Mitchell County v. Bank of Paducah, 91 Tex. 361, which
was an action upon interest coupons on bonds issued by the county
for the purpose of building a courthouse and jail and for
constructing and purchasing bridges, in which it was held that as
the Constitution and laws of Texas authorizing the creation of a
debt for such purposes require that provision should be made for
the interest and for a sinking fund for the redemption of the debt,
it was the duty of the court, in an action brought by a
bona
fide holder of bonds issued under the law, to so construe it
as to make them valid and give effect to them, is followed by this
Court even if it should be found to differ from previous decisions
of the Supreme Court of Texas, in force when the decision of the
court below in this case was made.
This was an action brought in the Circuit Court for the Western
District of Texas by the plaintiff, Wade, who is a citizen of the
State of Illinois, against the County of Travis to recover upon
certain interest coupons detached from forty-seven bonds issued by
the defendant for the purpose of building an iron bridge across the
Colorado River.
The petitioner set forth that in July, 1888, the defendant,
being authorized so to do, entered into a contract with the King
Iron Bridge Manufacturing Company of Cleveland, Ohio, for the
construction of a bridge for public use over the Colorado River,
the company agreeing to complete the same by November 15, 1888, in
consideration of which the defendant
Page 174 U. S. 500
agreed to pay the sum of $47,000 in six percent bonds, payable
in twenty years after date.
That, prior to the making of such contract, to-wit, February 23,
1888, the defendant, acting through its commissioners' court,
levied for the year 1888 and subsequent years, until otherwise
ordered, an annual
ad valorem tax of twenty cents for
general purposes, and an annual
ad valorem tax of fifteen
cents for road and bridge purposes, on each one hundred dollars'
worth of taxable property in such county. That on February 13,
1889, the commissioners' court of the county levied for the year
1889 an
ad valorem tax of fifteen cents on each one
hundred dollars' worth of property for road and bridge purposes,
and an
ad valorem tax of five cents to create a sinking
fund for bridge bonds, and to pay the interest on such bonds. That
the defendant delivered to the bridge company, upon its contract
for erecting the bridge, five bonds on December 6, 1888, ten bonds
on December 22, 1888, ten bonds on February 12, 1889, and the
remaining twenty-two of such bonds on July 3, 1889, such bonds
being signed by the county judge, countersigned by the county
clerk, and registered by the county treasurer. That the several
levies in question had not been appropriated for any other purpose
by the county, or at least a sufficient portion of them remained
unappropriated to pay the interest and sinking fund upon such
bonds, and that it was the intention of the commissioners' court to
use these levies with a view of providing an annual fund sufficient
to pay the interest and to provide the sinking fund required by
law. The petition further averred that plaintiff purchased the
coupons for a good and valuable consideration in open market, and
that he is the legal owner and holder of the same; that, on January
16, 1896, he presented such coupons to the county treasurer, and
demanded payment thereof, which was refused.
The county demurred to the petition upon six different grounds,
the first and material one of which was that the petition failed to
allege that,
"at the time the debt was created for which the bonds were
issued upon the coupons of which this suit is brought, any
provision was made for the
Page 174 U. S. 501
interest, and at least two percent sinking fund upon such
bonds."
The circuit court was of opinion that, at the date of the
execution of the contract for erecting the bridge, the
commissioners' court should have made a distinct and specific
provision for the interest upon such bonds and for a sinking fund,
and thereupon sustained the demurrer, and dismissed the cause. 72
F. 985.
The plaintiff appealed to the circuit court of appeals, which
affirmed the judgment of the circuit court. 81 F. 742. Upon
plaintiff's petition, a writ of certiorari was subsequently allowed
by this Court.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves the validity of certain bonds issued by the
County of Travis in payment to the King Iron Bridge Manufacturing
Company for the construction of a bridge over the Colorado River,
and, incidentally, the weight to be given to alleged conflicting
decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas as to the validity of such
bonds.
