July 3, 1869, the qualified voters of Perry County, Illinois,
voted to subscribe to the capital stock of the Belleville &
Southern Illinois Railroad and to issue its bonds in payment
thereof, conditioned that "no bonds should be issued or stock
subscribed until the railroad company should locate their machine
shops at Duquoin." In December, 1870, the county court directed the
bonds to be issued, and they were issued duly executed, and were
delivered to the company and by it put into circulation, but the
shops were never located at Duquoin.
Held, in view of the
legislation of Illinois reviewed in the opinion, and of the
provisions in the constitution of 1870, which came into force after
the vote to issue the bonds, but before their issue, that the
county court by its order to issue the bonds, and the county
officers by issuing them, violated their duty as prescribed by the
statutes, and as the bonds contained no recital precluding inquiry
as to the performance of the condition upon which the people voted
in favor of their issue, it was open to the county to show
Page 156 U. S. 693
that it had not been performed, which being shown, the bonds
became subject to the provisions of the constitution of 1870, and
were invalid.
The bonds issued by the same county to the Chester & Tamaroa
Coal & Railroad Company were issued in obedience to a vote of
the people taken at an election ordered and held with reference to
the Act of April 16, 1869, referred to in the opinion of this
Court, which act required that a majority of the legal voters
living in the county should be in favor of the subscription, and as
the county court, in ordering the issue of the bonds, certified on
its record that all the conditions prescribed had been complied
with, and as the fact that a majority of the voters living in the
county at the time of the election did not vote for the issue of
the bonds is not determinable by any public record,
held
that it would be rank injustice to permit it to be set up after the
lapse of so many years, and that the issue was valid and the bonds
are binding in the county.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought to recover the amount of certain coupons
taken from bonds issued in the name of Perry County, Illinois, and
made payable, some of them to the Belleville and Southern Illinois
Railroad Company or bearer; others, to the Chester and Tamaroa Coal
and Railroad Company or bearer.
The bonds, in each instance, were issued in payment of a
subscription in the name of that county to the capital stock of the
corporations to which they were respectively made payable.
The parties, by written stipulation, waived a jury, and the case
was tried by the court.
It was found by the court that an election was held in the
County of Perry on the 3d day of July, 1869, upon the
Page 156 U. S. 694
question of subscription to the capital stock of the Belleville
and Southern Illinois Railroad Company, to be paid by the bonds of
that county; that the notices for the election contained a clause
providing, among other things, that "no bonds should be issued or
stock subscribed
until the railroad company should locate their
machine shops at Duquoin," and that the shops, costing about
$150,000, were located at East St. Louis, and not at Duquoin.
In respect of the bonds issued to the Chester and Tamaroa Coal
and Railroad Company, it was found that the proposition for a
subscription by the county to the capital stock of that
corporation, upon which the people voted February 19, 1870,
"
did not receive a majority of the qualified voters of the
county, 986 votes only being cast in favor of it, while at the
last preceding general election, held in November, 1869, there were
2,024 votes thrown" -- in other words, that the proposition failed,
by 27 votes, to receive a majority of the qualified voters of the
county.
The conclusion of law as to each class of bonds was that, by
reason of the facts so found, they were void for want of power to
issue them.
First. The bonds issued to the Belleville and Southern
Illinois Railroad Company.
The Belleville and Southern Illinois Railroad Company was
incorporated by an act of the General Assembly of Illinois,
approved February 14, 1857, with authority to locate, construct,
and operate a railroad from the City of Belleville, in St. Clair
County, southwardly, by way of the village of Pinckneyville, to
some eligible point on the Illinois Central Railroad in Perry
County. By the ninth section of its charter, the directors of the
company were
"authorized and empowered to take and receive subscriptions to
their said capital stock on such terms and in such amounts as they
may deem for the interest of said company, and as they may
prescribe by their bylaws and regulations, from any other railroad
company or corporation, and from any county,
Page 156 U. S. 695
city, town, or village, and any such subscriptions shall be
valid and binding upon any railroad company, corporation, county,
city, town, or village making the same,
provided said
subscriptions shall be made in every respect subject to the
provisions and restrictions of an act supplemental to an act
entitled 'An act to provide for a general system of railroad
incorporations,' approved November 6, 1849."
It was provided that the road should be completed within eight
years from the passage of the act.
The act of 1849, here referred to, gave cities and counties
authority to purchase or subscribe for shares of the capital stock
of any railroad company then organized or incorporated, or which
might be thereafter organized or incorporated, in any sum not
exceeding $100,000 for each city or county; the stock so subscribed
for or purchased to be under the control of the county court of the
county or the common council of the city making the subscription or
purchase, in all respects as stock owned by individuals. (46} 1.
