4 Blackf. 208 | Ind. | 1836
This is a petition filed by the board of commissioners of the county of Dearborn in the Circuit Court of that county.
The commissioners in substance state, that by an act of the general assembly of the state, entitled “An act providing for the re-location of the seat of justice in the county of Dearborn and for other purposes,” passed in the year 1835, certain commissioners were appointed to re-locate the ¿eat of justice of Dearborn county; that a majority of the commissioners so appointed, met at the time and place designated in the .act, and being sworn, &c., after having viewed the different sites, &c., adjourned until the 18th of May, 1835; that on that day they again convened, and proceeded from said 18th of May until the 20th of said month, to consider sites at or near the centre of said county of Dearborn, and all other situations and sites offered for their consideration, and having also taken into view and paid due regard to the present and probable future population of said county, and a more suitable situation and convenient site in the opinion of said commissioners for the seat of justice in said county not being found, they, the commissioners, did then and there re-locate the seat of justice for said county on the land, &c. adjoining the town of Wilmington in said county, to wit, on, &c.; that- the said commissioners did on said 20th of May, agreeably to the provisions of the said act of the general assembly, certify their proceedings and re-location under their hands and seals to the record-er
Walter Armstrong and others, the appellants, entered their appearance as defendants to said- motion, and pleaded actio non, because they say, that by the provisidns of an act of the general assembly of this state, approved 26th January, 1827, entitled “An act for the re-locatiori of the seat of justice in the county of Dearborn,” certain commissioners were appointed to re-locate the seat of justice of said county; that the said commissioners were authorised to receive donations to erect the necessary public buildings at the site they should select as such seat of justice, and to take the necessary bonds and deeds from the donors so as to enforce the contracts. They aver that a majority of said commissioners did agreeably to said act meet, &c., on, &c., and after taking the oath, &c., proceed to the discharge of their duties, and did on, &c., finally and permanently establish the seat of justice of said county in the old town of Lawrenceburgh, where the court-house now stands; that the commissioners did then and there in writing, &c., certify to the recorder of said county, to be by him re
There was a general demurrer to this plea, and a judgment sustaining the demurrer. To reverse that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
Together with this case, a bill in chancery praying an injunction, and filed by the appellants in the case just stated, against the appellees and others, is also submitted. The injunction was refused, and the bill on demurrer dismissed for the want of equity. The matters charged in the bill, as the ground for the injunction and for relief, ar.e the same used in the plea to the petition. The opinion we pronounce will be decisive of each case.
In these cases there are presented to our consideration several important questions, which justly demand and have received the most careful and deliberate attention. Although we regard the questions before us to be important, we are of opinion that an application of established principles to the facts disclosed, strips them of a difficulty in their settlement, with which, by the ingenious and elaborate arguments of counsel, they have been clothed. Before we proceed to the examination of the positions taken by the appellants, to reverse the judgments of the Circuit Court, wo will recur to some principles inseparably connected with a correct view of these cases, and then notice the two acts of the general assembly of the state, supposed to be in conflict with each other.
The principal question before us involves the rightful exercise, by the legislature, of the power to locate the seat of justice of a county. That power is not denied, indeed it cannot be denied; but it is contended, that it has been so exercised in
The re-location of a seat of justice in a county, when demanded by the people of such county, with a view to the advancement of public interests and convenience, is a duty from which a legislature could not shrink. If after the location of a seat of justice, and its continuanbe for many years, individual interests should become identified in its permanency, but these be opposed by the paramount interests and convenience of the public, and a re-location be made,—what is the situation of such individual interests, if deteriorated and affected in value by such re-location? Is the public bound to repair losses and afford indemnity? This question can only be answered in the negative. Such losses would be consequential
With these remarks upon the power of the legislature over public corporations such as counties, we will proceed to the' examination of the two acts of the legislature which are brought before us. As the act of 1827 is that on which the appellants base their claim, we will precede its examination by a general and indisputable proposition, which is, that if the act itself did not create a contract with the appellants, or empower the commissioners appointed by it to enter into such contract, in locating the seat of justice, and such contract was entered into, the commissioners transcended their powers, and the contract is invalid. We shall cite such portions of the act as may seem applicable to the question of contract.