As bearing upon this question, the following sections of Article
XI of the Constitution of Texas upon the subject of "Municipal
Corporations" are pertinent:
"SEC. 2. The construction of jails,courthouses and bridges, and
the establishment of county poor houses and farms, and the laying
out, construction and repairing of county roads, shall be provided
for by general laws."
"SEC. 7. All counties and cities bordering on the coast of the
Gulf of Mexico are hereby authorized, upon a vote of two-thirds of
the taxpayers therein (to be ascertained as may be
Page 174 U. S. 502
provided by law), to levy and collect such tax for construction
of sea walls, breakwaters, or sanitary purposes as may be
authorized by law, and may create a debt for such works and issue
bonds in evidence thereof. But no debt for any purpose shall ever
be incurred in any manner by any city or county unless provision is
made at the time of creating the same for levying and collecting a
sufficient tax to pay the interest thereon and to provide at least
two percent as a sinking fund, and the condemnation of the right of
way for the erection of such works shall be fully provided
for."
In apparent compliance with the sections above quoted, the
legislature in 1887 enacted the following law, c. 141, §
1:
"SEC 1. That the county commissioners' court of the several
counties of this state are hereby authorized and empowered to issue
bonds of said county, with interest coupons attached, in such
amounts as may be necessary, for the purpose of buying or
constructing bridges for public uses within such county, said bonds
to run not exceeding twenty years, and bearing interest at any rate
not to exceed eight percent per annum."
"SEC. 2. The commissioners' court shall levy an annual
ad
valorem tax, not to exceed fifteen cents on the one hundred
dollars valuation, sufficient to pay the interest on and create a
sinking fund for the redemption of said bonds. The sinking fund
herein provided for shall not be less than four percent on the full
sum for which the bonds are issued."
It is admitted that no provision was made on July 3, 1888, "at
the time of creating" the debt, for levying and collecting a
sufficient tax to pay the interest thereon and two percent for a
sinking fund, as required by the second clause of section 7, if
said clause be applicable to a debt incurred for building bridges.
It was alleged in the petition, however, that in the February
preceding, the commissioners' court ordered an
ad valorem
tax of twenty cents for general purposes and an annual
ad
valorem tax of fifteen cents for road and bridge purposes, and
it also appeared that, in the following February (1889), it ordered
an annual
ad valorem tax of twenty-five cents for general
purposes, fifteen cents for road and bridge purposes,courthouse and
jail tax of five cents, and an
ad valorem
Page 174 U. S. 503
tax of five cents to create a sinking fund for bridge bonds to
pay the interest on said bonds.
Plaintiff insisted in the court below that the language of the
last clause of section seven, requiring a provision to be made for
the levying and collection of a tax to pay the interest and to
provide a sinking fund, must be read in connection with the
preceding clause of the section, and, taking the two together, that
the last clause must be held to apply only to counties bordering on
the Gulf of Mexico. Both the circuit court and the court of
appeals, however, held that the last clause contained a separate
and independent provision, and was applicable to the contract made
by the county for the building of this bridge, and that, the
petition of the plaintiff failing to show compliance with it, the
contract was void, and the bonds issued without authority of law.
Both courts relied upon the construction given by the Supreme Court
of Texas in numerous cases to this section of the constitution.
It is important in this connection to note that the opinion of
the circuit court was pronounced on March 13, 1896, and that of the
court of appeals on June 16, 1897. Since that time, it is asserted
that the Supreme Court of Texas has taken a somewhat different view
of the law, and an examination of these several decisions becomes
important. In the earliest of them,
Terrell v. Dessaint,
71 Tex. 770, 773 (1888), which was an action on a promissory note
given by the city in payment for material for waterworks supplies,
it was squarely held that the last clause of section seven, above
quoted, must be held to apply to all cities alike, and that the
clause contained no word or words which restricted its application
to the cities previously mentioned in the same section. "The
language is general and unqualified," said the court,
"and we find nothing in the context to indicate that the framers
of the constitution did not mean precisely what is said -- that is,
that no city shall create any debt without providing, by taxation,
for the payment of the sinking fund and interest."