Authority was given to pay for such stock by borrowing money or
issuing bonds. § 2. Railroad companies then or thereafter
organized or incorporated under the laws of the state were
authorized to receive at par the bonds of any county or city
becoming subscribers to their capital stock. 1 Gross' Ill.Stat.
1873, p. 552-553.
By that act it, was further provided:
"§ 4. No subscription shall be made, or purchase or bond
issued by any county or city under the provisions of this act,
whereby any debt shall be created by said judges of the county
court of any county or by the common council of any city to pay any
such subscription unless a majority of the qualified voters of such
county or city (taking as a standard the number of votes thrown at
the last general election previous to the vote had upon the
question of subscription under this act for county officers) shall
vote for the same, . . . and if a majority of the voters of said
county or city, assuming the standard aforesaid, shall be in favor
of the same, such authorized subscription or purchase, or any part
thereof, shall be then made by said judges or common council. In
case any election had under this act is held upon a day of a
general election, then the number of votes thrown at such
general
Page 156 U. S. 696
election for county officers shall be the standard of the number
of qualified voters as aforesaid. . . ."
1 Gross' Ill.Stat. 1873, p. 552-553.
These bonds were dated January 1, 1871, and made payable, twenty
years after date, to the railroad company or bearer, with interest
at seven percent per annum. Each bond, signed by the county judge
and the county clerk, and attested by the county seal, contained
the following recitals:
"This bond is one of a series of one hundred of like tenor and
date, issued under the authority and in accordance with the
requirements of an act of the Legislature of the State of Illinois
entitled 'An act to incorporate the Belleville and Southern
Illinois Railroad,' approved February 14, 1857, and is redeemable
at the pleasure of said county at any time after the first day of
January A.D. 1876."
Each coupon, signed by the same officers, was in this form:
"The County of Perry, State of Illinois, will pay to the bearer
seventy dollars on the first Monday of January, 1889; being the
interest on bond No. ___ issued to the Belleville and Southern
Illinois Railroad Company."
On the day the bonds were directed by the county court to be
issued, namely, December 5, 1870, the following communication and
certificate under the county seal, and verified by the oath of the
county judge, was sent to the auditor of public accounts of
Illinois:
"Sir: I herewith transmit to you, for registration in your
office under the provisions of the act entitled 'An act to fund and
provide for paying the railroad debts of counties, townships,
cities, and towns, in force April 16th, 1869,' the following bonds,
being one hundred in number, dated January 1st, 1871, amounting to
($100,000) one hundred thousand dollars, payable on the first day
of January, 1891, and bearing interest at the rate of seven
percentum per annum, payable annually. these bonds are issued by
the County Court of the County of Perry and State of Illinois to
the Belleville and Southern Illinois Railroad Company, under and by
authority of the provisions of an act entitled 'An act to
incorporate the Belleville and Southern Illinois Railroad,'
approved February 14, 1857, and I, as judge of the county court of
said county, do hereby
Page 156 U. S. 697
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 entitle them to the benefits of the said act
last referred to, have been fully complied with, to the best of my
knowledge and belief."
Upon each bond was endorsed a certificate by the Auditor of
Public Accounts of the State of Illinois, under his seal of
office,
"that the within bond has been registered in this office this
day, pursuant to the provisions of an act entitled 'An act to fund
and provide for paying the railroad debts of counties, townships,
cities, and towns,' in force April 16th, 1869."
Although these bonds did not upon their face expressly refer to
the Railroad Act of 1849, the recital in them that they were issued
under the authority of and in accordance with the act of 1857,
incorporating the railroad company, imports a compliance with the
provisions of the former act, for the act of 1857 declares that the
subscriptions authorized by it should be made in every respect
subject to the provisions and restrictions of the act of 1849. If,
therefore, the case depended alone on the acts of 1857 and 1849, in
connection with the recitals in the bonds, the conclusion would be
that the County of Perry rightfully subscribed to the stock of the
Belleville and Southern Illinois Railroad Company to the extent of
$100,000 (for which amount the subscription was made and the bonds
issued), and that the county was estopped by the representations
made in the recitals of the bonds, as between it and
bona
fide holders thereof, from relying upon any irregularities in
the exercise of its power to subscribe that did not involve the
substance of the power itself.
But we are not at liberty to look alone to the acts of 1857 and
1849 and the recitals in the bonds. Although the election relating
to the subscription of the stock was held July 3, 1869, the county
court did not make its order for the issue of bonds until after the
section of the Constitution of Illinois of 1870 forbidding
municipal subscriptions to the stock of railroad corporations went
into operation, which, as held in
Schall v. Bowman, 62
Ill. 321;
Louisville v.
