A change in the charter of a municipal corporation, in whole or
part, by an amendment of its provisions, or the substitution of a
new charter in place of the old one, embracing substantially the
same corporations and the same territory, will not be deemed, in
the absence of express legislative declaration otherwise, to affect
the identity of the corporation or to relieve it from its previous
liabilities, although different powers are possessed under the
amended or new charter, and different officers administer its
affairs.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
By an Act passed on the 2d of March, 1839, by the then
Territory, now State, of Florida, the City of Pensacola, at the
time a preexisting corporation, was rechartered and its powers were
vested in a mayor and board of aldermen, who were at all times to
continue "to act in their respective functions" until the election
and qualification of their successors in office. Among the powers
conferred by the charter was the power to borrow money, not
exceeding $5,000 a year, and to levy taxes and provide for their
collection, with a limitation of the amount to be levied upon real
estate to three-fourths of one percent.
In December, 1850, by an amendatory act, these limitations were
repealed and a larger loan and a greater rate of taxation upon real
estate were allowed. By a further amendatory act passed on the 3d
of January, 1853, the mayor and aldermen, with the consent of a
majority of the corporation, were authorized
Page 93 U. S. 267
to subscribe, in the name of the city, any amount of money which
they might deem necessary to any railroad leading from the city,
and for the purpose of procuring the amount of the subscription,
were empowered to borrow the same and impose a tax upon real estate
within its limits not exceeding two percent on the assessed value
of the property. By another act passed in the same month, the
Alabama and Florida Railroad Company was chartered to construct a
railroad from some point on Pensacola Bay (the city being the point
afterwards selected) northward to the boundary line of Florida and
Alabama, and there to connect with another line of road to be
constructed from the City of Montgomery, Ala.
Under the Act of Jan. 3, 1853, the City of Pensacola subscribed
$250,000 to the capital stock of this railroad company, and in
payment of the same executed and delivered to the company five
hundred bonds of $500 each, payable twenty years after date, with
interest at the rate of seven percent per annum, payable
semiannually on the first days of January and July, at such bank in
the city of New York as the treasurer might direct, on the
surrender of the coupons for such interest attached to the
bonds.
The plaintiff is the holder of sixteen hundred and ninety of
these coupons, now past due, and alleges that the city has never
made any provision for their payment at any bank in the City of New
York or at any other place; that until about the 1st of January,
1871, the city received the coupons in payment of taxes, although
the taxes assessed were never sufficient to absorb the coupons as
they matured, but that since that time, the city has refused, and
still refuses, to recognize its obligation to pay them. Several
judgments have been recovered by other parties upon coupons of the
same kind against the city, but executions issued thereon have been
returned wholly unsatisfied because the city possessed no property
out of which they could be made.
The Constitution of Florida, adopted in 1868, provided that the
legislature should "establish a uniform system of county, township,
and municipal government." In pursuance of this requirement, the
legislature, in 1868 and 1869, passed acts "to provide for the
incorporation of cities and towns, and to establish
Page 93 U. S. 268
a uniform system of municipal government" in the state. These
acts authorized the establishment of a municipal government, with
corporate powers and privileges by the voluntary action of the male
inhabitants of any hamlet, village, or town in the state, not less
than one hundred in number, and also provided for the
reorganization of existing municipal corporations under their
provisions. Under these acts, the charter of the city was
surrendered and attempts were made to reorganize its government;
but these attempts failed because the reorganization was not made
within the periods prescribed. In consequence of such failure and
because the acts provided for the cessation of corporate authority
in case the reorganization was not effected within the periods
designated, the citizens residing within the limits of the city
proceeded to establish a municipal government with corporate
authority, under the act of 1869, as citizens not having any
existing corporation were authorized to do. Such establishment or
reorganization of government having been effected, the plaintiff
applied to its officers for the payment of the coupons held by him,
but the payment was refused, they insisting that they were officers
of a new and distinct corporation from the one which issued the
bonds and coupons mentioned, and that the present corporation was
not responsible for them. The plaintiff thereupon filed the present
bill, asking for a decree for the amount of the coupons held by him
against the City of Pensacola, and that the city be compelled to
levy a tax upon real and personal property within its limits
sufficient to satisfy such decree and costs, and for general
relief. Upon demurrer, the bill was dismissed, and on appeal the
case is brought here for our consideration.
