Under the Act of March 8, 1895, of the Legislature of the
Territory of Arizona, relating to convict labor and the leasing of
the same, the board of control thereby created and given charge of
all charitable, penal and reformatory institutions then existing,
or which might thereafter be created in the territory, could not
dispense with the bond required by the statute to be given by the
person or persons leasing the labor of the convicts for the
faithful performance of their contract, and no contract made by the
board leasing the labor of the convicts could become binding upon
the territory until a bond, such as the statute required, was
executed by the lessee and approved by the board.
In this case, as it appears that no such bond was executed, the
plaintiff was not in a position to ask relief by mandamus.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
By an Act of the Legislative Assembly of the Territory of
Arizona approved March 8, 1895, the governor and auditor of the
territory, together with one citizen to be appointed by the
governor with the advice and consent of the council, were
constituted a board of control, and given charge of all charitable,
penal, and reformatory institutions then existing or which might
thereafter be created in the territory.
It was provided by the ninth section of the act that the
Page 173 U. S. 339
board of control, after qualifying and entering upon their
duties, should have full control over the territorial insane
asylum, the territorial reform school, and territorial prison,
together with all property, buildings, and lands belonging thereto
or that should thereafter be acquired. That section further
provided:
"Sixty days after the passage of this act, they shall have the
power and authority to enter into an agreement or agreements with a
responsible person or persons to lease on shares or for cash the
property, buildings and lands or any part thereof now belonging to
the territory, wherever said buildings and lands may be located, or
that may hereafter be acquired for the purpose of furnishing
employment for the inmates of the said territorial prison and the
said territorial reform school. The said board shall have the
authority to contract with a responsible person or persons to
furnish the labor of the inmates now within the said reform school
or said prison, or that may hereafter be confined therein, or any
number of them, for the best interests of the territory; provided,
however, that at no time shall the labor of the inmates of the said
territorial prison or territorial reform school be leased to any
person or persons when the labor of the inmates of said institution
is required upon any buildings or properties of the aforesaid
institutions, and no lease or contract shall be made that will
obligate the territory to furnish tools, machinery or money, or
make other expenditure other than the labor of the inmates,
properly clothed and fed, and the proper guards for same, together
with the use of the property, buildings and lands heretofore
mentioned; provided, that no contract or lease shall be made to
extend for a term of more than ten years from the time of making
said lease or contract. And the said board may contract to allow
such labor to be performed at any place either inside or outside
the prison walls or the confines of the reform school, but if a
contract be made to allow labor to be performed outside of the
prison walls or confines of the reform school, it must be done
under proper restrictions, having regard for the safety of the
prisoners or inmates. A good and sufficient bond must be given by
the person or persons leasing the labor of inmates of the
Page 173 U. S. 340
aforesaid institutions for the faithful performance of such
contract, said bond to be approved by the board of control."
Laws of Arizona 1895, pp. 20, 22.
This statute being in force, a written agreement was made
December 2, 1896, between "the Territory of Arizona, by L. C.
Hughes, Governor, C. P. Leitch, Auditor, and M. H. McCord,
constituting the board of control of the Territory of Arizona," of
the first part, and the Arizona Improvement Company, of the second
part. That agreement contained, among other provisions, the
following:
"The party of the second part having submitted its good and
sufficient bond for the faithful performance of this contract,
which said bond has been approved by the said board of control, and
each of its members, and is herewith delivered and accepted, the
said party of the first part, for and in consideration of the
covenants and agreements hereinafter mentioned, reserved, and
contained on their part, and on behalf of the said party of the
second part to be done and kept and performed, hath granted,
bargained, demised, leased, and to farm letten to said party of the
second part, its successors and assigns, all that certain real
estate; . . . also all the labor of the male convicts now in the
territorial penitentiary, or who may hereafter be confined therein,
to have and to hold the labor of said penitentiary convicts unto
said party of the second part, and to its assigns, for the term of
ten years from the date of these presents, and the lands and
premises above described for and during and until the end of the
full term of ten years to be fully completed and ended, and it is
further stipulated and agreed by and between the parties hereto
that in the event of the removal of the territorial prison from
Yuma County, Territory of Arizona, to any other portion of the
territory, such removal will in no way, manner, shape, or form
interfere with the conditions, stipulations, and covenants of this
contract and lease."