It was also held that a debt of $1,500 for materials to extend
its waterworks was within the clause in question, and that, as the
current expenses proper of the city exceeded its resources for
Page 174 U. S. 504
general purposes, and no appropriation was made for the payment
of this debt, there could be no recovery.
In
Bassett v. El Paso, 88 Tex. 168 (1895), it was held
that the language and purpose of the constitution were satisfied by
an order for the annual collection by taxation of a "sufficient sum
to pay the interest thereon and create a sinking fund," etc.,
although it did not fix the rate or percent of taxation for each
year by which the sum was to be collected, but left the fixing of
such rate for each successive year to the commissioners' court or
the city council. It was contended that the ordinance, which
provided for the issue of waterworks bonds, was void, because it
did not levy a tax, but delegated to the assessing and collecting
officers the power to make such levy from year to year. But it was
said that
"to so construe these provisions as to require at the time the
debt is created, the levy of a fixed tax, to be collected through a
long series of years, without reference to the unequal 'sums' that
would in all probability be realized therefrom, instead of the
collection annually of a certain 'sufficient sum' to pay the annual
interest and create the sinking fund required by law, would be
doing violence to the language used, and authorize, in cases where
values rapidly increase, the extortion from the taxpayers of large
amounts of money in excess of the amount necessary to satisfy the
interest and principal of the bonds, and this in turn would invite
municipal corruption and extravagance."
In
McNeal v. Waco, 89 Tex. 83 (1895), plaintiff sued
the city on a contract for building cisterns for fire protection,
to recover the contract price for one and damages for refusing to
allow him to complete the others. The petition failed to show a
provision for taxes to pay interest and a sinking fund, or an
existing fund for the payment, nor did the contract show facts from
which the court could say that it was an item of ordinary
expenditure. It was held that a general demurrer to the petition
should have been sustained, and it was also held that the word
"debt" included every pecuniary obligation imposed by contract
outside of the current expenditures for the year. To same effect is
Howard v. Smith, 91 Tex. 8.
Page 174 U. S. 505
Such was the construction placed by the Supreme Court of Texas
upon the constitutional provision at the time when the case under
consideration was decided by the courts below. It was held by the
circuit court that the county commissioners' court should have made
provision at the time the contract was executed -- July 3, 1888 --
by levy of a tax or otherwise, for a sinking fund, and the interest
on the bonds issued for the erection of the bridge; that the levy
made by the commissioners' court in February, 1888, could not be
held applicable to the bonds in controversy, for the manifest
reason that the contract for the erection of the bridge was not
then in existence, nor even in the contemplation of the parties, so
far as the allegations of the petition disclosed; that the general
levy made in February, 1889, could not be held applicable to the
bonds of the bridge company for two reasons: first, because it was
made some six months after the execution of the contract, and
second because the order of the commissioners' court, authorizing
the levy made no reference whatever to the bonds in controversy,
nor to the contract between the county and the bridge company. The
circuit court of appeals came practically to the same
conclusion.
Since these cases were decided, however, the Supreme Court of
Texas has put a construction upon the constitution which fully
supports the position of the plaintiff in this case. In
Mitchell County v. Bank of Paducah, 91 Tex. 361, decided
in January, 1898, the action was upon interest coupons attached to
bonds issued by the county for the purpose of building a courthouse
and jail, and upon others for constructing and purchasing bridges.
