In 1848, the Legislature of Ohio incorporated certain of its
citizens under the name of the Ohio & Pennsylvania Railroad
Company, and in 1849, the Legislature of Pennsylvania incorporated
the same company by the same style, and adopted the act of
Ohio.
In 1849, the Legislature of Pennsylvania exempted from taxation,
except for state purposes, the certificates of loan theretofore
issued or which might be thereafter issued by the City of Allegheny
amongst others in payment of a subscription to the capital stock of
the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, or to the capital stock of the
Ohio & Pennsylvania Railroad Company.
Page 65 U. S. 365
The charter of the last-named company had previously authorized
the city corporation of the City of Allegheny to subscribe for an
amount of the stock not exceeding two hundred thousand dollars.
By virtue of two ordinances, and a supplement thereto, two
hundred bonds of one thousand dollars each, with coupons attached,
were executed and delivered to the company. They bore date January
1, 1850.
On the 14th of April, 1852, another act was passed by the
legislature, providing
"That the City of Allegheny is hereby authorized to increase its
subscription to the capital stock of the Ohio & Pennsylvania
Railroad Company to an amount not exceeding the subscription
heretofore made by said city &c.; provided no bonds for the
payment of stock subscribed, as aforesaid, shall be issued of a
less denomination than one hundred dollars."
On the 19th of June, 1852, an ordinance was passed authorizing
the mayor to subscribe for four thousand shares, equal to two
hundred thousand dollars, &c. This ordinance was never
recorded, but the stock was subscribed for and the bonds
issued.
On the 8th of May, 1850, the legislature had passed an act
limiting the debt of the City of Allegheny to $500,000, exclusive
of the first subscription above mentioned. The debt of the city had
reached that limit prior to the second subscription.
These acts of the legislature, mentioned in the first part of
this note, conferred authority on the corporation of the City of
Allegheny to issue certificates of loan, otherwise called bonds,
with coupons, as was done, to pay for its first and second
subscriptions to the capital stock of the Ohio & Pennsylvania
Railroad Company.
The limitation in the Act of 8th of May, 1850, only meant that
the city council, by its own authority, should not go into debt to
a greater amount than $500,000. But this restriction was not
binding on the legislature.
The circumstance that the ordinance of 13th of June, 1852, was
not recorded or published, does not invalidate the bonds. The
charter of the city requires that those ordinances only which were
passed under the seventh section of the charter should be recorded
and published. The ordinance in question did not belong to that
class.
This Court adopts the judgment of the courts of Pennsylvania
that the above acts of the legislature were not inconsistent with
the constitution of the state.
The nature of the case is explained in the head note of this
report, and fully set forth in the opinion of the Court.
Page 65 U. S. 367
MR. JUSTICE WAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case has been sent to this Court on a certificate of
division of opinion between the judges of the Circuit Court for the
Western District of Pennsylvania.
The plaintiff has sued the mayor and aldermen and citizens of
Allegheny City, in actions of debt, upon several coupons of bonds
which were issued by that corporation, and made payable to the Ohio
& Pennsylvania Railroad Company, in payment for two
subscriptions, of two hundred thousand dollars each, to the stock
of the latter.
It was agreed by the parties upon the trial of the cause to
submit it for the opinion of the court upon a statement, in the
nature of a special verdict, and that verdicts upon the coupons
should be entered accordingly.
The judges, however, in their consideration of the case,
differed in opinion on the following points:
"Whether the several acts of assembly recited in the case stated
conferred any
Page 65 U. S. 368
authority on the corporation of the City of Allegheny to issue
bonds with coupons, as had been done, or whether the same are
altogether null and void, by reason of such want of authority, or
for any other irregularity connected with their issue."
It is admitted that the bonds were issued and delivered in
payment for subscriptions of stock to the Ohio & Pennsylvania
Railroad Company; that they were made payable to that company or
its order; that the company had negotiated them to raise funds to
construct the road, and that the road had been completed in
conformity with the conditions of the subscriptions of the
defendants.
The parties agree that the subscriptions had been made by the
authority of acts of the Legislature of the State of Pennsylvania,
in conformity with the charter of the railroad company, and were
intended to be in pursuance of resolutions and ordinances of the
select and common councils of the City of Allegheny.