Savings
Page 156 U. S. 698
Bank, 104 U. S. 469, and
Concord v. Robinson, 121 U. S. 165,
121 U. S. 169,
was on the second day of July, 1870. That provision was in these
words:
"No county, city, 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 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."
Touching this constitutional provision, we have heretofore held
that since July 2, 1870,
"no municipal corporation of Illinois has possessed authority to
subscribe to the stock of a railroad or private corporation, or to
make donations to or loan its credit to them, except that a
subscription or donation lawfully voted by the people before the
adoption of that section could be completed upon the terms and
conditions approved by the electors. There is no saving of the
right of such corporation to loan their credit to railroad
corporations, where such loan of credit was not embraced in a vote
previously taken under existing laws, and which was favorable to a
subscription of stock or a donation. . . . The Constitution took
away all power to impose upon the township any greater burdens than
the people had by vote lawfully assumed under existing statutes. .
. . They [purchasers of the township bonds] were bound to know that
the power of the township, after July 2, 1870, was restricted by
the Constitution to a completion of such subscription or donation
as had been lawfully voted before that date; if not upon the
precise terms and conditions attached thereto by the vote of the
people, upon such terms as did not increase the burden."
Concord v. Robinson, 121 U. S. 165,
121 U. S.
169.
At the time -- May 26, 1869 -- the county court ordered an
election to ascertain the popular will as to the proposed
subscription, to be paid by bonds of the county, the Act of April
16, 1869, entitled "An act to fund and provide for paying the
railroad debts of counties, townships, cities, and
Page 156 U. S. 699
towns," was in full force. That act was referred to in the
endorsement made on each bond by the auditor of state, as well as
in the official communication of the County Judge of Perry County
transmitting them for registration. It applied to every county,
township, incorporated city, or town that had created a debt in aid
of the construction of railways that were to be completed within
ten years after its passage, as well as those which should create a
debt of the character named under any law of the state. It
contained the following, among other provisions:
"§ 7. And it shall not be lawful to register any bonds
under the provisions of this act, or to receive any of the benefits
or advantages to be derived from this act, until after the railroad
in aid of the construction of which the debt was incurred shall
have been completed near to or in such county, township, city, or
town, and cars shall have run thereon, and none of the benefits,
advantages, or provisions of this act shall apply to any debt
unless the subscription or donation creating such debt was first
submitted to an election of the legal voters of said county,
township, city, or town under the provisions of the laws of this
state, and a majority of the legal voters living in said county,
township, city, or town were in favor of such aid, subscription, or
donation, and any county, township, city, or town shall have the
right, upon making any subscription or donation to any railroad
company, to prescribe the conditions upon which bonds,
subscriptions or donations shall be made, and such bonds,
subscriptions or donations
shall not be valid and binding until
such conditions precedent shall have been complied with. And
the presiding judge of the county court, or the supervisor of the
township, or chief executive officer of the city or town, that
shall have issued bonds to any railway or railways, immediately
upon the completion of the same near to, into, or through such
county, township, city, or town as may have been agreed upon, and
the cars running thereon, shall certify under oath that all the
preliminary conditions in this act required to be done, to
authorize the registration of such bonds and to entitle them to the
benefits of this act, have been complied
Page 156 U. S. 700
with, and shall transmit the same to the state auditor, with a
statement of the date, amount, number, maturity, and rate of
interest of such bonds, and to what company and under what law
issued, and thereupon the said bonds shall be subject to
registration by the state auditor, as hereinbefore provided."
Pub.Laws Ill. 1869, pp. 317, 319.
Now it is found as a fact that the people voted for the
subscription on the condition, specified in the election notices,
that no subscription should be made nor bonds issued until the
company's machine shops were located at Duquoin. The act of 1869
not only authorized the electors to prescribe such a condition, but
declared that no bonds, subscriptions, or donations that were voted
on prescribed conditions shall have been "valid and binding until
such conditions precedent should have been complied with." That the
location of the company's machine shops at Duquoin was a condition
precedent to the making of a subscription or the issuing of bonds
in payment thereof, is placed beyond question, not only by the
special finding of facts, but by the orders of the county court,
which were made part of the record for the purpose of presenting
the exceptions taken to those orders as evidence in the case.