An act had been passed in 1881 with reference to the creation of
courthouse debts similar to the act subsequently passed in 1887
respecting bridge bonds, a copy of which is given above. The same
defense was made -- that, at the time of the creation of the debts,
the county made no provision for levying and collecting a
sufficient tax to pay the interest and sinking fund, although for
the year 1881, the court levied a courthouse and jail tax of
twenty-five cents on the one hundred dollars, repeated during
subsequent years, and increased to fifty cents, and every year
after the issue of the
Page 174 U. S. 506
bonds for bridge purposes, the court levied fifteen cents on the
one hundred dollars as a tax for road and bridge purposes. It was
held, quoting
Bassett v. City of El Paso, 88 Tex. 175,
that it was unnecessary to ascertain the rate percent required to
be levied in order to raise the proper sum and to actually levy
that rate of tax at the time; that, if the laws of 1881 and 1887
had never been passed, the county would have had no authority under
the constitution to contract the debts represented by the bonds,
nor to levy a tax for the payment of the interest and sinking fund
on such debts. The power to do so could be derived from the
legislature only. "We understand," said the court,
"that the provision required by the constitution means such
fixed and definite arrangements for the levying and collecting of
such tax as will become a legal right in favor of the bondholders
of the bonds issued thereon, or in favor of any person to whom such
debt might be payable. It is not sufficient that the municipal
authorities should by the law be authorized to levy and collect a
tax sufficient to produce a sinking fund greater than two percent,
but to comply with the constitution, the law must itself provide
for a sinking fund not less than two percent, or require of the
municipal authorities to levy and collect a tax sufficient to
produce the minimum prescribed by the constitution."
It was held that, the laws of 1881 and 1887 having been enacted
for the purpose of putting into force the constitutional
provisions, it was the duty of the courts to so construe the laws
as to make them valid, and give effect to them. The court came to
the conclusion that these laws did make such provision for the
levying and collecting of a tax as was required by the
constitution, and that, in case the court had refused to levy the
tax after the bonds were issued and sold, the bondholders would
have been entitled to a mandamus to compel the commissioners' court
to levy such tax as purely a ministerial duty. The bonds, with
certain immaterial exceptions, were held to be valid obligations of
the county.
It is quite evident that if this case had been decided and
called to the attention of the courts below, the validity of the
bonds involved in this action would have been sustained, and
Page 174 U. S. 507
the main question involved in this case is whether we shall give
effect to this decision of the Supreme Court of Texas, pronounced
since the case under consideration was decided in the courts below,
and giving, as is claimed, at least, a somewhat different
construction to the constitution of the state.
We do not ourselves perceive any such inconsistency between the
case of
Mitchell County v. Bank of Paducah and the earlier
cases as justifies the county, in the case under consideration, in
claiming that the Supreme Court of Texas had overruled the settled
law of the state and set in motion a new departure. No such
inconsistency is indicated in the opinion in the
Mitchell
County case. So far as the prior cases are cited at all, they
are cited with approval, and there is certainly nothing to indicate
that the court intended to overrule them. That court had not
changed in its
personnel since the prior judgments, except
the first, were pronounced, and it is not probable that the judges
would have changed their views without some reference to such
change. Indeed, but one of the earlier cases was cited in the
Mitchell County case (
Bassett v. City of El Paso,
88 Tex. 175), and that supports, rather than conflicts with, the
opinion. As we read them, they merely decided that some provision
for payment must be made. In the
Mitchell County case, the
question was for the first time presented whether the laws of 1881
and 1887 were constitutional and whether action taken under these
laws was an adequate compliance with the requirement that provision
should be made "at the time of creating" the debt for a sufficient
tax to pay the interest and to provide a two percent sinking fund.
It was held that they were. This overruled nothing, because the
question had never before been decided, and the point was not made
in the courts below in this case. We are simply called upon, then,
to determine what is the law of Texas upon the subject, since,
under Rev.Stat. section 721, the "laws of the several states . . .
shall be regarded as rules of decision in trials at common law in
the courts of the United States." While if this case had been
brought before this Court before the decision in the
Mitchell
County case, we might have taken the view that was
Page 174 U. S. 508
taken by the courts below, treating the question as one hitherto
unsettled in that state, we find ourselves relieved of any
embarrassment by the decision in the
Mitchell County case,
which manifestly applies to this case, and requires a reversal of
their judgment.
But, assuming that the later case was intended to overrule the
prior ones, and to lay down a different rule upon the subject, our
conclusion would not be different. In determining what the laws of
the several states are which will be regarded as rules of decision,
we are bound to look not only at their constitutions and statutes,
but at the decisions of their highest courts giving construction to
them.
Polk's Lessee v.
