3 Dill. 376 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kansas | 1874
The city of Topeka issued one hundred bonds of 81,000 each, as a donation to the King Wrought Iron Bridge Manufacturing and Iron Works Company, of that place, to aid it in establishing therein its manufactory of iron bridges. The bonds are payable to that company and purport to be issued in pursuance of section 76, of an act of the legislature of Kansas, to incorporate cities of the second class, approved February 29, 1872 (Laws 1872, p. 192), and of an act approved March 2, 1872, to authorize cities and counties to issue bonds to build bridges, aid railroads, water-powers, and other works of internal improvement (Laws 1872, p. 110). The purpose for which these bonds were issued appears on their face, and is stated in the petition. It is alleged that the city has paid one year’s interest thereon out of funds raised by taxation, and that it was after such payment that the plaintiff became the owner of the bonds and the coupons in suit, for value.
I concede that the legislative provision is-broad enough to warrant the issue of these-bonds by the city of Topeka, and the demurrer must be overruled if the authority to this end conferred upon the city is one which the legislature had the rightful power to grant. This question I have already decided in the case of the Commercial Bank of Cleveland v. City of Iola [Case No. 3,061]. I have given at some length the reasons for the conclusion that bonds like those in suit are absolutely void. That opinion was deliberately formed; and I am still satisfied with it and adhere to it. The payment of interest can