68 Iowa 265 | Iowa | 1885
I. The questions for decision in this case arise upon the pleadings, which are voluminous. The petition, among other things, alleges and shows that the tax in question was voted to the Chicago, Clinton, Dubuque & Minnesota Railroad Company, to aid in the construction of a
II. The controlling question presented by the case is this: May taxes be collected which were voted to a corporation to aid in the construction of a railroad, after the corporation has transferred its road in pursuance of a purpose entertained from the beginning, of which public notice was given to the voters before the election? The position will not be questioned that a tax in aid of a railroad corporation cannot be voted, levied and collected except upon a substantial compliance with the statute authorizing such proceedings. This statute (Chapter 123, Acts Sixteenth Gen. Assem.) provides that the tax-payers shall receive stock of the company building the road for the taxes paid by them.
In a recent case (Manning v. Mathews, 66 Iowa, 675,) we held that the transfer of the railroad would defeat the collection of taxes voted to aid in its construction. We expressed our views of the law upon that' point in the following lan guage: “The statute, in providing for-the enforced contribu
In the case before us, as shown by the answer of defendants, the railroad has been teansferred, and stock in the com
III. Defendants show in their answer that the intended transfer of the road, and the fact that it was built by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, with the purpose of subsequently acquiring it, were known to the voters of the township prior to the election. It is insisted that the tax-payers, having remained silent until the railroad was built, cannot afterwards object to the collection of the taxes. This would possibly be true if the tax-payers, under the statute, were authorized to receive no other benefits than those flowing from the construction of the road. But they are entitled to receive stock which shall give them an interest in the railroad. If they are deprived of this by the voluntary act of the parties claiming the benefit of the tax, they fail to secure tile very consideration for which the tax was voted.
IV. The statute authorized the electors to vote the taxes, and the corporation to receive them, on condition that stock in the company should be issued for the taxes paid. We cannot recognize the right of the electors and the corporation to set aside this provision by agreement or waiver, and to vote and appropriate taxes for the construction of the road, without giving to the tax-payers stock in the corporation which slialL secure to them an interest in the road. Surely this would be most gross injustice to the minority of the electors who voted against the tax, and for this reason, with others, it ought not to be permitted.
We reach the conclusion that the judgment of the circuit court ought to be
Affirmed.