The order of the county court, made May 24, 1869, submitting to
popular vote at an election to be held July 3, 1869, the question
of subscription, provided:
"And be it further ordered that no bonds be issued or stock be
subscribed by said court to the Belleville and Southern Illinois
Railroad Company unless twelve hundred and thirty legal voters of
said county shall have voted in favor of the same at said election,
nor until said company shall have built said road, and put the same
in operation from Belleville to Duquoin, through the Town of
Pinckneyville, with depot and depot buildings at said town, nor
unless said road shall be in operation from Belleville to Duquoin
on or before the first day of January, A.D. 1871,
and shall
locate their machine shops at said Duquoin. And be it further
ordered that said bonds shall be in the sums of not less than one
hundred nor more than one thousand dollars, payable at any time
within twenty years from their date at the option of the said
county
Page 156 U. S. 701
court, bearing interest at the rate of 7 percent per annum, and
issued under the provisions of the act of the Legislature of
Illinois of November 6, 1849,
and Act of April 16, A.D.
1869, entitled 'An act to fund and provide for the paying of
the railroad debts of counties, townships, cities, and
towns.�"
Looking, then at the Act of April 16, 1869, and the Constitution
of Illinois, there is no escape from the conclusion that the
condition precedent, imposed by popular vote, that no bonds should
be issued until or unless the company located its machine shops at
Duquoin was in full force when the election was ordered and held,
as well as when the constitutional limitation upon municipal
subscriptions was prescribed, and that both the county court, by
its order of December 5, 1870, directing the issue and delivery of
the bonds, and the county officers who executed them, violated
their duty as prescribed by the statute.
But it is urged that, the bonds having been executed and issued
by those whose duty it was to execute and issue them whenever that
could be rightfully done, the county is estopped to plead their
invalidity, as between it and a
bona fide purchaser for
value. This argument would have force if the material circumstances
bringing the bonds within the authority given by law were recited
in them. In such a case, according to the settled doctrines of this
Court, the county would be estopped to deny the truth of the
recital, as against
bona fide holders for value. But this
Court, in
Buchanan v. Litchfield, 102 U.
S. 278,
102 U. S. 292,
upon full consideration, held that the mere fact that the bonds
were issued, without any recital of the circumstances bringing them
within the power granted, was not in itself conclusive proof, in
favor of a
bona fide holder, that the circumstances
existed which authorized them to be issued.
In the bonds here in question there are no recitals precluding
inquiry as to the performance of the conditions upon which the
people, after the passage of the Act of April 16, 1869, voted in
favor of a subscription to be paid by bonds of the county. Those
recitals only imply that the bonds were issued under the authority
and in accordance with the acts of
Page 156 U. S. 702
1857 and 1849. Those who took them must be held to have known
that the constitution of 1870 withdrew from municipal corporations
authority to subscribe to the stock of, or to lend their credit to,
railroad corporations except for the purpose of
completing
subscriptions authorized under previous laws by a vote of the
people. And they must also be held to have known that, by the act
of 1869, no subscription voted on conditions precedent could be
rightfully made nor bonds rightfully issued until such conditions
were performed. If, notwithstanding the express declaration in the
act of 1869 as to the invalidity of bonds issued without the
performance of conditions precedent imposed by popular vote, the
county court, prior to the constitution of 1870, without the
sanction of a popular vote, could have waived the condition as to
the location of the machine shops at Duquoin, there is no evidence,
on its records or otherwise, that it did so. And it is clear that
they could not, after the second of July, 1870, materially change
the conditions imposed by the electors. It is equally clear that
the recitals by the county officers in the bonds themselves do not
import any such change nor a compliance with the provisions of the
act of 1869 in respect to the performance of the conditions
voted.
The plaintiff in error is mistaken when it insists that its
position as to the conclusive effect of the recitals in the bonds
is sustained by the decision in
Insurance Co. v. Bruce,
105 U. S. 328. The
bonds there in suit recited that they were issued by virtue of the
charter, approved April 15, 1869, of the particular company to
which they were delivered,
as well as by virtue of the Act of
April 16, 1869. The Court held that the latter act did not
make it obligatory to impose conditions upon the issuing of bonds,
but only gave the
right to prescribe conditions; that the
recitals fairly imported that nothing remained to be done in order
to make the bonds binding obligations upon the town, in the hands
of
bona fide purchasers. "Under these circumstances," the
Court said,
"the town, by every principle of justice, is estopped, as
against a
bona fide holder, to plead conditions the
existence of which were withheld from the public either to
facilitate the negotiation
Page 156 U. S. 703
of the bonds in the markets of the county, or because it had
full confidence that the railroad company would meet the prescribed
conditions. It should not now be heard to make a defense
inconsistent with the recitals upon its bonds, or upon the ground
that the conditions imposed, of which the purchasers had no notice,
have not been performed."
The fact that the bonds in suit in
Insurance Co. v.
