delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action to recover from the township of Santa Anna, established under the general township organization laws of Illinois, the amount of certain negotiable bonds, with interest coupons attached, signed by its supervisor and clerk, and purporting to have been issued by it, on the 1st day of October, 1867, “ under and by virtue of a law of the State of Illinois, entitled £ An act to amend the articles of association of the Danville, Urbana, Bloomington and Pekin Railroad .Company, and to extend the powers of and confer a charter upon the same,’ approved February 28,1867, and in accordance with the vote of the electors of said township, at the special election held July 21, 1866, in accordance with said act.” Each bond, also, recites that the faith of the township is “ pledged for the payment of said principal sum and interest.”
The Circuit Court sustained a demurrer to the declaration and amended declaration, and gave judgment for the township.
The act of February 28, 1867, empowered the railroad company to locate and construct a railroad from Pekin, in Tazewell County, through, or as near to as practicable, certain named towns, to the eastern boundary of the State of Illinois. For the purpose of aiding in its construction, authority was given to incorporated towns or townships in counties acting under the township organization law, along the route of the road, to subscribe to the capital stock of the company in any sum not exceeding $250,000.
By the 13th section of the act it is provided:
“ § 13. No such subscription shall be made until the question has been submitted to the legal voters of such incorporation, town, or township in which the subscription is proposed to be made; • and the clerk of each of said towns or townships is hereby required, upon the presentation of a petition signed by at least ten citizens, who are legal voters and tax-payers of such town or township for which he is clerk, and in which petition the amount proposed to be subscribed shall be stated, to post up'notices in at least three public places in each town' or town *358 ship; which notice shall be posted not less than thirty days before the day of holding such election, notifying the legal voters of such town or township to meet at the usual place of holding elections in. such town or township, or some other convenient place named in such notice, for the purpose of voting for or against such subscription: Provided, That where elections may have already been held, and the majority of the legal voters of. any township or incorporated town were in favor of a subscription to said railroad, then and in that case no other election need be had, and the amount so voted for shall be subscribed as in this act provided. And such elections are hereby declared- to be legal and valid, as though this act had been in force at the time thereof and all the provisions hereof had been complied with.”
The pleadings allege that on the 21st of July, 1866, the township of Santa Anna, through which the road passed, “ held a special election upon the question of subscribing the sum of $50,000 to the capital stock of said Danville, Urbana, Bloomington and Pekin Railroad Company, at which said election a majority of the legal voters of said township voted for and were in favor of a subscription to the capital stock of said railroad company, by the said township,” of the said sum; that, on the 1st of October, 1867, in pursuance of said vote, and of said act of February 28, 1867, the then supervisor of the township subscribed, in its name, the sum of $50,000, receiving from the railroad company, for the township, proper certificates of stock, and, in connection -with the township clerk, and in payment for such stock, executing and delivering to the company the bonds and coupons in suit; that the township, for nine consecutive years, regularly and annually assessed taxes to meet the interest on said bonds, and paid the same over without objection; that on the first day>of. December, 1868, the plaintiff purchased the bonds in suit at their par value from ope Tiernan, to whom they had been sold by the company ; that on the first Monday of September, 1869, and subsequently, the township, by its proper officers, participated, as a stockholder, in sundry meetings of the company’s stockholders; that on the 28th of October, 1871, its then supervisor caused *359 the bonds to be registered in the office of the auditor of public accounts of Illinois, who endorsed on each bond his certificate to the effect that it had been registered in his office pursuant to the act of April 16, 1869, to fund and provide for paying the railroad debts of counties, townships, cities, and towns; and that on the 1st day of July, 1874, tne township exchanged this stock for a like amount of stock in another corporation, the Indianapolis, Bloomington and Western Railroad Company, which latter stock, during the time the township has held and owned it, has been worth as much as fifty per cent, of its par value.