"It is further understood, stipulated, and agreed by and between
the parties hereto that the party of the second part is to have the
exclusive control of the labor of the convicts in the territorial
prison from 8 o'clock a.m. to 5 o'clock p.m.,
Page 173 U. S. 341
during the said term of ten years from the date of these
presents, Sundays and legal holidays excepted."
"It is further agreed by and between the parties hereto that the
party of the first part, or its agent or agents, will furnish the
said convict labor to the party of the second part at the place or
places designated by the said party of the second part, or its
agents, in Yuma County, Arizona Territory, properly guarded,
clothed, fed, and ready to commence work at the hours and terms
heretofore mentioned, and the party of the first part shall
properly guard said convicts during the hours of labor. The party
of the second part is to furnish all the tools and machinery
necessary for the use of the convicts while at work under the
conditions of this contract and lease, but the said party of the
first part shall not be compelled to take outside of the prison,
under guard, parties of less than five convicts. . . ."
"The superintendent of the prison or agent of the territory
having the convicts in charge shall be required to furnish the
convicts in such numbers as may be required from time to time up to
the amount of all the able-bodied male convicts; to deliver them at
such points or places in Yuma County as may be demanded of him, by
the party of the second part, its agent or agents. The party of the
second part further agrees to keep a current and accurate account
of the number of days worked by convicts, and on the first Monday
of each calendar month to make a statement of the total number of
days done the previous month by all the convicts employed by the
said party of the second part, and shall furnish a copy of the said
statement to the superintendent of the territorial prison, properly
verified by an agent of the company."
"The said party of the second part agrees to compensate the
party of the first part for such convict labor, as follows, to-wit:
the value of each convict's labor shall be placed at 70 cents per
day, and as soon as the party of the first part has furnished
convict labor at the rate of 70 cents per day, aggregating the sum
of sixteen hundred dollars, the party of the second part shall
issue its perpetual water right deed for eighty
Page 173 U. S. 342
acres of land, of the water in its canal, when such canal is
completed. . . ."
"It is further covenanted and agreed by and between the parties
hereto that after the water rights hereinbefore provided for are
earned by said party of the first part, then, as soon as the labor
of convicts at the rate of 70 cents per day for each day's labor
amounts to sixteen hundred dollars, the party of the second part
shall issue water right certificates for one eighty-acre water
right. . . ."
"It is further stipulated by and between the parties hereto, in
consideration of the covenants herein contained, that the said
party of the second part is to use such of said convicts' labor
_____ this contract and lease as it may from time to time require,
and such party of the second part need not commence to use any of
said labor sooner than five months from the date hereof."
"It is further stipulated and agreed by and between the parties
hereto, in consideration of the covenants herein contained, to be
performed by each of the parties hereto, and in consideration of
the convict labor herein mentioned, that the lease of the lands
herein described shall commence on and from the day when the water
shall be conducted in the canal of the party of the second part to
lands, convenient for the said water to be conducted upon the said
lands hereinbefore described, and shall terminate ten years
thereafter, and that the party of the second part shall pay to the
party of the first part, as rent therefor, an annual sum, to be
hereafter determined upon in cash, or at the option of the party of
the second part, one-half of the net products of the said lands:
provided, however, that the said lease shall commence to run within
four years from date."
"It is further agreed, covenanted, and declared that these
presents are made, executed, and delivered for the best interest of
the Territory of Arizona, and for the purpose of furnishing
employment for the inmates of the said territorial prison, the
labor of said inmates being not required upon any buildings or
properties of any institution of said territory."