Bruce recited that they were issued in virtue of the Act of
April 16, 1869 -- implying thereby that they were issued
conformably in all respects to the provisions of that act -- was
alluded to by this Court in
German Bank v. Franklin
County, 128 U. S. 526,
128 U. S. 542,
where one of the questions was whether a county in Illinois,
issuing bonds which upon their face made no reference whatever to
the Act of April 16, 1869, was estopped to show that they were
issued in disregard of certain conditions precedent imposed by
popular vote. The Court, referring to the grounds of the decision
in
Insurance Co. v. Bruce, said:
"The view taken was that as the Town of Bruce had power, under
the seventh section of the Act of April 16, 1869, to make an
unconditional subscription, and to issue and deliver its bonds in
advance of the construction of the road, and
as the bonds
recited that they were issued by virtue of the Act of April 16,
1869, it was too late to claim that they had been issued in
violation of the special conditions. In the case now before us, as
before said, there is no reference in the bonds to the Act of April
16, 1869, and no statement in the bonds that they were issued by
virtue of that act."
And what was said in
German Bank v. Franklin County in
relation to the registration of the bonds is applicable to the
present case:
"The registration of the bonds by the state auditor has nothing
to do with any of the terms or conditions on which the stock was
voted or subscribed. Neither the registration nor the certificate
of registry covers or certifies any fact as to compliance with the
conditions prescribed in the vote on which alone the bonds were to
be issued. The recital in the bonds does not contain any reference
to the Act of April 16, 1869, or certify any compliance with the
provisions of that act, and the certificate of registry
Page 156 U. S. 704
merely certifies that the bond has been registered in the
auditor's office pursuant to the provisions of the Act of April 16,
1869. The statute does not require that the auditor shall determine
or certify that the bonds have been regularly or legally
issued."
In
Cairo v. Zane, 149 U. S. 122,
149 U. S.
141-142, this Court, while holding, upon the authority
of
German Bank v. Franklin County, that the certificate of
registry was not conclusive that the bonds were issued in full
compliance with the terms and conditions of a subscription of
stock, adjudged that the certificate of registry in the office of
the state auditor could be relied upon as showing that what the
City of Cairo did, in that case, amounted to a subscription of
stock, which the statute gave it a right to make, rather than to a
donation, which it could not legally make. It is to be observed
also that the bonds there in suit recited that they were issued
pursuant as well to an ordinance of the City Council of Cairo as to
a vote of the citizens of that city, and in accordance with the
laws of the state. The recital that they were issued in accordance
with the laws of the state brought that case within the rule
announced in
Insurance Co. v. Bruce, rather than within
that announced in
German Bank v. Franklin County.
We cannot assume that the location of the company's machine
shops at Duquoin was deemed by the voters to be a matter of no
consequence. It may well be that the election turned upon the
question of the location of those shops in the county at a named
place.
It results from what has been said that, as the recitals in the
bonds issued to the Belleville and Southern Illinois Railroad
Company neither expressly nor by necessary implication imported a
compliance with the condition precedent imposed by popular vote in
reference to the location of the company's shops at Duquoin, it was
open to the county to show that that condition was not performed
when the bonds were issued by order of the county court, and had
never been performed. That being shown, the case is not brought
within the reservation or saving made by the state constitution in
favor of subscriptions authorized by popular vote prior to July 2,
1870.
Page 156 U. S. 705
In this view, the judgment, holding the bonds issued to the
Belleville and Southern Illinois Railroad Company to be invalid,
was right.
Second. The bonds issued to the Chester and Tamaroa Coal and
Railroad Company.
The Chester and Tamaroa Coal and Railroad Company was
incorporated by an Act approved March 4, 1869, with authority to
construct, complete, and operate a railroad from Chester, in
Randolph County, Illinois, easterly, on the most eligible route, by
the way of Pinckneyville, to Tamaroa, in Perry County.
The history of the bonds issued to this company is fully
disclosed in the orders of the County Court of Perry County.
