after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.
It is not denied, and has been so decided by the Supreme-Court of Missouri, that, under § 17 of the General Railroad Law, just cited, the county court of a county was authorized' to subscribe to the stock of railroad companies, though created by special charter, рrovided the requisite assent of the qualified voters was duly obtained. Cape Girardeau, &c., County v. Dennis, 67 Missouri, 438; Chouteau v. Allen, 70 Missouri, 290.
It is also not denied, that, by virtue of § 18 of the General Railroad Law, the special tax therein provided may be lpvied for the purpose of paying bonds issued in pursuance thereof, and that without limit as to its amount.
United States
v.
The Country of Macon,
The question is, whether the respondents below are estopped in this proceeding by the judgment in favor of the relator against the county of Knox on the bonds, to deny that the bonds were issued in pursuancе of '§ 17, c. 63, of the General Statutes of Missouri of.-1866. The averment to that effect in *317 the petition in the action, if material and traversable, was confessed by the default. The judgment reсites that the action is founded upon certain bonds and coupons for interest thereon issued by said defendant and described in the petition. The averment as to the charaсter of the bonds, and the grounds and authority upon which they were founded, so as to constitute them legal obligations of the county of Knox, contained in the petition, was clearly material to the plaintiff’s cause of action. If the defendant had denied it by a proper pleading, the fact would haye been put in issue, and the plaintiff would have been bound to prove it.
It was part of the plaintiff’s case to show, not merely the execution of the bonds by the county authorities, but that they were issued in pursuance of a law making them the valid obligations of the county. The power to issue such securities does not inhere in a municipal corporation, so as to be implied from its corporate existence; it must be conferred, either in express words, or by reasonable intendment; and if the authority to issue them in a given case is challenged by a proper denial, the plaintiff is put to the prоof. • "What it is necessary for him to prove, it is proper for him to allege, and the allegation must be proven as made. It follows, therefore, that if a denial had been made in the action on the bonds in question, the averment that they were issued under § 17, c. 63, of the General Statutes of Missouri of 1866, would have been material and traversable, and proof of the fаct would have been necessary to support the recovery. In the absence of a denial, the fact as stated in the petition of' the plaintiff is confessed by the default, and stands as an admission on the record, of its truth by the defendant. It is quite true that the judgment would have beefl the same whether the authority to issue the bonds was derived under the general statutes or under the charter of the railroad company, but good pleading required that the fact, whichever way it was, should be stated, and when stated the averment must be proved as laid.
As this is а direct proceeding upon the judgment, its effect as an estoppel is determined by the first branch of the rule as laid down in
Cromwell
v.
County of Sac,
' In
Balls County
v.
United States,
*319 As the execution follows the nature of the judgment, and its precept is to carry into effect the rights of the plaintiff as declared by the judgment, with that mode and measure of redress which in such cases the law gives, so the mandamus in a case like the present can be limited in its mandate only by that which the judgment itself declares.
It was said, however, in
Ralls County
v.
The United
States,
The return of the respondents, therefore, to the alternative writ of mandamus is insuificient in law, and the Circuit Court erred in not awarding to the relator a peremptory writ of mandamus. For that error
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to a/ward a peremptory ma/ndamus.