The record do|>s not disclose the particular ground upon which the Circuit Court sustained the demurrer, and gave judgment for the township. But w'e cannot understand how that result was possible, except upon the hypothesis that the act of February 2S, 1867, legalizing elections previously held, at which a majority of the legal voters of a township declared in favor of a subscription to the stock of this company, was unconstitutional. But the constitutionality of that very statute, in respect of the clause now before us, was directly sustained by this court in
St. Joseph Township
v.
Rogers,
In
Cowgill
v.
Long,
In
Keithsburg
v. Frick, above cited,
*361
In
Schofield
v.
Watkins,
These cases were all determined before the bonds in suit were issued. While they are not analogous in "every respect to the one before us, they seem to rest upon the principle that the legislature when not restricted by the Constitution, may, by retroactive statutes, legalize the unauthorized acts and proceedings of subordinate municipal agencies, where such acts and proceedings would have been valid if done under legislative sanction previously given. The decision in
St. Joseph Township
v.
Rogers,
only gave effect to principles announced by the State court prior to the issuing of the bonds. If, according to the law of Illinois, as declared by its highest court at the time' the bonds in. suit were issued, the act of February 28, 1867, was a valid exercise of legislative power, the rights of the purchasers or holders could not be affected merely by subsequent change of decision. For it is the long-established doctrine of this court — from which, as said recently in
Green County
v.
Conness,
If, however, we are in error in our interpretations of the decisions in
Cowgill
v.
Long, Schofield
v.
Watkins,
and
Keithsbxirg
v.
Frick,
it results that when the bonds were executed there was no decision of the State court in reference to the power of the legislature to enact the statute of February 28, 1867. In that case, the duty of this court is to determine, upon its independent judgment, what -was the law' of Illinois when the rights of the parties accrued. In
Burgess
v.
Seligman,
Assuming, then, for the purposes of this case, that the' question of' legislative power as here presented had not, when the bonds in suit were issued,, been finally determined by the State court, we perceive no reason to doubt the correctness of the decision upon this point in
St. Joseph Township
v.
Rogers.
It is not claimed that the constitution of Illinois, in terms, forbadé retrospective legislation. But the statute in question is supposed to be obnoxious to that clause which 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.” Numerous decisions of the State court, to which our attention was called in other cases, con-strue that provision as defining not simply the class of municipal officers upon whom the power of taxation,, for local purposes, may be conferred, but the purposes for which that power maybe. exerted. Those decisions are to the effect, that, within the meaning of the constitution, the corporate authorities of a township,-like Santa Anna, are the electors, and .that while the construction of a railroad, through or near the township, would- be a corporate purpose within the meaning of that instrument, a debt for that object could not be imposed upon it without -the consent of its corporate authorities, that is, without the consent of the electors. These principles fall far short of sustaining the proposition that the curative clause of the act of February 28, 1867, was unconstitutional; for, the legislature did not, in any just sense, impose a debt upon Santa Anna Township against the will of its corporate authorities, the electors. The' act embraces only townships which,- by a majority of their legal voters, at an election previously held, had declared for a subscription. That such majority was given at an election held by the township in the customary form is averred in the declaration and is admitted by the demurrer. The curative act only gave effect to the declared will of the electors. As the constitution of the State did not provide any particular inode in which the corporate authorities of a township should manifest their
*364
willingness or desire, to incur a municipal debt for railroad purposes, we perceive no reason why the action of the majority of legal voters, at an election held in advance of legislative action, might not be recognized by the legislature and constitute the basis of its subsequent assent to the- creation of such indebtedness, and its ratification of what had been done. In
Grenada County
v.
Brogden,
We infer from the arguments before us that the Circuit Court felt obliged by the decision in
Township of Elmwood
v.
Marcy,
*365
¥e are of opinion that the demurrer should have been overruled.
The judgment is reversed, with directions for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Confarr v. The Township of Santa Anna. In error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Illinois. The judgment in this case is, upon the authority of Anderson v. The Township of Santa Anna, just decided,
Reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in conformity with the opinion in that case.