On the 22d day of April, 1896, it was agreed in writing
Page 173 U. S. 343
between the parties, as follows:
"The time for commencing work under this contract is hereby
extended to the 10th day of June, 1896, and it is fully understood
and agreed by the parties hereto that this extension is in no way
to affect the legal status of said contract. It is understood and
agreed that the rights of the parties thereto are to remain
in
statu quo, and the extension herein made is not intended to
ratify, alter, or impair said contract, or to give it any validity
whatsoever that it does not before the signing of this instrument
possess."
Later, a supplemental agreement in writing was made between the
same parties, but, in the view which the Court takes of this case,
it need not be set out in this opinion.
On the 26th day of May, 1896, the Arizona Improvement Company
filed its complaint in the District Court of the Third Judicial
District of the territory in and for the County of Yuma, in which
reference was made to the above agreements with the board of
control, and in which it was alleged that it was a corporation
organized under the laws of the territory; that M. J. Nugent, a
resident of Yuma County, was the superintendent of the territorial
prison at Yuma, and, as such, had full control of the prisoners
confined in that prison, subject only to the direction of the board
of control of the territory; that, on the 25th day of May, 1896,
the plaintiff company demanded in writing of said Nugent,
superintendent aforesaid, that, in pursuance of the contract
between it and said board of control, he furnish to plaintiff, on
the second day of June, 1896 at 8 a.m., ten able-bodied male
convicts out of the territorial prison at Yuma, properly guarded,
on the outside of the gate of the territorial prison; that, on the
next day, Nugent served a written notice on the plaintiff, whereby
he peremptorily declined to furnish the convict labor at such time
and place, or at any time and place, and that the plaintiff had not
a plain, speedy, or adequate remedy in the ordinary course of
law.
The complaint was supported by the affidavit of the president of
the plaintiff company.
The relief asked was that a writ of mandamus issue, directed
Page 173 U. S. 344
to Nugent, superintendent of the territorial prison, directing
and commanding him to furnish to the plaintiff ten able-bodied male
convicts out of the territorial prison at Yuma, on the second day
of June, 1896, on the outside of the prison gate at Yuma, properly
guarded, and that plaintiff have such other and further relief as
to the court seemed meet and just.
An alternative writ of mandamus was issued, and Nugent, as
superintendent of the prison, excepted to the sufficiency of the
complaint, and demurred thereto upon these grounds: (1) that the
complaint did not state facts sufficient to authorize a writ of
mandamus; (2) that the plaintiff sought to compel the performance
of an act by the respondent as superintendent of the territorial
prison which the law did not specially enjoin upon him as a duty
resulting from his office; (3) that the petition sought to compel
the performance of a contract made by others, and not by
respondent; (4) that the alleged contract was void because
authorized only by a pretended law, which was void.
Nugent also filed an answer alleging, among other things, that
there was a want of proper parties defendant; that the territory
had no power to hire out the convicts confined in the territorial
prison who had not been sentenced to punishment with hard labor,
nor to authorize the convicts to be taken out and away from the
territorial prison, where punishment and sentence were by
confinement in such prison; that the board of control had no power
to make the contract sought to be enforced; that the contract was
itself without consideration, and in violation of the Act of March
8, 1895, in that it was for a period of over ten years; that the
contract took the entire convict labor for the period just named in
violation of the provisions of the act providing that said labor
should not be leased out when it was needed to work on the
buildings and premises of the territory, and that the contract was
against public policy, in authorizing all the prisoners to be taken
from the prison, and to remain away from it in many cases for the
entire period of their sentence.
The answer also averred
"that as the duly appointed, qualified, and acting
superintendent of the territorial prison at
Page 173 U. S. 345
Yuma, Arizona, previous to the service of the alternative writ
herein, this defendant was advised and informed by the Honorable
B.J. Franklin, as Governor of the Territory of Arizona, that the
said pretended contract mentioned in the application herein was and
is of no valid force and effect, and further advised and informed,
in substance and to the effect, that said contract was not of any
legal force or binding effect upon said territory or said board of
control, and, among other things, concerning the same, the said
Honorable B.J. Franklin, acting as such governor, authorized and
directed this defendant in substance and to the effect that in the
event that the said Arizona Improvement Company should, by its
officers or agents, make a demand upon this defendant to do or
perform anything under the provisions of said contract, and
especially if such demand should be made for the delivery of any
prisoners confined in or inmates of said penitentiary to the said
company, its officers or agents at the gate of said prison or
elsewhere, that this defendant, acting as such superintendent,
should politely but firmly refuse such request or any request made
or to be made under the provisions of said pretended contract; that
acting under the advice and information given by the Honorable B.
