The power of the state to alter or destroy its municipal
corporations is not, so far as the impairment of the obligation
clause of the federal Constitution is concerned, greater than the
power to repeal its legislation, and the alteration or destruction
of subordinate governmental divisions is not the proper exercise of
legislative power when it impairs the obligations of contracts
previously entered into.
Courts cannot permit themselves to be deceived, and while they
will not inquire too closely into the motives of the state, they
will not ignore the effect of its action, and will not permit the
obligation of a contract to be impaired by the abolition or change
of the boundaries of a municipality. Where a tax has been provided
for and there are officers to collect it, the court will direct
those officers to lay the tax and collect it from the property
within the boundaries of the territory that constituted the
municipality.
A suit to compel county officers to levy and collect a tax on
property within the county to pay bonds of a municipality is not,
under the circumstances of this case, a suit against the state,
either because those officers are also state officers or because
the bonds were issued under legislative authority.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 200 U. S. 249
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of error brings up for review the judgment of the
circuit court in mandamus requiring plaintiffs in error to assess
and collect taxes to pay a judgment recovered against Township
Ninety-Six, for certain bonds issued by it in aid of the Greenville
& Port Royal Railroad Company. In
Folsom v. Township Ninety
Six, 159 U. S. 611, the
bonds were declared valid obligations of the township. In
accordance with the opinion in that case, judgment was entered in
favor of the suing bondholders. Defendants in error are owners of
that judgment. The legislation which authorized the issue of the
bonds is recited in
Folsom v. Township Ninety Six, and
need not be repeated at length. We may say, however, that the act
incorporating the railroad empowered townships interested in its
construction to subscribe for its capital stock such sum as the
majority of the voters, voting at an election held for that
purpose, might authorize, and it was provided (section 9) that
"the county auditor or other officers discharging such duties,
or city or town treasurer, as the case may be, shall be authorized
and required to assess annually upon the property of said county,
city, town, or townships such percentum as may be necessary to pay
said interest on said sum of money subscribed, which shall be known
and styled on the tax books as railroad tax, which shall be
collected by the treasurer under the same regulations as are
provided by law for the collection of taxes in any of the counties,
cities, towns, or townships so subscribing."
19 Stat.S.C. 239, 241.
In 1895, South Carolina adopted a new Constitution by which it
was provided that the several townships of the state, with names
and boundaries as then established, should continue, with power,
however, in the legislature to form other townships or change the
boundaries of those established. Art. VII.
Page 200 U. S. 250
This section, by an amendment finally adopted in 1903, was made
inapplicable to certain townships, including Ninety-Six. It was
provided that
"the corporate existence of the said townships be, and the same
is hereby, destroyed, and all offices in said townships are
abolished, and all corporate agents removed."
24 Stat.S.C. 3.
At the time of the execution of the bonds, Township Ninety-Six
was situated in Abbeville County, and in 1896 the County of
Greenwood was organized out of portions of Abbeville and Edgefield
Counties, and Township Ninety-Six was included in Greenwood
County.
The officers of the latter county refuse to assess and collect
the taxes, contending that they are not officers of the county, but
officers of the state, appointed by the governor of the state, and
are termed county officers because assigned to duty in that county,
but cannot exercise any function of those offices except as
authorized by the laws of the state, and that they have been
forbidden, by an act of the general assembly of the state, to
assess or collect taxes for the payment of subscriptions by
townships to the building of roads which have not been built. 23
Stat.S.C. 78.
Against this defense, defendants in error invoke the contract
clause of the Constitution of the United States.
As we have seen, the validity of the bonds was decided in
Folsom v. Township Ninety-Six, 159 U.
S. 611; in other words, they were decided to be the
contracts of the township, and that the acts which authorized their
issue constituted their obligation. In this the court announced and
applied the principle of many cases which are too familiar to need
especial citation.
Plaintiffs in error yield to the case of
Folsom v.
