1. While, in a general sense, the laws in force at the time a
contract is made enter into its obligation, parties have no vested
right in the particular remedies or modes of procedure then
existing.
2. The legislature may not withdraw all remedies, and thus in
effect destroy the contract, nor impose such new restrictions or
conditions as would materially delay or embarrass the enforcement
of rights under the contract according to the course of justice as
established when the contract was made.
Neither could be done without impairing the obligation
Page 187 U. S. 438
of the contract. But the legislature may change existing
remedies or modes of procedure without impairing the obligation of
contracts if a substantial or efficacious remedy remains or is
provided by means of which a party can enforce his rights under the
contract. The contract clause of the Constitution of the United
States has reference only to a statute of a state enacted after the
making of the contract whose obligation is alleged to have been
impaired.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents a question under the clause of the
Constitution of the United States which prohibits a state from
passing a law impairing the obligation of contracts.
The question arose upon demurrer by the defendant, the City of
Oshkosh, to the complaint filed against it on the 16th day of June,
1900, by the Oshkosh Waterworks Company, a municipal corporation of
Wisconsin. The principal ground of demurrer was that the complaint
did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
The complaint set forth two causes of action, on the first one
of which the company claimed a judgment for $4,085, which was
alleged to be due from the city under an agreement made between it
and the company on June 18, 1883, in reference to the building and
maintaining by the company of a waterworks plant for supplying
water for domestic and fire purposes, and the renting of public
fire hydrants.
On the second cause of action, the company asked a judgment for
$1,060, which amount was claimed under an agreement of the 31st day
of August, 1891, having reference to the company's extensions of
its then-existing mains, and the rentals to be paid by the city for
hydrants to be located on such extensions.
After the contract of 1883 was made, the charter of the city was
amended and revised, the revision taking effect March 23, 1891.
Page 187 U. S. 439
The revised charter contained certain provisions as to suits
against the city, imposing on suitors conditions or restrictions
that did not previously exist.
The company insisted that the revised charter could not be
applied to this suit without impairing the obligation of its
contracts with the city. This view was rejected by the state court,
the demurrer was sustained, and the suit dismissed.
The general principles which must control in determining whether
a state enactment impairs the obligation of contracts have become
so firmly established by the decisions of this Court that any
further discussion of their soundness would be inappropriate. It is
only necessary to recall them, and then ascertain their
applicability to the particular state legislation now alleged to be
repugnant to the Constitution of the United States.
It is well settled that while, in a general sense, the laws in
force at the time a contract is made enter into its obligation,
parties have no vested right in the particular remedies or modes of
procedure then existing. It is true the legislature may not
withdraw all remedies, and thus in effect destroy the contract; nor
may it impose such new restrictions or conditions as would
materially delay or embarrass the enforcement of rights under the
contract according to the usual course of justice as established
when the contract was made. Neither could be done without impairing
the obligation of the contract. But it is equally well settled that
the legislature may modify or change existing remedies or prescribe
new modes of procedure without impairing the obligation of
contracts, provided a substantial or efficacious remedy remains or
is given, by means of which a party can enforce his rights under
the contract.
Green v. Biddle,
8 Wheat. 1,
21 U. S. 85;
Bronson v.
Kinzie, 1 How. 311,
42 U. S. 317;
Planters' Bank v.
Sharp, 6 How. 301,
47 U. S. 327;
Walker v.
Whitehead, 16 Wall. 314,
83 U. S. 317;
Murray v. Charleston, 96 U. S. 432, 438
[argument of counsel -- omitted];
Edwards v. Kearzey,
96 U. S. 595,
96 U. S. 601;
Vance v. Vance, 108 U. S. 514,
108 U. S. 518;
McGahey v. Virginia, 135 U. S. 685,
135 U. S. 693;
Barnitz v. Beverly, 163 U. S. 118;
McCullough v. Virginia, 172 U. S. 102,
172 U. S. 104.
The decisions of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin as to what are to
be deemed laws impairing the obligations
Page 187 U. S. 440
of contracts are in harmony with the decisions of this Court.
Lightfoot v. Cole, 1 Wis. 26, 34;
Von Baumbach v.
Bade, 9 Wis. 559;
Paine v. Woodworth, 15 Wis. 298;
Northwestern Mut. Ins. Co. v. Neeves, 46 Wis. 147;
Lee
v. Buckheit, 49 Wis. 54;
Rosenthal v. Wehe, 58 Wis.