J. Franklin, Governor of this territory, and of the direction of
the head of the executive department of this territory, this
defendant alleges that he made the refusal complained of in the
application herein, and not otherwise. . . . Respondent further
avers and gives the court to know that the Arizona Improvement
Company has not, before the institution of these proceedings,
executed and filed a good and sufficient bond enforceable in a
court of law in any of the courts of this territory for the
faithful performance of said contract, as required by said
pretended board of control act."
The case was heard in the district court, on the complaint and
the demurrer and answer. The demurrer of the defendant was
overruled, and the contracts set forth in the complaint were the
only evidence adduced at the trial. The defendant having declined
to amend the pleadings or to offer further evidence, and having
elected to stand upon the pleadings, the
Page 173 U. S. 346
court found for the plaintiff, and ordered a peremptory writ of
mandamus to issue.
A new trial having been refused, the case was carried to the
supreme court of the territory, where the judgment of the district
court was affirmed.
We are of opinion that the supreme court of the territory erred
in affirming the judgment of the district court awarding a writ of
mandamus against the defendant Nugent.
The statute under the authority of which the board of control
made the contracts referred to in the complaint expressly required
a good and sufficient bond to be given by the person or persons
leasing the labor of inmates of the territorial prison for the
faithful performance of such contract, which bond was to be
approved by the board. The complaint asking for a mandamus against
the superintendent of the prison did not distinctly allege the
execution of such bond. But the answer of Nugent alleged that the
defendant in error had not, prior to the institution of these
proceedings, executed and filed a good and sufficient bond
enforceable in a court of law in any court of the territory for the
faithful performance of its contract, as required by the Act of
March 8, 1895. That act, it is true, did not in terms require the
execution and delivery of a bond prior to or contemporaneously with
the making of a contract with the board of control. But it is clear
that the board could not dispense with the bond, and that no
contract made by them leasing the labor of the convicts could
become binding upon the territory until a bond such as the statute
requires was executed by the lessee and approved by the board. The
recital in the agreement of December 2, 1896, that the lessee had
submitted and that the board had approved a good and sufficient
bond for the faithful performance of that agreement may have been
made in the expectation that such a bond would be executed before
the agreement became effective as between the parties. But as the
case was heard upon the pleadings, without any evidence except the
written agreements between the board of control and the improvement
company, the mere recital referred to cannot be taken as sufficient
to disprove the averment in the answer as to the nonexecution
Page 173 U. S. 347
of the required bond. If the plaintiff was entitled to the
relief asked by a proceeding against the superintendent without
bringing the members of the board of control before the court, it
should have shown by allegation and proof that the required bond
had been executed. If no bond was executed as required by the
statute, the plaintiff was not in a position to ask relief by
mandamus. The superintendent of the prison may not have been
charged by law with knowledge of the provisions of the statute; but
he was aware of its provisions and was bound not to allow the
convicts to go beyond his control under an agreement that did not
conform to the statute. An agreement unaccompanied by the required
bond would not justify him in surrendering custody and control of
the convicts or any of them. As it must be taken upon the present
record that the improvement company never executed the bond
required by the statute, the district court erred in giving any
relief.
Under the circumstances, it may not be inappropriate to say that
in the printed brief of the Attorney General of Arizona it is
distinctly stated that no bond had ever been executed, and that
statement is not disputed in the printed brief subsequently filed
for appellee, nor was it disputed by counsel for appellee in oral
argument.
Without expressing any opinion in reference to other questions
discussed by counsel, some of which are important, the judgment of
the supreme court of the territory is, for the reasons stated,
Reversed, with directions to remand the case to the district
court for such further proceedings as may be consistent with this
opinion and with law, and it is so ordered.