Wendal, 9 Cranch 87;
Luther v.
Borden, 7 How. 1,
48 U. S. 40;
Nesmith v.
Sheldon, 812;
Jefferson Branch Bank v.
Skelley, 1 Black 436;
Leffingwell v.
Warren, 2 Black 599;
Christy v.
Pridgeon, 4 Wall. 196;
Post v.
Supervisors, 105 U. S. 667;
Bucher v. Chesire Railroad Co., 125 U.
S. 555.
If there be any inconsistency in the opinions of these courts,
the general rule is that we follow the latest settled adjudications
in preference to the earlier ones. The case of
United
States v. Morrison, 4 Pet. 124, seems to be
directly in point. The United States recovered judgment against
Morrison, upon which a
fi.fa. was issued, goods taken in
execution, and restored to the debtor under a forthcoming bond.
This bond having been forfeited, an execution was awarded thereon
by the judgment of the district court rendered April, 1822, which
it was asserted created a lien upon the lands, and overreached
certain conveyances under which the defendants claimed, dated
February and March, 1823. The circuit court was of opinion that the
lien did not overreach these conveyances. But, the Court of Appeals
of Virginia having subsequently decided that the lien of a judgment
continued pending proceedings on a writ of
fi.fa., this
Court adopted this subsequent construction by such court and
reversed the decree of the circuit court.
In
Green v. Neal's
Lessee, 6 Pet. 291, a construction given by the
Supreme Court of Tennessee to the statute of limitations of that
state having been overruled, this Court followed
Page 174 U. S. 509
the later case, although it had previously adopted the rule laid
down in the overruled cases.
See also
Leffingwell v.
Warren, 2 Black 599;
Fairfield v. Gallatin
Co., 100 U. S. 47.
In
Morgan v.
Curtenius, 20 How. 1, the circuit court placed a
construction upon an act of the legislature in accordance with a
decision of the Supreme Court of Illinois with reference to the
very same conveyance, and it was held that that, being the settled
rule of property which that court was bound to follow, this Court
would affirm its judgment though the supreme court of the state had
subsequently overruled its own decision, and had given the act and
the same conveyance a different construction. We do not consider
this case as necessarily conflicting with those above cited.
An exception has been admitted to this rule where, upon the
faith of state decisions affirming the validity of contracts made
or bonds issued under a certain statute, other contracts have been
made or bonds issued under the same statute before the prior cases
were overruled. Such contracts and bonds have been held to be valid
upon the principle that the holders, upon purchasing such bonds,
and the parties to such contracts, were entitled to rely upon the
prior decisions as settling the law of the state. To have held
otherwise would enable the state to set a trap for its creditors by
inducing them to subscribe to bonds and then withdrawing their only
security.
Gelpcke v.
Dubuque, 1 Wall. 175;
Havemeyer
v. Iowa County 3 Wall. 294;
Mitchell
v. Burlington, 4 Wall. 270;
Riggs v.
Johnson Co., 6 Wall. 166;
Lee Co. v.
Rogers, 7 Wall. 181;
Chicago v.
Sheldon, 9 Wall. 50;
Olcott v.
Supervisors, 16 Wall. 678;
Douglass v. Pike
County, 101 U. S. 677;
Burgess v. Selligman, 107 U. S. 20.
Obviously this class of cases has no application here. The bonds
were issued in good faith, for a valuable consideration received by
the county, and were purchased by the plaintiff with no notice of
infirmity attaching to them. If certain decisions, pronounced after
the bonds were issued, threw doubt upon their validity, those
doubts have been removed by a later decision pronouncing
unequivocally in favor of their
Page 174 U. S. 510
validity. In the theory of the law, the construction given to
the bonds of this description in the
Mitchell County case
is, and always has been, the proper one, and, as such, we have no
hesitation in following it. So far as judgments rendered in other
cases which are final and unappealable are concerned, a different
question arises.
The judgments of the court of appeals and of the circuit court
must be
Reversed, and the case remanded to the circuit court for the
Western district of Texas for further proceedings in conformity
with this opinion.