621.
Having these principles in view, we proceed to inquire whether
the revised charter of Oshkosh so changed existing remedies for the
enforcement of contract rights against municipal corporations as to
impair the obligation of the contract made in 1883 between the
waterworks company and the city.
By the act of the Wisconsin Legislature revising and amending
the charter of the City of Oshkosh, that municipal corporation was
made capable of suing and being sued in all courts of law and
equity. Laws of Wisconsin, 1883, vol. 2, p. 687, c. 1, § 1.
The same act provided that all moneys, credits, and demands of the
city should be under the control of the common council, and "be
drawn out only upon the order of the mayor and city clerk, duly
authorized by the vote of the common council." Laws of Wisconsin,
1883, vol. 2, p. 724, c. 7, § 1. It was further provided
that
"any account or demand against the city, before acted on or
paid, the council may require the same to be verified by affidavit,
except salaries and amounts previously fixed or determined by law,
and any person who shall falsely swear to any such amount or demand
shall be deemed guilty of perjury, and shall be punished according
to law."
Laws of Wisconsin, 1883, vol. 2, p. 726, c. 7, § 10.
The Supreme Court of Wisconsin, in its opinion, states that,
except for the above restrictions upon the payment of money, the
City of Oshkosh was, in 1883, subject to be sued upon contract
liability like any private person or corporation.
But by the city's amended charter of 1891, certain changes were
made, and the question is whether those changes, if applied to the
contract of 1883, would impair its obligation. 2 Laws of Wisconsin,
1891, p. 321, c. 59.
The revised charter retained substantially the above provisions
in the charter of 1883, and the following, among other, additions,
were made:
Page 187 U. S. 441
"§ 4. No action shall be maintained by any person against
the city, upon any claim or demand, until such person shall first
have presented his claim or demand to the common council for
allowance, and the same shall have been disallowed in whole or in
part:
Provided, That the failure of such common council to
pass upon such claim within sixty days after the presentation
thereof shall be deemed a disallowance thereof."
"§ 5. The determination by the common council, disallowing
in whole or in part any claim, shall be final and conclusive, and a
bar to any action in any court founded on such claim, unless an
appeal shall be taken from the decision of such common council, as
in this act provided."
"§ 6. Whenever any claim against the city shall be
disallowed in whole or in part by the common council, such person
may appeal from the decision of such common council disallowing
said claim to the circuit court of the county in which the city is
situated by causing a written notice of such appeal to be served on
the clerk of the city within twenty days after making the decision
disallowing such claim, and by executing a bond to the city in the
sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, with two sureties, to be
approved by the city attorney and comptroller, conditioned for the
faithful prosecution of such appeal, and the payment of all costs
that shall be adjudged against the appellant in the circuit court.
The clerk, in case such appeal is taken, shall make a brief
statement of the proceedings had in the case before the common
council, with its decision thereon, and shall transmit the same,
together with all the papers in the case, to the clerk of the
circuit [court] of the county. Such case shall be entered, tried,
and determined in the same manner as cases originally commenced in
such court:
Provided, however, That whenever an appeal is
taken from the allowance made by the common council upon any claim,
and the recovery upon such appeal shall not exceed the amount
allowed by the common council, exclusive of interest upon such
allowance, the appellant shall pay the costs of appeal, which shall
be deducted from the amount of the recovery, and when the amount of
costs exceeds the amount recovered, judgment
Page 187 U. S. 442
shall be rendered against the appellant for the amount of such
excess."
2 Laws of 1891, p. 412, c. 21.
It is not alleged in the complaint that the waterworks company,
before commencing this action, presented its claims to the common
council for allowance.
The company contends that, if the above provisions are construed
to mean what the Supreme Court of Wisconsin have declared similar
provisions in other municipal charters to mean, then such burdens
and restrictions have been imposed upon the enforcement of its
contract with the City of Oshkosh as to impair its obligations.
This suggestion renders it necessary to ascertain the import of
those decisions.