The first section appoints the commissioners and thus defines their duties—“To locate said seat of justice for said county, as near the centre thereof as the situation of the land and the interests of the county will admit, having due regard to the present and probable future population thereof: provided, said commissioners shall have the right to view every other site equally near the geographical centre with Laiorenccburgh, the centre inclusive, and fix on the site most eligible within said bounds; and if the commissioners cannot select a site more convenient for the county* the seat shall be and remain at the town of Lawrenceburgh.” In this provision, there is no authority-given to the commissioners to make the location dependent on a contract, nor are they authorised to make a contract. The authority to locate the seat of justice is specific, and only controlled by a discretion limited to the situation of the land, the interests of the county with reference to
If such be the extent of the authority given to the commissioners, it is palpable that they could not make the location the subject of contract. If a contract had been intended by the act, we may well presume that language expressive of that intention would have been used. But it would be an insult to the legislature, to suppose that such an intention was entertained. We cannot indulge the idea, that in a question of such moment, as the public interest and convenience of the people of that county in the place in which the Circuit Court, the Probate Court, and the sessions of the board doing county business are to be holden, and all business affecting the great interests of a county is to be transacted,—-the legislature could commit such interests to the arbitrament of dollars and cents. Such a conclusion would presume that body unfaithful to the trust confided to it by the constitution.
We think it cannot be seriously contended, that a contract is created, or authority to contract for the location of the seat of justice given, by the second section. That simply empowers the commissioners to receive all donations of land for the site of said seat of justice, and all donations which may be made to defray the expense of erecting the necessary public buildings for the use of said county, and to take all necessary public bonds and deeds to secure the faithful performance of such contracts. The commissioners are to receive all donations of land, &c. for the site of said seat of justice, &c. This language is plain and unambiguous, and the true interpretation of the section will be perhaps correctly reached, by answers to a question it presents. • At what time prior or subsequent to the location, are these donations contemplated to be made? Undoubtedly after the location; for until that was made, the commissioners had no authority to accept or receive donations. To what purposes were these donations to be applied? The section itself furnishes the answer—that of land, for the site of said seat of justice, and those of money, &c., to defray the expense of erecting the necessary public buildings for the use of said oounty. Had the location depended on donations, their
It would thus seem that the commissioners were not authorised to enter into a contract, nor were they authorised tb make the location of the seat of justice dependent on donations. If, however, they did enter into a contract, which is not shown, it is clear that the appellants, having a perfect knowledge from the act of the powers of the commissioners, could not, if those powers were exceeded, avail themselves of a supposed benefit or right arising from an act by the commissioners, itself an evident excess of the powers committed to them. The fund commissioners are authorised to borrow money, and the maximum amount of interest they are to give is fixed. The act appointing the’ commissioners and defining their duties, is submitted to those from whom they wish to obtain loans, and is itself, in the event of a contract, a part of the contract. If these commissioners should contract for a loan at 6 percent., when the act only authorises them to give 5 per cent-., no one would contend that the contract at 6 per cent.was obligatory upon the state. This case is directly parallel to that bfefore us.
There remains to be noticed but one other provision of the act under review. This is found in the sixth section, and thus reads: “So soon as the public buildings shall be completed in the manner aforesaid, at the place so designated, the same shall be forever thereafter the permanent seat of justice of said county of Dearborn,” &c. Argument touching this provision
We are now arrived, pursuing the course indicated, to the consideration of the appellants’ positions. The first is, that the act of 1835 is unconstitutional, being repugnant to the constitution of the United States, as it impairs the obligation of a contract.