The mayor was first instructed to subscribe for four thousand
shares of the capital stock of the Ohio & Pennsylvania Railroad
Company, to be paid for in bonds, with coupons attached for
interest, payable semiannually, the bonds having twenty-five years
to run. The railroad agreed to pay the interest upon the bonds
until the completion of the road, or so much of it as may be
adequate to pay the interest, and that the proceeds of the bonds
were to be applied to the construction of the road from the City of
Allegheny to the mouth of the Big Beaver River, about twenty-five
miles. And to secure the city and the bondholders, it was
stipulated, in addition to the legal obligations incurred in making
the subscription, that the stock, with the interest, earnings, and
dividends of the road, should be pledged to pay the interest, and
finally to redeem the bonds. Accordingly, two hundred bonds of
$1,000 were prepared, and were delivered to the railroad company,
on the 1st of January, 1850, and the city at the same time received
a certificate of four thousand shares. The coupons now sued upon
were a part of those which were attached to those bonds.
Page 65 U. S. 369
The second subscription was made in virtue of another act of the
Assembly of Pennsylvania, and in compliance with a resolution of
the city, dated June 19th, 1852. That act authorized the city to
increase its subscription to the capital stock of the railroad
company, to any amount not exceeding its first subscription,
upon the laws and conditions which had been prescribed for the
first; but it restrained the city from making an issue of
bonds of a less denomination than $100. The act also exempts the
stock from the payment of any tax in consequence of the payment of
any interest to stockholders, until the net earnings of the company
shall realize six percent per annum on the capital stock. The city
authorities passed an ordinance for this additional subscription,
but it was not published in compliance with the charter of the
city, nor was it recorded in the manner which it is said the
charter requires the city ordinances to be. For those neglects, it
is said the ordinance was null and void, and that the city had not
the power to make the second subscription under the act of the
legislature. But the city bonds were issued, and the subscription
was made. It is also objected that the ordinance was endorsed upon
the bonds, without any proviso requiring the railroad company to
pay the interest upon them according to its stipulation. But it is
admitted that the road was built first from the city to the Big
Beaver River, and afterwards completed to its termination on the
western border of Ohio, and thence to Chicago.
The city continues to hold its stock in the railroad company. It
has received five dividends from the company -- one of $14,000,
another of $16,000, another of $12,000 -- which were retained by
the company by the consent of the city, and had been appropriated
to the payment of the coupons for interest; and that $4,000 of
those dividends had been paid in cash, and others in stock. Prior
to the city's second subscription, it appears that the debt of the
city had become $500,000, the limit prescribed by an act of the
legislature. That act is
"that it should not be lawful for the councils of the city,
either directly or indirectly, by bonds or certificates of loan of
indebtedness, or by virtue of any contract, or by any means or
device whatsoever,
Page 65 U. S. 370
to increase its indebtedness to a sum which, added to the
existing debt, shall exceed $500,000, exclusive of the subscription
of $200,000 to the Ohio & Pennsylvania Railroad Company."
It is admitted, also, that the stock of the city in the railroad
company had been voted at all elections of it by order of the city,
except in a single instance, when the city refused to vote. The
city was incorporated on the 11th April, 1840, with all the powers
and authorities then vested by law in the select and common
councils of the city of Philadelphia.
We have given the agreed case of the parties in every particular
in any way bearing upon the points about which the judges in the
court below were divided in opinion, and will now consider
them.
The subscriptions of the defendants were made under the acts of
the 5th April, 1849, and that of the 14th April, 1852. The first
permitted a subscription of $200,000, to be paid for by
"certificates of loan." The second permitted the increase of it, to
an amount not exceeding the first, without, however, having altered
the manner in which the corporate credit of the city was to be used
for the payment of the second subscription. We infer from the words
of the act, and do not see how it can be otherwise, that it was to
be paid for by the
same certificates of indebtedness which
the legislature had directed to be issued and used for the payment
of the first subscription. The act is,
"That the City of Allegheny is hereby authorized to increase its
subscription to the capital stock of the said Ohio &
Pennsylvania Railroad Company to any amount not exceeding the
subscription heretofore made by the said city, upon the terms and
conditions prescribed in regard to said previous subscription;
provided no bond for the payment of the subscription shall be
issued of a less denomination than one hundred dollars."
This proviso is merely an inhibition upon the city to use for
the payment of the subscription any certificate of indebtedness
less than $100, and the words "no bond for the payment of the
subscription shall be issued," when considered in connection with
the act authorizing the second subscription, that it should be made
"upon the same terms and conditions
Page 65 U. S. 371
of the first," cannot be interpreted into a permission or
direction of the legislature, that the city might use in payment
for the stock any other legal or commercial instrument than
"certificates of loan." Such certificates are well and
distinctly known and recognized in the usages and business of
lending and borrowing money, in the transactions of commerce, also,
and for raising money upon the contract in them for industrial
enterprises and internal improvements. They were formerly more
generally known than otherwise as "certificates of loan," with
certificates for interest attached, payable to the bearer at
particular times within the year, at some particular place, being a
part of the contract, from which they must be cut off to be
presented for payment. But now, in their use, they are called
bonds, with coupons for interest -- a coupon bond -- coupon being
the interest payable separable from the certificate of loan, for
the purpose of receiving it. But neither the instrument nor coupon
has any of the legal characteristics of a bond, either with or
without a penalty, though both are written acknowledgements for the
payment of a debt.