In
Drinkwine v. Eau Claire, 83 Wis. 428, 430, it
appeared that Drinkwine preferred a claim against the City of Eau
Claire, which was disallowed by the common council. He appealed
from that action of the council, and executed a bond which recited
that he had appealed to the Circuit Court of Eau Claire county, and
conditioned for the payment of all costs that should be adjudged
against him by the court aforesaid, and not generally by the court,
as prescribed by the statute. It was contended that the bond was
insufficient, since, in the event of a change of venue in the case,
the surety would not be bound by a judgment for costs in the court
that actually tried the case. After referring to prior cases in
that and in other courts, particularly to
Sharp v. Bedell,
10 Ill. 88, in which it had been held that, if an appellant failed
to comply substantially with the requirements of the statute in
relation to the perfecting of appeals, the circuit court did not
acquire jurisdiction of the person of the opposite party or of the
subject matter, and should dismiss the appeal, the Supreme Court of
Wisconsin said:
"The liability of a surety is
strictissimi juris, and
cannot be extended by implication. He has a right to stand on the
exact words of his contract. . . . The deviation from the statutory
requirement is one of substance. The surety may have been quite
willing to enter into the engagement to pay the costs, if the
appellant should be defeated on a trial in Eau Claire County, in
the city where the alleged cause of action arose, and quite
unwilling to undertake for the payment
Page 187 U. S. 443
of the costs, in like event, of a trial in a distant county,
greatly increased by the travel of witnesses and the costs of
subpoenaing them. A similar ruling in
Myres v. Parker, 6
Ohio St. 502-504, sustains the conclusion at which we have arrived,
that the bond under consideration is not a substantial compliance
with the statute."
The ruling in the
Drinkwine case was reaffirmed in
Oshkosh Waterworks Co. v. Oshkosh, 106 Wis. 85, and in
other cases.
In
Mason v. Ashland, 98 Wis. 540, 547, it was held
that, under the Charter of the City of Ashland, the right of appeal
from the disallowance of a claim by the common council was perfect
at the expiration of sixty days from the filing of the claim with
its clerk, and that the claimant "was obliged to exercise it within
the twenty days allowed by statute, or be forever barred from
thereafter prosecuting his claim in any court," citing
Fleming
v. Appleton, 55 Wis. 90, and
Koch v. Ashland, 83 Wis.
361.
In
Telford v. Ashland, 100 Wis. 238, it was adjudged
that, as the objection that the appeal was not taken within twenty
days after the adverse action of the council goes to the
jurisdiction of the subject matter, it may be raised for the first
time in the appellate court.
In
Seegar v. Ashland, 101 Wis. 515, it was held that,
under a provision in a city charter to the effect that, in case any
person presented his claim or demand against the city, which the
common council disallowed in whole or in part, the council "shall
not again consider or allow such claim," its failure to act upon a
claim within sixty days after being presented was equivalent to a
disallowance, the right to appeal therefrom expiring in twenty days
after such disallowance.
Accepting these decisions as our guide in determining the
meaning and effect of the provisions in the revised charter of
Oshkosh, we perceive no reason for holding that the change in
remedies made by that charter impair, in the constitutional sense,
the obligation of the contract of 1883 between the waterworks
company and the city.
The requirement that a claim or demand against the city should
be presented to the common council and be disallowed
Page 187 U. S. 444
in whole or in part before the city can be subjected to suit
upon it is a reasonable regulation for the protection of the city
against the cost of unnecessary litigation. It does not affect the
substance of the creditor's right, without being unreasonably
delayed, to institute an action against the city. It only stays his
hand until the city has full opportunity to look into his claim
before paying or refusing to pay it. Nor does the above regulation
unduly obstruct the creditor, for by it the city is in effect
allowed only sixty days for such examination, and the creditor is
protected against a vexatious or indefinite delay by the provision
that the failure of the council, for sixty days, to pass upon the
claim shall be deemed a disallowance thereof, and the creditor may
at once appeal to the circuit court of the county. In that court,
the necessary issues can be framed, under the direction of the
court and according to the usual modes of pleading, and the rights
of the parties judicially ascertained and enforced.
Equally without merit is the objection to that clause of the
revised charter making the disallowance of a claim in whole or in
part by the council final and conclusive unless an appeal be taken
to the circuit court of the county within a prescribed time. We
take it that the purpose of that provision was to protect the
public against the dangers attending persistent and frequent
applications to the common council after it had once acted, and to
compel claimants to proceed with promptness while all the facts
connected with their demands were fresh in the minds of the members
of the council. This is a wholesome regulation of which no creditor
can justly complain, since the charter enables him, without serious
delay, after the disallowance of his claim, to invoke the
jurisdiction of a court of general jurisdiction for the enforcement
of such claim.
