56 Miss. 115 | Miss. | 1878
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Board of Supervisors of Madison County issued to the Vicksburg, Yazoo City, and Canton Railroad Company sundry bonds, with coupons for interest attached, of which those in question are a part.
The eighth section of the act of 1870 ( Pamph. Acts, 205 ) authorized the Board of Supervisors, after certain conditions had been complied with, to issue to the aforesaid corporation county bonds bearing interest at seven per cent per annum,
The board, by its ordinance, directed the question of subscription to the capital stock of the corporation to be submitted to the qualified electors of the county, at a special election to be held on the thirtieth day of March, 1872, on the terms, among others, as follows, viz. : —
“The said subscription to be for the sum of $250,000, for which bonds of said county shall be issued, bearing seven per cent per an-num interest, payable semi-annually, payable twenty years after date.”
The act of April 6, 1874, amendatory of the charter of the company (Pamph. Acts, 184), in its first section enacted :
“And when such bonds have been issued by any county, beaiing interest semi-annually, the action of such county is hereby ratified and confirmed, and the bonds so issued shall be valid and binding, notwithstanding the original charter directed that the interest should be paid annually.”
The defendants set up in their answer, that the bonds were executed and delivered to the company in violation of the authority conferred by the Legislature, in this : that the interest was made payable semi-annually, on the first days of January and July, whereas the statute directed that “ the interest should be made payable annually.”
To this the relator makes several answers: first, that the bonds do not substantially differ from the requirement of the act of 1870; and, secondly, if they do, the defect is cured by the act'of 1874, and also by confirmatory conduct in pais.
These defences are- made against the relator, who prefers himself as a bona fide holder of part of the bonds and coupons. He offered no other proof of proprietorship except the possession and exhibition of the instruments.
In Mayor v. Muscatine, 1 Wall. 337, the authority was “ to boi’rowfor a term of years, not exceeding twenty, on the bonds of the city, at a rate of interest not higher than ten per cent per annum, to be subscribed, in the name of the city, to the capital stock of the M. & M. B. B. Company.” Under an ordinance of that import the vote was taken, and bonds were issued, payable in New York, interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum, payable semi-annually. Objection was made, that the stipulation to pay semi-annual interest transcended the authority, which limited the rate at not higher than ten per cent per annum. To this objection the court responded, “that it has no foundation ; ” holding “ that parties may always contract for the payment of that rate, before the principal debt becomes due, at periods shorter than a year.”
The principle contained in this case, and the one to which it refers, is, that a stipulation to pay interest at seven per cent, semi-annually, does not violate a proposition adopted to pay the interest annually ; that no greater rate of interest is paid in the one case than the other; that when the first instalment is paid, interest for half the year has been earned, and when the last instalment matures, interest for the other half has accrued.
Thei'e are cases which hold that terms in the contract in excess of the authority may be rejected as surplusage, but we do not think it necessary to rest our decision on this branch of the case on either of the grounds stated.
We had occasion recently, in Sykes v. Columbus, 55 Miss. 115, to consider the power of the Legislature to ratify a municipal debt incurred to give aid to a railroad company, as affected by the fourteenth section of art. 12 of the Constitution. It was stated that the current of authority was, that defective or irregular exercise of municipal power could be ratified by the Legislature where the Legislature could have originally conferred the power. But, inasmuch as the county or town could not lend its aid or credit to the railroad company except on the approval of the qualified electors, as prescribed in the Constitution, it was ultra vires of the Legislature to dispense with that vote. It is the consent of the qualified electors, expressed at the election, that confers power on the Board of Supervisors to act. Hawkins v. Carroll County, 50 Miss. 735.
■ The Board of Supervisors cannot issue bonds to pay for stock subscription to a railroad company without the consent of the qualified electors, given as prescribed in the Constitution.
The essential conditions to the creation of that sort of indebtedness by the county are: first, legislative authority; .and, second, a vote of the qualified electors: The Legislature cannot impose the debt on the municipality without its consent, manifested in a particular way.
The Legislature, in the act of 1870, authorized the county of Madison, and other municipalities specially interested in the proposed railroad, to subscribe for stock and issue bonds,if the proposal were ratified at a special or general election. But the bonds, according to the act, were to bear not exceeding ten per cent interest per annum, and that was to be paid annually.
The Board of Supervisors submitted and the electors approved the subscription and issue of bonds, with interest payable semi-annually. Aid to the enterprise had the sanction of the Legislature and the Board of Supervisors, and of the electors, to the extent of $250,000, at ten per cent interest; the bonds to be delivered, in fixed amounts, as the work was completed.