The ancient doctrine that upon the repeal of a private
corporation, its debts were extinguished and its real property
reverted to its grantors, and its personal property vested in the
state, has been so far modified by modern adjudications that a
court of equity will now lay hold of the property of a dissolved
corporation and administer it for the benefit of its creditors and
stockholders. The obligation of contracts, made whilst the
corporation was in existence, survives its dissolution, and the
contracts may be enforced by a court of equity so far as to
Page 93 U. S. 269
subject, for their satisfaction, any property possessed by the
corporation at the time. In the view of equity, its property
constitutes a trust fund pledged to the payment of the debts of
creditors and stockholders, and if a municipal corporation, upon
the surrender or extinction in other ways of its charter, is
possessed of any property, a court of equity will equally take
possession of it for the benefit of the creditors of the
corporation. In this case, it is averred in the bill that the City
of Pensacola, upon the surrender of its original charter, did not
possess any property.
It is not necessary, however, in the view we take of the
proceedings for the reorganization of the city government, to
consider the effect of an absolute repeal of the charter of a
municipal corporation upon its obligations. It is sufficient that
here, in our judgment, there was a continuation of the corporation
of Pensacola, with its original rights of property and obligations,
not a new and distinct creation of corporate capacity and
liability.
The constitution of 1868 only designed to secure uniformity in
county, township, and municipal government. It contemplated no
change in existing liabilities. The acts of 1868 and 1869, passed
to carry into effect the constitutional provision, aimed solely to
secure this uniformity. They do not even allude to previous
liabilities. Although a municipal corporation, so far as it is
invested with subordinate legislative powers for local purposes, is
a mere instrumentality of the state for the convenient
administration of government; yet when authorized to take stock in
a railroad company and issue its obligations in payment of the
stock, it is to that extent to be deemed a private corporation, and
its obligations are secured by all the guaranties which protect the
engagements of private individuals. The inhibition of the
Constitution, which preserves against the interference of a state
the sacredness of contracts, applies to the liabilities of
municipal corporations created by its permission, and although the
repeal or modification of the charter of a corporation of that kind
is not within the inhibition, yet it will not be admitted, where
its legislation is susceptible of another construction, that the
state has in this way sanctioned an evasion of or escape from
liabilities,
Page 93 U. S. 270
the creation of which it authorized. When, therefore, a new form
is given to an old municipal corporation or such a corporation is
reorganized under a new charter, taking in its new organization the
place of the old one, embracing substantially the same corporators
and the same territory, it will be presumed that the legislature
intended a continued existence of the same corporation, although
different powers are possessed under the new charter and different
officers administer its affairs, and in the absence of express
provision for their payment otherwise, it will also be presumed in
such case that the legislature intended that the liabilities as
well as the rights of property of the corporation in its old form
should accompany the corporation in its reorganization. That such
was the intention of the State of Florida in the present case we
have no doubt; to suppose otherwise would be to impute to her an
insensibility to the claims of morality and justice, which nothing
in her history warrants.
The principle which applies to the state would seem to be
applicable to cases of this kind. Obligations contracted by its
agents continue against the state, whatever changes may take place
in its constitution of government. "The new government," says
Wheaton,
"succeeds to the fiscal rights, and is bound to fulfill the
fiscal obligations, of the former government. It becomes entitled
to the public domain and other property of the state, and is bound
to pay its debts previously contracted."
Inter.Law 30. So a change in the charter of a municipal
corporation, in whole or part, by an amendment of its provisions,
or the substitution of a new charter in place of the old one,
should not be deemed, in the absence of express legislative
declaration otherwise, to affect the identity of the corporation or
to relieve it from its previous liabilities.
In a case recently decided by the Circuit Court of the United
states for the Northern District of Florida,
Milner's
Administrator v. City of Pensacola, 2 Woods 632, the effect of
the legislation of the state upon the corporate existence of the
City of Pensacola was examined. The court held and sustained its
conclusion in an able and well considered opinion, that the
reorganization of the city under the act of 1869 was simply the
assumption by the city of the new powers and privileges
Page 93 U. S. 271
which the act conferred, and was not the creation of a new
corporation -- a conclusion which accords with our judgment.
It follows from the views we have expressed that the remedy of
the plaintiff was not by a suit in equity, but by an action at law
against the present corporation upon the coupons, and if judgment
be recovered thereon and be not paid, then by mandamus upon its
officers to compel them to raise the requisite funds for its
payment in the manner prescribed by its charter.
Decree affirmed without prejudice to the plaintiff's right
to proceed at law.
NOTE --
Jones v. Pensacola, appeal from the Circuit
Court of the United states for the Northern District of Florida,
was argued at the same time and by the same counsel as the
preceding case.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is similar in all essential particulars to that of
Broughton v. Pensacola, and, upon the authority of the
decision therein rendered, the decree is affirmed without prejudice
to the plaintiff's right to proceed at law.