Such certificates of loan have been resorted to for many years
in the United States to raise money for internal improvements. They
were as well known and used in Pennsylvania as elsewhere, and were
permitted to be issued in that state, by just such enactments as
those which authorized the City of Allegheny to subscribe to the
capital stock of the Ohio & Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Such
an issue was applicable to the subject matter of legislation. The
city solicited the state to be allowed to make the subscriptions.
It was the policy of the state to grant the application. The
subscriptions were made under the act of the 5th April, 1849, and
that of the 14th April, 1852. The first permits a subscription of
$200,000, which was to be paid for by certificates of loan. The Act
of the 14th April, 1852, allowed the increase of the subscription
to an amount not exceeding the first, upon the same terms and
conditions. It was the understanding of the legislature, of the
city, and of the railroad company, that the subscriptions were to
be paid for by the corporate credit of the city by the issue of
"certificates of loan." That appears
Page 65 U. S. 372
from the act of 1849, authorizing it, before the subscription
was in fact made. That act provides, in anticipation of its being
done, that the certificates of loan which shall hereafter be issued
by the City of Allegheny in payment of any subscription to the Ohio
& Pennsylvania Railroad Company, were to be exempt from all
taxation, except for state purposes. The railroad company took from
the city certificates of loan in payment of the subscriptions, sold
them as such, and with the money built the road. Such a concurrence
of contemporaneous action by all the parties interested in the
subject matter of legislation, proves that it was the intention of
the legislature that the authority given to the city to make the
subscriptions to the railroad company, had been carried out just as
it was meant to have been.
We answer, therefore, that the several acts of assembly stated
in the agreed case did confer authority on the corporation of the
City of Allegheny to issue certificates of loan, otherwise bonds
with coupons, as was done, to pay for its first and second
subscriptions to the capital stock of the Ohio & Pennsylvania
Railroad Company.
We will now inquire whether the bonds or certificates of loan
which were issued are null and void "for any irregularity connected
with their issue."
It is said there were two irregularities which made them so. The
first is that the debt of the city had reached its limit of
$500,000 prior to the second subscription. The second is that the
city ordinance authorizing the issue for the payment of the
subscriptions was null and void, from not having been published in
conformity with the charter of the city.
The first objection depends upon the proper construction of the
Act of 8th May, 1850, section 4, in connection with the Act of the
14th April, 1852, which authorized the second subscription. The
first declares that the indebtedness of the city should not be made
to exceed five hundred thousand dollars, exclusive of the
subscription of two hundred thousand dollars to the railroad
company; and it is urged, that the Act of 14 April, 1852, though it
authorizes the city to make a second subscription of two hundred
thousand dollars, does not permit
Page 65 U. S. 373
the city to increase its debt to a larger sum than seven hundred
thousand dollars, to which it was limited by the first act of 1850.
The objection has arisen from a misconception of the 4th section of
the act of 1850. It provides that it shall not be lawful
for
the councils of the City of Allegheny, either directly or
indirectly, or by bonds, certificates, or loans, or of
indebtedness, or by virtue of any contract, or by any other means
or device whatsoever, to increase the indebtedness of the said
city, in a sum which, added to the existing debt, shall, taken
together, exceed five hundred thousand dollars, exclusive of the
subscription of two hundred thousand dollars to the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company, meaning, obviously, that no increase of debt
should be made by the councils beyond the sum of $500,000, but not
intending that the legislature might not authorize an increase of
it beyond that amount, as it had previously done by authorizing the
first subscription to the railroad company. The same political
power which allowed the first subscription could, at a succeeding
session of the legislature, give authority to the city to make a
second. Such authority was given by the act of the 14th April,
1852. The city councils could not under its charter have made
either the first or second subscription without authority from the
legislature,
but by its charter it could contract debts for the
purposes of its incorporation to a larger amount than
$500,000. When, then, the legislature was called upon to
authorize the city to make the first subscription, increasing its
indebtedness two hundred thousand dollars, beyond what the city
might have owed then for other purposes, it was thought prudent, as
well for the protection of the citizens of Allegheny as for those
who might purchase these certificates of stock with coupons, to
declare that the councils of the city should not thereafter, by
virtue of their charter authority to contract debts, by
any device whatever, increase its amount to more than five hundred
thousand dollars. And as it has turned out, judging from the
attitude of the mayor, aldermen, and citizens of Allegheny in this
suit, it must be admitted to have been upon the part of the
Legislature of Pennsylvania a very commendable precautionary act of
legislation.
