21 Pa. 37 | Pa. | 1853
The opinion of the Court was delivered, by
— This is a bill in equity by several citizens and taxable inhabitants of the county of Philadelphia, who complain that the defendants, commissioners of the county, have agreed to subscribe for twenty thousand shares of capital stock in the Sun-bury and Erie Railroad Company, at one hundred dollars for each share, and to pay for these shares are about to make and issue bonds in the name of the county, to the amount of two millions of dollars; pledging the faith and credit of the county for their payment. The bill avers that the large debt thus to be created will seriously impair the credit of the county, and augment the taxation
The answer admits fhat two of the Commissioners (being a majority) have agreed to subscribe for the stock as alleged in the ■bill, and that they intend to pay for it in bonds of the county, and they are well assured that they have the power by law to do so.
The facts being undisputed, the 'plaintiff’s counsel have laid before us the bill and answer, and moved us for a preliminary injunction. Whether we can grant it or not depends upon the construction to be given to the several statutes, which prescribe the duties and define the powers of the County Commissioners.
It is not pretended, and if it were, it could not be believed for a single moment, that the Commissioners of a county can pledge the property of their constituents for money to be invested in the stock of a railroad corporation, unless it be done in pursuance of some special statute. The general law of the land forbids that money shall be borrowed on the faith of the county for such a purpose, or that public funds already in the treasury shall be so appropriated.
The power now claimed by the defendants, is asserted by their counsel to have been conferred on them by the first section of a supplement to the charter of the Sunbury and Erie Railroad Company, passed February 10th, 1852, which contains these words:— “ It shall be competent to the corporate and constituted authorities of any municipal or other corporation in the Commonwealth, to subscribe for shares in the capital stock of the Sunbury and Erie Railroad Company; and to borrow money to pay therefor and to make provision for the payment of the principal and interest of the money so borrowed.” It is argued that the county is “ a municipal or other corporation,” and that the Commissioners are “the corporate or constituted authorities,” thereof, and therefore they are within the very letter of the statute. Both the propositions from which this deduction is made are denied by the plaintiffs. According to them the county is not a corporation, and if it were, the County Board is a part of its constituted authorities, without whose consent no such contract as the one proposed can be lawfully made.
Assuming for the present, that the county is a corporation within the meaning of the Act, we will consider whether the Commissioners have the authority to make this subscription, and to create this debt without the consent of the County Board. That the consent and approbation of the County Board has not been obtained, is an admitted fact, and that the Commissioners design to proceed without regard to its opinion is plainly avowed.
To get rid of these Acts it is argued that they are unconstitutional, and that therefore the Commissioners were right enough in disregarding them. There is nothing in the constitution which makes a County Commissioner sacred and. intangible by the legislature.- The office is created by legislative authority, and all its power and privileges are derived from that source. They who made, can unmake it wholly, and a fortiori can limit and restrict its incidental rights. The constitutional validity of the law is further impugned on the ground that it imposes on members of the Assembly, administrative and local instead of general and legislative duties. It is a sufficient answer to this that the constitution does not forbid it, and that the offices are not in their own nature incompatible. The policy of such a regulation is not for us to discuss.
It is further argued (and here is the strain of the case) that the law establishing the County Board was repealed five days after its passage) by the same legislature which enacted it. If this be true,
Nevertheless, though a general error may sometimes gain the strength of common law, it will not make a new statute nor reinstate an old one which has been repealed. We have therefore given to this argument a patient hearing, and not only a respectful but a careful consideration.
The Act which is said to repeal the one erecting the County Board, is the general “Act relating to counties and townships and county and township officers,” passed April 15th, 1834, which in its third section provides, that counties and townships shall have capacity as bodies corporate for certain enumerated purposes, and by the fourth section, declares that “ the corporate powers of the several counties and townships, shall be exercised by the commissioners and supervisors thereof respectively.” It is argued that the words here quoted imply a repeal of the Act of April 10th, 1834.
When two statutes are so flatly repugnant that both cannot be executed, and we are obliged to choose between them, the later is always- deemed a repeal of the earlier. This rule applies with equal force to a case of absolute and irreconcilable conflict between different sections or parts of the same statute. The last words
That the law does not favor repeals by implication, is a very old rule. Lord Coke says, it has ever been confined to repealing as little as possible of preceding statutes. (11 Rep. 63.) The principle prevails even where the statutes are penal, and where the humanity of the law would plead for another construction. (6 Rep. 19.) With much stronger reason it applies to statutes which give powers to different persons. If the powers can subsist together, the grant of one is not a withdrawal of the other. (15 East 377.) These authorities have always been followed in Pennsylvania. One act of Assembly is held to repeal another by implication only in cases of very strong repugnancy, (6 W. & S. 209,) or irreconcilable inconsistency. (10 Barr 442.)
Is there any strong repugnancy, or irreconcilable inconsistency between the two acts under consideration ? Certainly not. On the contrary, there is no conflict whatever. It does not follow that the commissioners may not exercise the corporate powers of the county because they must do so in subordination to another body. Their authority is not taken away by a law which regulates their manner of using it. To assert the contrary is to say, that power is not power unless it bo despotic and unlimited. The County Board is not put in the place of the commissioners to perform their functions, but is set up beside them to see that these functions are well performed by the commissioners themselves. The third section of the act of 15th April, 1834, says, the corporate powers of the county shall be exercised by the commissioners. The tenth section of the same act declares, that the commissioners shall make no contract for the erection of a public building without the approbation of two grand juries and the Court of Quarter Sessions. Now these two sections are as inconsistent with one another, as the act establishing the County Board is with either. If it should be said that the tenth section abrogates the third, the answer would be very ready, that they are not repugnant, but may stand together very well.
Besides all this, it seems to be well settled that a general statute without negative words, cannot repeal a previous statute which is particular, even though the provisions of one be different from the other. (6 Rep. 19.) Precisely such are the statutes before us. It is against reason to suppose that the legislature in framing a general system for the State, intended to repeal a special act which the local circumstances of one county had made necessary.
The contemporaneous construction so universally given to these
Upon the whole, we are unanimously of opinion, that the Act of Assembly creating the County Board is in full force, and totally free from the least suspicion of being repealed. It follows, that the attempt of the Commissioners to appropriate public money to the purchase of railroad stocks, and to create a public debt without the consent of the Board, was illegal.
Whether the county is or is not within the words “ municipal or other corporation,” is a question which needs not now to be determined, since whichever way it might be decided, our judgment in this case must be the same.
It was suggested at the bar, but not argued, that the legislature had no constitutional authority to make such a law as that of 10th February, 1852, under which the Commissioners claim the power to- subscribe for stock in a railroad company. The same reasons which caused the counsel not to press the argument of this question will prevent us from giving any opinion upon it.
It is ordered and decreed, that on bond and security being given by the plaintiffs in one thousand dollars, agreeably to the Act of Assembly, a special writ of injunction be awarded to restrain the defendants according to the prayer of the bill, until further order.