delivered the opinion of the court.
The object of this action, which was commenced on the twelfth day of May, 1880, is to recover the amount due on bonds, with 'interest coupons attached, issued on the first day of January, 1857, by the town of Koshkonong, a municipal corporation of Wisconsin, pursuant to authority conferred by an act of the legislature of that State. They were made payable to the Chicago, St. Paul, and Fond du Lac Railroad Company, or its assigns, on the first day of January, 1877, at the American Exchange -Bank, in the city of New York, with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, on the presentation of the interest warrants at that bank on the first day of each July and January, until the principal sum should be paid. Of the bonds in suit, with their respective coupons, Burton became the owner by written assignment from the railroad company, indorsed upon the bonds, under date of Nov. 16, 1857. None of the coupons have ever been detached from the bonds nor paid, except those maturing July 1,1857, and Jan. 1, 1858.
The coupons are all alike except as to dates of maturity. They are complete instruments, capable of ’sustaining separate actions, without reference to the maturity or ownership of the bonds.
Commissioners of Knox County
v.
Aspinwall et al.,
The main question is whether the- action, as to coupons maturing more than six ymars prior to its commencement, is not barred by the'.Statutes of Limitation of Wisconsin. The court *670 below being of opinion that no part of plaintiff’s demands was barred, gave judgment for the principal of the bonds, with interest from the first day of January, 1877, at the stipulated rate of eight per cent per annum until paid, and also for the amount of each coupon in suit, with interest from its maturity at the rate of seven per cent per annum, the ■ latter being the rate established by the local law in the absence of a special agreement by the parties.
The present writ of error questions the correctness of that judgment, as well because it overrules the defence of limitation to coupons maturing more than six years before the commencement of this action, as because it allows interest upon the amount of each coupon from its maturity.
The statutes of Wisconsin, in force when the bonds and coupons were issued, provided that “ all actions of debt founded upon any contract or liability, not under seal ” (except such as are brought upon the judgment or decree of some court of record of the United States, or of a State or Territory of the United States), shall be commenced within six years after the cause of action accrued, and not afterwards; and that all personal actions on any contract, not otherwise limited by the laws ■ of the State, shall be brought within twenty years after the-accruing of the cause of action. Rev. Stat. Wis. 1849, sects. 14-22, pp. 644, 645.
We remark that the foregoing provisions, without substantial change of language, were taken from the statutes of the Territory of Wisconsin, adopted in 1889. Further, that the revision of 1849 did not, in terms, prescribe any limitation to actions upon sealed instruments. They were, therefore, embraced by the limitation of twenty years as to personal actions on contracts not covered by other provisions.
The revision of 1849 was superseded by one.made in 1858, which went into operation on the first day of January, 1859. By the latter, as modified by an'act passed in 1861, civil actions, other than for the recovery of real property, were required to be commenced within the following periods: .Actions upon judgments or decrees of courts of record of the State, and actions upon sealed instruments when the cause of action accrued in the State, within twenty years (Rev. Stat. Wis. 1858, *671 c. 138, sect. 15) ; actions upon the-judgments or decrees of courts.of record of any State or. Territory of the United States or of courts of. the United States, and actions upon sealed instruments, when the cause of action accrued out of the State, within ten years (sect. 16) ; and actions upon contracts, obligations, or liabilities, express or implied, excepting those mentioned in sects. 15 and 16, within six years, the time to be computed, in each ease, from the date where the cause of action .accrued. Gen. Laws Wis. 1861, p. 302. The revision of 1858 also contained the general clause that, “ in any case where a limitation or period of law prescribed in any of the acts hereby repealed [which included the revision of 1849], for the acquiring of any right or barring of any remedy, or for any other purpose, shall have begun to run, and the same or any similar limitation is prescribed, in the Revised Statutes, the time of limitatio'n shall continue to run, and shall have the like effect, as if the whole period had-begun and ended under the operation of the Revised Statutes.” Id., c. 191, sect. 13, p. 1038.
, Thus stood the law of the State until the ninth day of March, 1872, —a little over fifteen years after these bonds and coupons were’issued,' — when an act was passed entitled “ An Act to limit the time for the commencement of action against towns, counties, cities, and villages on demands payable to bearer.” It provided that “ no action brought to recover any sum of money, on any bond, coupon, interest warrant, agreement, or promise in writing, made or issued by any town, county, city, or village, or upon any instalment of the principal or interest thereof, shall be maintained in any court, unless such action shall be commenced within six years from the time when such sum of money has or .sha.ll become due, when the same has been or shall be made payable to bearer, or to some person or bearer, or to the order of some person, or to some person or his order: Provided, that any such action may be brought within one year after this act shall take effect: Provided further, that this act shall in nó case be construed to extend the time within which an action may be brought under the laws heretofore- existing.” ■ Gen. Laws Wis. 1872, p. 56.