Ninety-Six, but contend that it is open to inquiry what
officers, under the act authorizing the bonds, were the corporate
agents or officers of the township, and, answering the inquiry, say
the county commissioners were such agents and officers, not the
county auditor and county treasurer, and that, it is contended, the
circuit court has so decided. The distinction that plaintiffs
Page 200 U. S. 251
contend for, based on the opinion of the court, is merely
verbal. The court distinguished the duties of the commissioners
from those of the auditor and treasurer, and expressed with
emphasis the continuing duty of the latter. The court said:
"If the contention that the legislature had the right to destroy
the corporate existence of the township be true, we are
nevertheless confronted with the fact that the instrumentalities
and means employed by the legislature in this instance for the
purpose of enforcing the collection of a tax are still
unimpaired."
The purpose of the court, therefore, was to point out the
temporary duties of the commissioners and to emphasize the
permanent duties of the auditor and treasurer as instrumentalities
of the law, with a continuing power to give its remedy and
protection to the bonds "independent of the existence of the
township." And there can be no doubt about this from the words of
the statute.
It is further contended that the action of the court in issuing
the writ disregarded Article IX of the Constitution of 1868,
entitled "Finance and Taxation." Section 8 of the article
provides
"that the corporate authorities of counties, townships, school
districts, cities, towns, and villages may be vested with power to
assess and collect taxes for corporate purposes."
And the further limitation of the power of municipal
corporations to levy and assess taxes, expressed in Section 6,
Article X, of the Constitution of 1895, to-wit,
"for educational purposes, to build and repair public roads,
buildings, and bridges, to maintain and support prisoners, pay
jurors, county officers, and for litigation, quarantine, and court
expenses, and for ordinary county purposes, to support paupers and
pay past indebtedness."
The argument is that
"the 'corporate authorities' of the county cannot be vested with
power to assess and collect a tax for township purposes, nor
vice versa. That power can only be delegated to the
authorities of the body contracting, or about to contract, the
debt."
And this argument, it is contended,
Page 200 U. S. 252
is not opposed to
Folsom v. Ninety-Six. There, it is
said, the validity of the bonds was established, but it was not
decided that the "corporate authorities" of the township might be
vested with power to assess and collect a tax to pay them. Here,
the question is, can the auditor and treasurer, who are state
officers, be made to assess and collect a tax which, under the
Constitution and laws of the state, can only be done by the
"corporate authorities" of the township?
Plaintiffs' construction of the case of
Folsom v.
Ninety-Six is too limited. It takes from the case about all of
its value. The case decided that the bonds were issued for
corporate purposes, and established them as a valid indebtedness of
the township. It proclaimed the validity of the laws under which
the bonds were issued, and made those laws and every part of them
the contract with the bondholders. It did not occur to anyone to
urge that, because the legislature might vest the township
authorities with the power to assess and collect taxes, such power
could not be vested in county officers. By clear implication, the
contrary is decided in
State v. Whitesides, 30 S.C. 579;
State v. Harper, 30 S.C. 586;
State v. Neely, 30
S.C. 587. The offices of auditor and treasurer still exist, and
through them taxes are assessed and collected in the State of South
Carolina. The case at bar is not, therefore, like
Heine v.
Levee Commission, 19 Wall. 655, or
Meriweather
v. Garrett, 102 U. S. 498.
It is like
Von Hoffman v.
Quincy, 4 Wall. 535;
Galena v.
Amy, 5 Wall. 705;
Seibert v. Lewis,
122 U. S. 284;
Mobile v. Watson, 116 U. S. 289, and
many others.
But plaintiffs in error urge other defenses: (a) by an amendment
of the constitution in 1903 the corporate existence of Township
Ninety-Six was destroyed, its offices abolished, and all its
corporate agents were removed; (b) by an act of the legislature,
Township Ninety-Six was included in Greenwood County; at the time
the bonds were issued, it was situated in Abbeville County; (c)
plaintiffs in error are forbidden by the laws of the state from
assessing and collecting taxes for Ninety-Six
Page 200 U. S. 253
Township, and have no power to perform the acts enjoined upon
them by the judgment of the circuit court.
