transaction, being invalid at law, was equally invalid in equity.
This conclusion was reached after a full review of the authorities
on the question, and the court denied the relief sought.
In
Aetna Life Insurance Co. v. Middleport, 124 U.
S. 534, the Town of Middleport made an appropriation to
a railroad company, to be raised by tax on the property of the
town, and bonds of the town for a sum large enough to include
interest and discount for which they could be sold and delivered
were issued to the railroad company, by whom they were put in
circulation. These bonds were declared void, and the insurance
company, as a purchaser and holder for value and without notice of
a portion thereof, sought by a proceeding in equity to be
subrogated to the right of the railroad company to enforce payment
of the amount of the appropriation voted by the town, but it was
held that the purchase of these bonds by the holder was no payment
of the appropriation voted by the town, and that the holder was not
entitled to claim the benefit of such appropriation, nor that the
advantages conferred by the railroad company upon the town inured
to the benefit of the holder, or constituted the basis of a
consideration on which it could claim to be paid the sum
appropriated for the railroad company. The proposition contended
for in that case by the complainant was that, by its purchase of
the bonds, which were supposed to represent the benefit conferred
upon the town by the appropriation to the railroad company, it
became entitled, in equity, to claim the payment of the
Page 150 U. S. 192
amount represented by the bonds, on the basis of the original
consideration. This contention was not sustained, and the
complainant was denied the equitable relief sought.
The principle running through these decisions controls the case
under consideration, and clearly establishes that the complainants
are not entitled to the relief they seek. The fact that the
complainants have no remedy at law arising from the invalidity of
the bonds confers no jurisdiction upon a court of equity to afford
them relief. The established rule, although not of universal
application, is that equity follows the law, or as stated in
Magniac v.
Thomson, 15 How. 299,
"that wherever the rights or the situation of parties are
clearly defined and established by law, equity has no power to
change or unsettle those rights or that situation, but in all such
instances the maxim
equitas sequitur legem is strictly
applicable."
Where a contract is void at law for want of power to make it, a
court of equity has no jurisdiction to enforce such contract, or in
the absence of fraud, accident, or mistake to so modify it as to
make it legal, and then enforce it. Courts of equity can no more
disregard statutory and constitutional requirements and provisions
than can courts of law. They are bound by positive provisions of a
statute equally with courts of law, and where the transaction or
the contract is declared void because not in compliance with
express statutory or constitutional provision, a court of equity
cannot interpose to give validity to such transaction or contract,
or any part thereof. These general propositions clearly establish
that the present bill cannot be sustained, and our conclusion
therefore is that there was no error in the judgment of the court
below in dismissing the bill, and that judgment is accordingly
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN dissents from the conclusion in this
case.