Our attention has also been called to certain sections in the revision of the statutes of Wisconsin of 1878, which went into. *672 operation on, the first day of November of that year, superseding that of 1858, as well as the act of 1872. Those sections contain, in substance, the clauses first quoted from the revision of 1858, with the modifications'made by the act of 1872. Rev. Stat. Wis. 1878, pp. 1015, 1016. It is to be observed in this connection — for it has some bearing upon what we shall presently'- say — that sect. 4220 of the revision of 1878, in terms, ■prescribed twenty years as the limication for “an action upon a sealed instrument when the cause of action accrues within this State, except those mentioned in sect. 4222 ; ” while the latter section embraces, among others, “ an action upon any bond, coupon, interest warrant, or other contract for the payment of money, whether sealed or otherwise, made or issued by any town, county* city, village, or school district in this State,” — thus indicating that the framers of the revision of 1878 regarded municipal securities for the payment of money as belonging to the class cf sealed instruments. We observe, also, that the revision of 1878 contains a provision in reference to those cases in which limitation had commenced to run, similar to that already quoted from the revision of 1858. Rev Stat. 1873, sect. 4984 ; Rev. Stat. 1858, p. 1088.
From the foregoing summary it will be seen that by the local law, when the bonds in suit were issued, all civil actions for debt, founded on contract or liability, not under seal (except actions upon judgments or decrees of some court of record of the United States, or of a State or Territory), could be brought within six years after the cause of action accrued, and not afterwards ; while such actions, if founded on contract or liability, under seal, would not be barred until twenty years after the cause of action accrued. If, as contended by plaintiff, the question of limitation is to be determined exclusively by the revision of 1849, in Jioree when the bonds were issued, and if, as is further insisted, au action on municipal bonds and coupons, such as are here in suit, is, within the meaning of that revision, “founded on con tract'or liability not under seal,” it is clear that, without reference to the statute of 1872, this action is barred as to all coupons maturing more than six years before its commencement, whether such coupons-were separated or not from the bonds to which they were originally attached.
*673
This, upon the authority of
Amy
v.
Dubuque
(
But we are inclined to the opinion — although uninformed upon' the subject by any direct decision of the Supreme Court of the State to which our attention has been called — that municipal bonds and coupons Avere regarded by the framers both of the revision of 1849 and that of 1858, as, alike, sealed instruments to which the limitation of twenty years was applicable. The word “ bond ” at common laAV (and even now as a general rale) imports a sealed instrument. And although, under some circumstances, a muzzicipal coz-poration issuing and delivering bonds and coupons, in aid of railroad enterprises, may be liable thereon, notwithstanding they are unattested by its corporate seal, we are satisfied that the legislature of Wisconsin intended, by the revision of 1849, as well as that of 1858., to prescribe the same limitatioiA for actions upon such obligations as Avas, in terms, prescribed for actions upon Avhat, technically or in common legal parlance, az-e denominated sealed instruments.
If this interpretation of the revision of 1849 and 1858 be correct, it Avould follow that this action Avas not, at the passage of the act of 1872, barred by liznitation as to any of the coupons in suit. Twenty years had not then expired ii-ozn the maturity of any of them.
It remains now to inquiz'e as to the effect of the act of 1872 upon municipal obligations executed and outstanding at the date of its passage. Of the object of that statute there cannot, *674 it seems to us, be any reasonable doubt. The specific reference to coupons end interest warrants made or issued by towns, counties, cities, and villages, without distinguishing such as are sealed from those unsealed, .and the express requirement as to the time within which actions thereon must be brought or be barred, indicates a purpose upon the part of the legislature to reverse the policy which had been pursued, by holders of such securities, of postponing the collection of interest coupons until after the bonds, to which they were annexed, had matured, — a delay which had the effect, in some instances, of compelling municipal corporations to' meet, all at once, a large indebtedness, which the legislature intended, at least as to the interest accruing thereon, should be provided for in instalments or through a series of years. Whatever considerations, however, may have suggested that legislation, it is clear that its object was such as we have indicated.