This position is attempted to be sustained by urging that the act of 1827, and the proceedings under it, are a contract within the meaning of the constitution. Although it seems to have been once doubted, whether grants and contracts by a state, created directly by law, or made by some authorised agent in pursuance of a law, come within the prohibition of the constitution, yet it is settled that they are as much so as the contracts and grants of private persons; and the only question, in order to the operation of the constitutional prohibition, is, do such grants or contracts exist? 3 Story’s Comm. 257. 1 Kent’s Comm. 388.—Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch, 87. These authorities likewise establish, that where a law creates a contract, and absolute rights are vested under it, such rights cannot be divested by a repeal of that law. The judicial expositions have, however, confined the prohibition to contracts which respect property or some other object of value, and which confer rights capable of being asserted in a Court of justice; leaving the several states untrammelled in the exercise of sovereign power, in regulating their civil institutions adopted for internal government. See the above-cited authorities.—Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. Rep. 518, 629. Mr. Justice Story, treating of this distinction says, “The reason is, that it is only a mode of exercising public rights and public powers for the promotion of the general interest; and therefore it must, from its very nature, remain subject to the legislative will, so always, that private rights are not infringed or trenched upon.” 3 Story’s Comm. 361. The law thus presented is in entire accordance with that noticed in the remarks prefatory to the examination of the act of 1827; and it is
From the construction we have given to the act oí Io¿7, and. from the conclusion to which we have come, that the act did not create a contract, nor authorise one by the agents of the state, for the location of the seat of justice, it would seem unnecessary to pursue further the investigation of the appellants’ first position. As it is, however, pressed with much zeal, and sustained at least by ingenious argument, it may demand a few additional remarks.
If the location forever of the seat of justice at Lawrence-burgh, in consideration of the appellants erecting the courthouse, is not a contract, it is urged that it is a grant, and that the constitution protects all grants, franchises, immunities, &c. The latter conclusion may be conceded; but, from it, it does not necessarily follow that the appellants have had granted to them a franchise, immunity, or any right capable of being asserted in a Court of justice. It does not follow, because certain rights are protected by the constitution, that they are invested with them. This Court will never hesitate, when rights are shown to exist and are before it for protection, to extend that protection. We cannot, however, pass beyond the case before us, presume rights, and then afford protection. Now it is said the appellants have a right capable of being asserted in a Court of justice. What is that right? It is called a franchise. What is a franchise? They say, from the books, it is “ a right to have a fair or a market holden at a certain time and a certain place,” &c. Franchises are not only enjoyed in the instance presented, but exist in many other ways. The law regards them as valuable rights, and they cannot be invaded by legislative enactments. 3 Story’s Comm. 260. Let us inquire to what the right or franchise claimed by the appellants attaches. To the seat of justice of the county of Dearborn and its records. If the claim be available, it clothes the appellants with the power of controlling the general policy of the state, the rights of the people of that county, and the administration of justice in it. The state itself is stripped of one of the inherent and essential attributes of sovereignty. It is compelled,—however imposing its obligation,
We will now take up the second position. The act of 1835 is said to be unconstitutional, because it is in conflict with the 7th sect. 1st art. of the constitution of this state. That section declares “ that no man’s particular services shall be demanded, or property taken or applied to public use, without the consent, &c., or without a just compensation being made therefor.”
It is readily-admitted, that if the legislature should take or apply the property of a citizen to public use, it must make a just compensation for it, and that the act which authorises, the taking or application, should provide for the compensation. This has been done here; it is believed to be done in every state of the Union; and is the admitted law of England, when the appropriation of private property has been necessary to the public interest. But as the appellants, as seen, have had n& private property taken, &c., we canno't discover how this provision of the constitution has been violated. If the appellants-have suffered a loss by the change of the seat' of justice, such-loss, as previously remarked, is consequential, and cle'arly not the subject of compensation under the constitutional provision-cited. This is the proper construction of the constitution, and the only one of which it is susceptible. Callender v. Marsh, 1 Pick. R. 430.
We are therefore of opinion that the Circuit Court decided correctly, in sustaining the demurrer to the plea of the appellants, as well as in sustaining the demurrer to the bill in chancery, and in refusing the injunction
The judgment is affirmed with costs. To, be certified, &c.
Vide Elwell v. Ticker, Vol. 1 of these Rep. 235.—Blackwell v. The Board of Justices of L. County, 2 id. 143.