The board and the electors concurred that the bonds would be more available to the company with interest payable semiannually; and, since the rate was not increased, they may have supposed that the change was not material.
If the Legislature had authorized, in the first instance, interest to be made payable semi-annually, the validity of the bonds would not be doubted.
' But the Board of Supervisors and • the electors supposed that this modification would be expedient. That has been declared in the ordinance and the vote for the subscription. These represented all parties to be affected as debtors. The Legislature gave its assent, and ratified what had been done.
This is far from being an effort to impose a debt on the county without its consent. The agreement of the people of the county to incur the debt, in the precise shape which it
In St. Joseph Township v. Rogers, 16 Wall. 659, the act authorized municipal bonds in aid of the l’ailroad, on an approving vote by the town, county, or township, and validated all bonds theretofore issued by such municipalities. It was •held that, although the election was held in the township before the act was passed, yet the act ratified it, and made the bonds obligatory. Also, Thompson v. Lee County, 3 Wall. 327; City v. Lamson, 9 Wall. 447; Bissell v. Jeffersonville, 24 How. 295.
In addition to the act of 1874, the relator relies on the conduct of the county authorities and the tax-payers as ratifying the execution and delivery of the bonds and coupons, and as curative of any irregularity or defect in the original transaction. These acts consist in the acceptance by the Board of Supervisors of certificates of stock, and being represented and voting in the meetings of the stockholders ; in the assessment and collection of taxes for several successive years, and the payment'of the coupons of interest therewith ; and the omission for this long period, by the county authorities or tax-payers, to contest in the courts the validity of the debt.
It is claimed that these acts contributed to give credit to the bonds, and that this long recognition of liability might induce the belief that investments in them could be safely made. We have been referred to many cases which attach great importance to such acts. Johnson v. Stark, 24 Ill. 89; 7 Ohio St. 381; 14 Ohio St. 386; Rogers v. Burlington, 3 Wall. 667.
The bonds contain, among other things, a recital that they were issued “ pursuant to an ordinance of the Board of Supervi-
The eifect of a recital in the bond in the' hands of a bond, fide purchaser is correctly stated in sect. 22 of Dillon ón Municipal Bonds, viz.: If there exists legislative authority, not in conflict with the State or Federal Constitution, to issue the bonds, and they are duly executed by proper officers, who are invested with authority, under the law, with power to decide whether conditions precedent have been performed, and they so declare or recite, the issue of such bonds, under such circumstances and with such recitals, is conclusive as to the facts so stated, and estops the municipality, in a suit on the bonds, to aver and prove the contrary. Murray v. Township of Oswego, 92 U. S. 638; Town of Coloma v. Evans, 92 U. S. 484; Commissioners v. Nichols, 14 Ohio St. 260; Moran v. Miami County, 2 Black, 732; Mercer County v. Hackett, 1 Wall. 83; Supervisors v. Schenck, 5 Wall. 784. The doctrine is firmly established by the Supreme Court of the United States, and was distinctly recognized in this court in City of Vicksburg v. Lombard, 51 Miss. 126, 127.
The statute under which these bonds were executed made it the duty of the Board of Supervisors to canvass the votes, and declare the result of the election. Their decision is conclusive on the county, in a controversy between it and a bona fide purchaser of the bonds. The decision of the board does not have that effect, but the correctness of it is open to investigation on the facts, at the suit of any person interested, before the bonds have been negotiated to a bond fide purchaser. Hawkins v. Carroll County, 50 Miss. 735.
Evidence that the proposition, at the election, did not receive the favorable vote of two-thirds of the qualified electors, tends
The recital also cures any irregularity or want of fulness in the notice of the election. City of Vicksburg v. Lombard, supra, and cases there cited.
We did not suppose that it could be seriously doubted that it was competent for the Legislature to submit a proposition of subscription to the stock of a railroad company, and to issue bonds, at a special election held for that purpose and no other. The will of the electors could be more certainly and deliberately ascertained at such election than at a general election, where the voters would be distracted and their attention divided by other considerations and duties. The plain and ordinary signification of the words used in the Constitution admit of a special election to pass on a proposition of aid or credit. We do not doubt that they were so employed by the Convention, and have been so understood by the legislative department and the people. ' Such has been its practical interpretation in this State, and in other States having a similar provision in their •Constitution, — notably so in Missouri. In the many cases litigated in the courts, where bonds have been authorized at a special election, counsel and courts have never suggested a doubt as to the propriety of such proceeding.
The result is, that the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings.
In conformity to request of counsel, we have considered the questions on their merits, without reference to the formality of the pleadings.