On the 18th day of January, 1870, that body, at a special term
on that day begun, ordered an election to be held at the usual
places of voting in the several precincts of the County of Perry,
on he 19th day of February, A.D. 1870, by the judges of election
appointed at the September term, 1869, of the court, to ascertain
if the county court would subscribe one hundred thousand dollars to
the capital stock of the Chester and Tamaroa Coal and Railroad
Company. The order provided that no stock be subscribed
"unless nine hundred and eighty-four (984) legal voters of said
county shall have voted for the same at said election, . . . that
the subscription should be paid in county bonds, in sums of not
less than one hundred dollars nor more than one thousand dollars
each, payable at any time within twenty years from date at the
option of the county court, bearing interest at the rate of seven
percent per annum, . . . said bonds to be registered and paid as
provided in an 'Act entitled an act to fund and provide for paying
railroad debts of counties, townships, cities, and towns,' in force
April 16, 1869; but no bonds shall be registered or paid except in
the following manner and upon the following conditions, to-wit,
$50,000 of said bonds shall be issued to said railroad and coal
company when they shall have completed said road and cars for
passengers and freight, shall have run thereon to Pinckneyille, in
said Perry County, and depot and depot buildings shall have been
established or built within the corporate limits of said Town of
Pinckneyville, provided the work on
Page 156 U. S. 706
said road shall commence at Tamaroa, and depot and depot
buildings shall have been established or built within the corporate
limits of said Town of Tamaroa, and be it further ordered that the
residue, $50,000, shall be issued when said road shall be completed
through the county, and thence to the terminus of said road, and
cars shall have been run thereon, and all necessary depot and depot
buildings have been established or built as above required and
specified. The ballots in favor of subscribing the stock shall
contain the words 'For subscription' and those against the
subscription, 'Against subscription.'"
At the regular term of the county court held March 8, 1870, an
order was made which referred to the previous one for an election,
and proceeded:
"And whereas, in pursuance of said order and published notices
thereof, as required by law, said election was held in said county
on the 19th day of February, A.D. 1870, and whereas it appears from
the returns of said election, on file in the county clerk's office
of said county, and the certificate of the board of canvassers,
that a
majority of the legal voters of said County of
Perry (assuming the standard
required by law and the said
order of the court, taking as a basis the number of votes cast at
the last general election for county officers) having voted in
favor of subscribing said stock, now therefore it is ordered by the
court, in pursuance of said order of court and the election held
thereunder, and the statutes in such case made and provided, that
the County of Perry, in the State of Illinois, do subscribe one
hundred thousand dollars to the capital stock of the Chester and
Tamaroa Coal and Railroad Company, to be paid in bonds issued in
accordance with said order of court under which said election was
held, and to be registered and paid as provided by an Act of the
General Assembly of the State of Illinois in force April 16, 1869,
entitled 'An act to fund and provide for paying the railroad debts
of counties, townships, cities, and towns,' and it is further
ordered by said court that the judges of this Court subscribe said
stock on the books of said company, and that the same be attested
by the clerk of this Court, under the seal of this Court."
On the 8th of June, 1870, the county court, in regular term,
made an order showing the delivery to it on that day of a
Page 156 U. S. 707
certificate of stock issued by the Chester and Tamaroa Coal and
Railroad Company, which certificate was ordered to be recorded and
filed; that the county had subscribed and was entitled to the
benefits of one thousand shares of $100 each, of the capital stock
of the company,
"to be paid in Perry County bonds, as provided by the terms of
subscription made by the county court on the books of the company,
and the election held on the 19th day of February, 1870,
authorizing said court to make said subscription, and transferable
on conditions as provided in the bylaws."
At a special term of the county court, held November 10, 1871,
the county court made an order reciting all previous orders, and
stating that the company had completed their railroad from Tamaroa
to Pinckneyville, had run cars for freight and passengers thereon,
had built depot buildings in Tamaroa and Pinckneyville, and had
complied with and fulfilled
all the conditions of the order of
the court made at its January special term, 1870, to entitle it to
have and receive from the County of Perry the first issue of said
bonds. That order concluded as follows:
"Now therefore be it ordered by the court that Charles E. R.
Winthrop, judge of the county court, and J. Carroll Harriss, clerk
of said court, sign and deliver to said company, or their
authorized agent or attorney, fifty bonds of said county, for the
sum of one thousand dollars each; that the said bonds be of date of
the first day of July, 1871, and draw interest from their date,
payable semiannually at the American Exchange National Bank, in the
City of New York, and that all coupons on said bonds maturing on
and previous to the said first day of July, 1871, be cut off by the
said Charles E. R. Winthrop, judge, and J. Carroll Harriss, clerk,
of said court, before delivering the same to said company, and that
the said judge of the county court be authorized to certify
under oath that all the conditions of the order made on the
18th day of January, 1870, above recited, have been complied with
by the said Chester and Tamaroa Coal and Railroad Company, and
that said bonds be registered and paid in pursuance of an act of
the General Assembly of the State of Illinois
Page 156 U. S. 708
entitled 'An act to fund and provide for paying the railroad
debts of counties, townships, cities, and towns.�"
On the 15th of November, 1871, a certificate similar in form to
the one issued December 5, 1870, in reference to the bonds to the
Belleville and Southern Illinois Railroad Company, and verified by
the oath of the county judge and under the county seal, was sent by
that officer to the auditor of public accounts of Illinois. And on
the 6th day of December, 1871, a like certificate was made by the
county judge in respect to fifty other bonds issued by the county
to the Chester and Tamaroa Coal and Railroad Company.