But it is earnestly insisted by the waterworks company that the
provision requiring an appeal from the disallowance of a claim to
be perfected within twenty days thereafter is so unreasonable, in
the matter of time, as, by its necessary operation, to impair the
obligation of its contracts with the city. We cannot assent to this
view. The time within which the creditor must perfect his appeal is
undoubtedly short. But it is
Page 187 U. S. 445
sufficient for the purpose of enabling him to get his case, with
reasonable dispatch, into the circuit court and have its judgment
as to his claim against the city, with the same right that other
litigants have to take the case to the highest court of the state.
Here again is disclosed the purpose of the legislature to bring to
a speedy conclusion all disputes as to claims against the city. It
surely was competent for the legislature to effect such an object,
and it cannot be said as matter of law that a provision requiring
the creditor, within twenty days after the disallowance of his
claim, to serve notice of appeal on the city clerk materially
affects or obstructs the presentation of his claim to the proper
circuit court.
Objection is also made to the requirement in the new charter
that the appeal bond shall be approved by both the city attorney
and comptroller. In support of that objection, it is said that one
or the other or both of those officers might be absent from the
city at the time the bond is tendered by the creditor; also, that
one or both of them might object to the bond when he ought to
accept it as sufficient. But these contingencies may never arise.
They certainly have not arisen in respect of the claim of the
waterworks company, for it is not alleged that the company ever
presented its claim to the common council for allowance, and
consequently had no occasion to tender the city attorney and
comptroller an appeal bond. Besides, it is not at all clear that
the revised charter requires, as a condition of the right to
appeal, that a bond be executed by the creditor within twenty days
after the disallowance of his claim by the common council. It does
expressly require that the notice of appeal shall be served within
that time on the clerk of the city, but no such absolute
requirement is made as to the time within which the appeal bond
must be executed. It may be that a construction that would defeat
the creditor's appeal, because of the absence of the city attorney
and comptroller, or either of them, at the time a bond is tendered
for their approval, or a refusal to approve a bond that was
sufficient, would make the revised charter, in its application to
such a case, repugnant to the contract clause of the Constitution.
But no such case is now presented, and no such question
Page 187 U. S. 446
as that suggested need be now decided. It should not be assumed
that the right of appeal will be lost where the creditor has done
all that was required in order to perfect his appeal. As the
waterworks company does not allege that it presented its claim to
the common council for allowance, it is not in a position to ask a
judicial determination of a question that cannot arise in this
case.
Another objection remains to be noticed. It is founded on the
decision in
Drinkwine v. Eau Claire, 83 Wis. 428, 430, in
which it was held that the appeal bond provided in the charter of
Eau Claire must relate to costs as adjudged by the circuit court,
and not by the circuit court of any named county. We have seen what
were the reasons that governed the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in so
interpreting a provision similar to the one here in question in the
revised charter of the City of Oshkosh. If that interpretation was,
as suggested, too technical, it would not follow that the charter
thus construed would impair the obligation of contracts. It would
be extraordinary if this Court should hold the new remedies and
modes of procedure provided by the revised charter to be illegal
because of the possibility that a creditor might, by mistake or
carelessness, execute a bond not conditioned, as required by that
charter, for the payment of the costs adjudged by the circuit
court, generally, but by a named circuit court.
As to the contention that the obligation of the contract of
August 31st, 1891, was impaired by the revised charter, it is
sufficient to say that that charter went into operation March 23,
1891. The contract of 1891 was a new contract, independent of that
of 1883, and the waterworks company could not therefore say that
its obligation was impaired by a statute in force at the time the
contract was made. The contract clause of the Constitution of the
United States has reference only to a statute of a state enacted
after the making of the contract whose obligation is alleged to
have been impaired.
Lehigh Water Co. v. Easton,
121 U. S. 388,
121 U. S. 391;
Pinney v. Nelson, 183 U. S. 144,
183 U. S. 147;
New Orleans Waterworks Co. v. Louisiana, 185 U.
S. 336,
185 U. S. 351.
If, however, the agreement of 1891 had such connection with that of
1883 that they may be regarded as one agreement,
Page 187 U. S. 447
then what has been said as to the application of the revised
charter to the contract of 1883 applies, in all respects, to that
of 1891. The obligation of neither contract was impaired by the
charter of 1891.
We have noticed all the points that require consideration, and
adjudge therefore that the changes made by the revised charter of
Oshkosh, in respect of remedies for the enforcement of claims
against that city, provided for its creditors a substantial and
adequate remedy, and therefore did not impair the obligation of
contracts with that municipal corporation.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin must be
Affirmed.