We are here met with the argument that the act of 1872, neither in terms nor by necessary implication, applies to any municipal obligations, except those “ payable to bearer, or to some person or bearer, or to the order of some person, or to some person or his order; ” whereas, the bonds in suit are payable, to the railroad company or its assigns, and the coupons are payable to the holder thereof. Waiving any expression of opinion as to whether the phrases•“ payable ... to the. order of soine person,” or “ payable . . .' to some person or his order,” do not, upon k reasonable construction of the act, embrace the case of a bond payable to a railroad company Or its assigns,'— a question which need not be determined, since it is conceded that the action, as to the principal of the bonds, is not, in any view of the case,"barred by limitation, — we are of opinion that a coupon, payable to the holder- thereof, is, within the meaning of the act, and, according to .the usages of the commercial world, payable to bearer. Consequently the suit, as it respects interest coupons, is émbraced' by the terms of the act-of 1872.' '
"But the further contention'of plaintiff's counsel is, that the. act O'l 1872 is unconstitutional as impairing the obligation of the contract between the town and the holders of its securities. This objection is founded upon the proviso, which declares
*675
that “ any such action [of the class specified in the act] maybe brought [only] within one year ” after the act takes effect. While tbat proviso is very obscurely worded, its meaning is, that no action to recover money due upon a municipal bond, .coupon, interest-warrant, or written agreement or promise, or upon any instalment of the principal or interest thereof, whether such obligations were issued befqre or after the pas* sage of the act, should be maintained, unless brought within six years (not from the passage of the act, but) from the time the money sued for became due; except — and no other exception is made — that when the six years from the maturity of any past-due bond or coupon .would expire within less than a year after the act passed, the action should not be barred, if brought within that year. It was'-undoubtedly within the constitutional power of the legislature to require, as. to existing causes of action, that suits for their enforcement should be barred unless brought within a period-less than that prescribed at the time the contract was made or the liability incurred ■ from which the cause of action arose. The exertion of this power is, of course, subject to the fundamental condition that a reasonable time, taking all the circumstances into consideration, be given by the new law for the commencement of an action before the bar takes effect-..
Terry,
v.
Anderson,
The question next to be considered relates to that portion of the judgment allowing interest upon the amount of each coupon from its maturity.
The general proposition suggested by this question seems to have been determined, in 1865, in
Mills
v.
Town of
Jefferson,
Another question arises upon this branch of the case. The law of Wisconsin, as declared in Mills v. Town of Jefferson, remained, without attempt to change it, until. March 3, 1868, when an act was passed entitled “ An Act to construe sections one and two of chapter 160 of the General Laws of 1859, and to amend section 2 of said chapter.” Its first and second sections are as follows: —
“ 1. It was and is the' true intent and meaning of sections one and two of chap. 160 of the General Laws passed in the year 1859, and of all other laws heretofore enacted in the State prescribing and limiting the rate of interest, that interest should not be compounded or bear interest upon interest, unless an agreement to that effect was clearly expressed in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith.
“2. Section 2 of chap. 160 of the General Laws of 1859 is hereby amended by adding thereto the following: ‘And in the-computation of interest upon any bond, note, or other instrument or agreement, interest shall not be compounded, nor shall the interest thereon be construed - to bear interest.’” Gen. Latos Wis. 1868, pp. 62, 68.
*678 In the. Revised Statutes of 1878 the following provision appears: —
, “Sect. 1689. . . . And in the computation of interest upon any bond, note, or other instrument or agreement, interest shall not be compounded, nor shall interest thereon be construed to bear interest, unless an agreement to that effect is clearly expressed in •writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith.”
It is contended that the foregoing enactments govern the present case, and preclude recovery of interest upon the amount of the respective coupons from their maturities. In this view we do not concur. By the first section of the act of 1868, the legislature assumed to declare what was the true intent and meaning of previous legislation prescribing and limiting the rate of interest. It was- said by Chancellor Walworth, in
Salters
v.
Tobias
(3 Paige (N. Y.), 338, 314),. that, “in England, where there is no constitutional limit to the powers of Parliament, a declaratory law forms a new rule of decision-, and is valid arid binding upon the courts, not only as to cases which may subsequently occur, but also as to preexisting and vested rights. But even then the courts will not give it a retrospective operation, so as to deprive a party of a vested right, unless the language of the law is so plain and explicit as to render it impossible to put any other construction upon it. In this.country, where the legislative power is limited by -written constitutions, declaratory laws, so far as they operate upon vested rights, can have no legal effect in depriving an individual of his rights,' or to change the rule of construction as'to a pre-existing law. Courts will treat such laws with all the respect that is due to them as an expression of the opinion of. the individual members of the legislature as to what the rule of law previously was. ' But beyond that they can have no binding effect; and if the judge is satisfied the legislative construction is wrong, he is bound to disregard it.” When counsel, in
Ogden
v.
Blackledge
(
Without pursuing the case further, it is sufficient to say that we do not concur with such of the views of the learned district judge as are inconsistent with those here announced. The
*680
judgment must be reversed, with directions to enter judgment in- behalf of plaintiff for the amount of the bonds, with interest ¡it the stipulated rate, from their maturity until paid
(Spencer
v. Maxfield,
So ordered..