The bonds issued to the last-named company were similar, in
their general form, to those issued to the Belleville and Southern
Illinois Railroad Company; each one being signed by the county
judge and the county clerk, under the county seal, and containing
the following recitals:
"This bond is one of a series of bonds issued by the County of
Perry in payment of one hundred thousand dollars of the capital
stock of the Chester and Tamaroa Coal and Railroad Company, in
pursuance of an election held by the legal voters of Perry County,
Illinois, on the 19th day of February, 1870, and by virtue of the
provisions of an act of the General Assembly of the State of
Illinois entitled 'An act to provide for a general system of
railroad incorporation,' approved November 6, 1849. And for the
payment of said sum of money, and accruing interest thereon, and in
the manner aforesaid, the faith of the County of Perry, State of
Illinois, is hereby irrevocably pledged, as also its property,
revenue, and resources."
Each coupon signed by the county judge and county clerk was in
this form:
"The County of Perry will pay to bearer on the first day of
July, 1888 at the American Exchange Bank, in the City of New York,
thirty-five dollars, it being six moths' interest on bond No. 52,
for $1,000."
Upon each bond was endorsed a certificate by the auditor of
public accounts to the effect
"that the within bond has been registered in this office this
day pursuant to the provisions of an act entitled 'An act to fund
and provide for paying the railroad debts of counties, townships,
cities, and towns,� in force April 16th, 1869. "
Page 156 U. S. 709
We have seen that the only ground upon which the court below
held these bonds to be not binding obligations of the county was
that the proposition to subscribe $100,000 to the capital stock of
the company received only 986 votes in its favor, whereas at the
last general election in the county, 2,024 votes were cast. The
court, we infer, had in mind the provision of the Act of November
6, 1849, under the authority of which the bonds purport upon their
face to have been issued.
If we looked alone to the act of 1849 as authority for issuing
these bonds, there would be ground for holding that the provision
of the Constitution of 1870 relating to municipal subscriptions and
bonds would be an insuperable obstacle in the way of any recovery
on the coupons of bonds issued to this company, for the act of
1849, in express words, forbade the making of subscriptions or the
issuing of bonds except upon a vote of a majority of qualified
voters, taking as a standard the vote cast at the next preceding
general election for county officers. What number of votes would
meet that requirement could be determined by reference to the
official record of the election. All who took bonds issued under
the act of 1849 were bound to take notice of what that record
disclosed. The Constitution intended that that record, being
accessible to all, should speak for itself. The number of votes at
the last preceding general election was not dependent upon any
calculation or investigation or weighing of facts by officers
charged with the duty of issuing bonds under that act. If,
therefore, the case depended upon the act of 1849, the judgment of
the court below would be sustained on the authority of
Northern
Bank v. Porter Township, 110 U. S. 608,
110 U. S. 616,
in which it was said:
"The adjudged cases, examined in the light of their special
circumstances, show that the facts which a municipal corporation
issuing bonds in aid of the construction of a railroad was not
permitted, against a
bona fide holder, to question, in
face of a recital in the bonds of their existence, were those
connected with or growing out of the discharge of the ordinary
duties of such of its officers as were invested with authority to
execute them, and which the statute conferring the power made it
their duty to ascertain and determine before the bonds were
Page 156 U. S. 710
issued not merely for themselves, as the ground of their own
action in issuing the bonds, but equally as authentic and final
evidence of their existence, for the information and action of all
others dealing with them in reference to it."
In the same case it was said that although, the power existing,
a municipality may be estopped by recitals to prove irregularities
in its exercise, and when the law prescribes conditions upon the
exercise of the power granted, and commits to the officers of such
municipalities the determination of the question whether those
conditions have been performed, the corporation will also be
estopped by recitals importing such performance, nevertheless "the
question of legislative authority in a corporation to issue bonds
in aid of a railroad company cannot be concluded by mere
recitals."
But we are of opinion that the court below erred in holding, as
in effect it did, that there could be no valid subscription to the
stock of the Chester and Tamaroa Railroad Company except upon a
vote of the majority of the qualified voters of the county, taking
as the standard the number of votes cast at the last preceding
general election for county officers. The plea of the county did
not proceed distinctly on that ground. It only alleged that the
bonds issued to this company were not authorized "by a majority
vote of the electors of said county,
as required by law."