Page 65 U. S. 374
Having thus disposed of the first irregularity imputed to the
councils of Allegheny, in making their issue for the payment of the
second subscription, we proceed to the second.
It is that the ordinance of the city directing the issue for the
payment of the second subscription had not been recorded within
thirty days. It is admitted in the stated case that it had not
been.
By the 8th section of the charter of the City of Allegheny, it
is provided, that in order that a knowledge of the laws,
ordinances, regulations, and constitutions of the city, authorized
by the seventh section of the charter, may at all times be had and
obtained, and the publications thereof at all times be known and
ascertained, such and so many of them as shall not be published in
one or more of the public newspapers published in the city, or in
such other way as the select and common councils may direct, within
fifteen days after these laws severally passed &c., and also
recorded in the office for the recording of deeds &c., within
thirty days after these laws passed &c., shall be null and
void.
Now it does not require a very careful examination of the
section to determine that it can have no bearing upon the ordinance
directing the issue for the payment of the second subscription of
the city to the Ohio & Pennsylvania Railroad Company, for in
terms it is only applicable to ordinances &c.,
authorized
by the 7th section of the charter, and that did not permit
such a subscription to be made, and paid for by the city stock, as
the ordinance for that purpose was intended. It could only be made
by the authority of the legislature. In other words, the
legislature enlarged the powers of the councils of Allegheny, to do
what it could not do by charter. Besides, if the section was not
limited to such ordinances &c., as are
authorized by the
7th section of the charter, and those words were not in it, it
could have no application to an ordinance of the city passed for a
special purpose to carry out an act of the legislature, outside of
the charter, as was the case here. We have determined that the acts
of the legislature have been carried out by the city in the way
they should have been done. Neither the ordinance, nor the stock
issued by
Page 65 U. S. 375
the city, are deficient in any substantial particular. The
latter has every formality of the corporation to give them
currency. They were circulated for ten years, and were constantly
acknowledged by the city, as its bonds, for the purposes for which
they were issued. They are now in the hands of
bona fide
transferees, to whom they must be paid according to their terms. It
would be inequitable, if the city could repudiate them at all, and
more especially, if that were allowed to be done upon the ground of
any fault in the corporation in their issue. But we will not
enlarge further upon the case. The points of objection of which we
have treated have already been before this Court in several cases,
and they are worthy of perusal.
See the cases of
Commissioners v.
Wallace, 21 How. 239;
Zabriskie
v. Cleveland, Columbus & Cincinnati Railroad
Company, 23 How. 381.
We have not, in our treatment of this certified division of
opinion, discussed that position of the learned counsel who argued
it for the defendant, that the acts of the Legislature of
Pennsylvania authorizing the issue of the certificates of loan were
unconstitutional.
Agreeing with him in the main, as to the foundations upon which
the correctness of legislation should be tested, and the objects
for which it ought to be approved, we cannot, with the respect
which we have for the judiciary of his state, discuss the imputed
unconstitutionality of the acts upon which the subscriptions were
made to the Ohio & Pennsylvania Railroad Company; it having
been repeatedly decided by the judges of the courts of
Pennsylvania, including its supreme court, that acts for the same
purposes as those are, which we have been considering, were
constitutional.
We shall order it to be certified, that the issue of bonds with
coupons, in the case stated, are not null and void, but that it was
done under the authority of constitutional acts of the State of
Pennsylvania, in the case stated, and further, that they are not
null and void for any irregularity connected with that issue by the
City of Allegheny.
Page 65 U. S. 376
ORDER
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western
District of Pennsylvania, and on the point or question upon which
the judges of the said circuit court were opposed in opinion, and
which was certified to this Court for its opinion, agreeably to the
act of Congress in such case made and provided, and was argued by
counsel. On consideration whereof, it is the opinion of this Court
that the issue of bonds with coupons, in the case stated, are not
null and void, but that it was done under the authority of
constitutional acts of the State of Pennsylvania, in the case
stated, and further, that they are not null and void for any
irregularity connected with that issue by the City of Allegheny.
Whereupon it is now here ordered and adjudged that it be so
certified to the said circuit court.