These defenses differ only in form from those which this Court
held insufficient in the cases to which we have referred, and they
acquire no sanctifying power because one of them, or all of them,
may be said to rest upon the constitution of the state. This,
indeed, is not denied. It is asserted that the obligation of the
contract is unimpaired; that the state has done nothing but
exercise an unquestionable right -- the right to alter or destroy
its corporations.
The power of the state to alter or destroy its corporations is
not greater than the power of the state to repeal its legislation.
Exercise of the latter power has been repeatedly held to be
ineffectual to impair the obligation of a contract. The repeal of a
law may be more readily undertaken than the abolition of townships
or the change of their boundaries or the boundaries of counties.
The latter may put on the form of a different purpose than the
violation of a contract. But courts cannot permit themselves to be
deceived. They will not inquire to closely into the motives of the
state, but they will not ignore the effect of its action. The cases
illustrate this. There may indeed be a limitation upon the power of
the court. This was seen and expressed in
Heine v.
Levee Commission,19 Wall. 655, and
Meriweather
v. Garrett, 102 U. S. 498.
There is no limitation in the case at bar. A tax has been provided
for, and there are officers whose duty it is to assess and collect
it. A court is within the line of its duty and power when it
directs those officers to the performance of their duty and their
objects upon which the tax can be laid. It is the property within
the boundaries of the territory that constituted Township
Ninety-Six.
Mount Pleasant v. Beckwith, 100 U.
S. 514, and
Mobile v. Watson, 116 U.
S. 289, are cases in which municipal corporations had
incurred indebtedness and afterward their municipal organization
was destroyed and their territory added to other municipalities. It
was argued in those cases, as it is argued in this, that such
alteration or destruction of the subordinate governmental
Page 200 U. S. 254
divisions was a proper exercise of legislative power, to which
creditors had to submit. The argument did not prevail. It was
answered, as we now answer it, that such power, extensive though it
is, is met and overcome by the provision of the Constitution of the
United States which forbids a state from passing any law impairing
the obligation of contracts.
See also Shapleigh v. San
Angelo, 167 U. S. 646. And
this is not a limitation, as plaintiffs in error seem to think it
is, of the legislative power over subordinate municipalities,
either over their change or destruction. It only prevents the
exercise of that power's being used to defeat contracts previously
entered into.
It is further contended by plaintiffs in error that this is, in
effect, a suit against the state. The argument to support this
contention is that, if the auditor and treasurer are not corporate
authorities, as it is insisted the circuit court decided, they are
necessarily "state officers, and, being state officers, this
proceeding is an attempt to require of the state the performance of
her contract." The reasoning by which this is attempted to be
sustained is rather roundabout. It is based in part on distinctions
which, it is contended, were made by the circuit court, and on the
assumption that the circuit court decided that the levy of taxes
prescribed by section 9 of the statute under which the bonds were
issued was a levy by the legislature, and the taxing officers state
officers. This proceeding, hence, it is argued, becomes a
proceeding against the state, and "the relief sought is to require
of the state the performance of
her contract" (italics
ours) by the coercion of her officers to the performance of duties
which she has, by a statute, forbidden. And, it is said, it may be
admitted that such statute "is unconstitutional, and therefore
void;" nevertheless, the relief asked against the officers is
"affirmative official action," which the political body of which
they are the mere servants has "forbidden them to exercise," and it
is not competent for a court to compel them to exercise, because of
the immunity of the state from suit under the Constitution of the
United States.
Page 200 U. S. 255
To sustain these contentions, an elaborate argument is presented
and a number of cases are cited. The most direct of the cases are
Louisiana v. Junel, 107 U. S. 711;
Hagood v. Southern, 117 U. S. 52;
Rolston v. Missouri Fund Comm'rs, 120
U. S. 411;
In re Ayers, 123 U.
S. 443;
Pennoyer v. McConnaughy, 140 U. S.
1. It would make this opinion too long to review these
cases. Nor is it necessary. It is enough to say that they do not
sustain the contentions of plaintiffs in error.
Judgment affirmed.