The orders of the county court, under which the election of
February 19, 1870, was held, show that the election was ordered and
held
with reference to the Act of April 16, 1869, and that
the purpose of the county was to take the benefits and advantages
of that act, one of the provisions of which, as we have seen, was
that its benefits, advantages, or provisions shall not apply to any
debt created unless the subscription or donation by which it was
created was first submitted to the qualified voters of the
municipality under the provisions of the laws of the state, and "a
majority of the legal voters living in said county, township, city,
or town were in favor of such aid, subscription, or donation." The
order of the county court for the election provided that no
subscription of stock should be made "unless nine hundred and
eighty-four legal voters of
Page 156 U. S. 711
said county shall have voted for the same at said election." Two
more than that number of votes were cast in favor of the
subscription, and only ninety-one against it. There is no finding
to the effect that nine hundred and eighty-four votes was not a
majority of legal voters
living in the county at the time
of the election.
We have seen that the county court at its special term in
November, 1871, not only certified upon its record that all the
conditions prescribed by its order at the January term, 1870, had
been complied with by the railroad company, but authorized the
county judge to make a similar certificate under oath. It even
certified upon its records that the subscription had been voted for
by a majority of the qualified voters,
taking as the standard
the vote cast at the preceding general election for county
officers. The number of such voters who at the time of
election lived in the county was a fact
dehors any
official record of votes, and was to be ascertained by the county
court or county judge upon examination. It did not depend wholly
upon an official record speaking as of the date of the election.
Under any reasonable interpretation of the act, the county court
was invested with authority to determine whether the majority of
voters living in the county voted in favor of the subscription
proposed. If the purchaser had examined the orders of the county
court, he would have ascertained that those orders several times
expressly stated that all the conditions prescribed by the county,
and upon which the people voted, had been fully complied with. It
would be rank injustice to permit the county, after the lapse of so
many years, to say that a majority of the voters
living in the
county at the time of election -- a matter not determinable by
any public record -- did not vote for the subscription. What may be
the fact upon this point it is perhaps impossible now to determine.
Indeed, as we have said, the court below did not find that those
who voted for the subscription were not a majority of all the
voters living in the county at the time of the election. It only
found that the subscription failed, by twenty-seven votes, to
secure in its favor a majority of the qualified voters, taking as a
standard the votes cast at
Page 156 U. S. 712
the next preceding general election for county officers. But as
has already been shown, that was not the true test.
This construction of the act of 1869 is in harmony with the
decision of the Supreme Court of Illinois in
Town of Prairie
&c. v. Lloyd, 97 Ill. 179, 197-198, one of the question in
which case was whether certain municipal bonds were entitled to be
registered under the act of 1869. Mr. Justice Mulkey, speaking for
the court, said:
"Before railroad aid bonds can be properly registered under the
above act, it must appear that they were issued in pursuance of a
vote of a majority of the voters living in the municipality issuing
them. When once registered, the presumption is they were rightfully
registered, and the burden of establishing the contrary rests upon
the party affirming it. It is well settled by the decisions of this
Court, where a majority of those voting at an election of the kind
vote in favor of subscription or donation, as the case may be, for
the purposes of registration, it will be presumed that such
majority so voting is a majority of all the legal voters living in
the municipality at the time of the election, and where in such
case the authorities, acting upon such presumption, have admitted
the bonds to registration, and the municipality issuing them has,
as in this case, treated them as properly registered by paying
previous taxes levied by the auditor for the liquidation of
accruing interest, and the bonds thus registered have passed into
the hands of innocent holders, nothing but the clearest and most
satisfactory proof will authorize a court of equity to enjoin the
collection of a tax levied by the auditor on account of such bonds
on the alleged ground that the majority voting for such
subscription or donation was not a majority of the legal
voters."
In the case now before us, it appears that the county paid
interest on the bonds in suit for about seventeen years, and there
is no proof whatever that the votes cast for subscription, payable
in bonds, did not represent a majority of all qualified voters
living at the time in the county.
The case is within numerous decisions of this Court sustaining
the validity of bonds issued by municipal corporations.
Town of
Coloma v. Eaves, 92 U. S. 484;
Buchanan v.
Litchfield,
Page 156 U. S. 713
102 U. S. 278;
Dixon County v. Field, 111 U. S. 83,
111 U. S. 92-93;
Cairo v. Zane, 149 U. S. 122.
We are of opinion that the court below erred in holding that the
bonds issued to the Chester and Tamaroa Coal and Railroad Company
were not binding upon the County of Perry, and in not giving
judgment against the county for the amount of the coupons of such
bonds in suit.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a
judgment, upon the facts found, in conformity with this
opinion.