34 Ind. 185 | Ind. | 1870
This case presents, for our consideration and decision, the constitutionality and validity of an act entitled “an act to authorize aid to the construction of railroads by counties and townships taking stock in, and making donations to, railroad companies” (approved May 12th, 1869), and the regularity and legality of the proceedings had, under such act, by the Board of Commissioners of Tippecanoe County.
The record shows the following facts :
Geiger’s complaint against the Lafayette, Muncie, and
“To the Honorable, the Board of Commissioners of the County of Tippecanoe, in the State of Indiana: The undersigned, freeholders of said county, respectfully petition your honorable board to make an appropriation of money to aid the Lafayette, Muncie, and Bloomington Railroad Company in the construction of its railroad through said county, by taking stock in, or donating money to, said company, to the amount of three hundred and seventy-three thousand dollars. “ Dated, Lafayette, Indiana, July 15th, 1869.”
It is then averred that the commissioners, acting under the law of May 12th, 1869, entitled “an act to authorize aid to the construction of railroads by counties and townships taking stock in, and making donations to, railroad companies,” upon the filing of said petition, made the following order, to wit f
“Said board, after taking said petition under advisement, and after being fully advised, do order the polls of the several and respective voting places and precints be opened upon Saturday, the 28th day of August, 1869, and the votes of the legal voters of said county be taken for or against the appropriating of the money by the said county, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of the said Lafayette, Muncie, and Bloomington Railroad, as prayed for in said petition, by taking stock in said company, and that ihe auditor give due and legal notice to the qualified voters of said county of the opening of the polls pursuant to this order.
“And it is further ordered and declared that it is the opinion and judgment of said board that the appropriation asked for by said petition, to aid in the construction of said railroad,
The complaint then avers that the auditor, in compliance with this order, published in the Lafayette Daily Courier and in the Lafayette Weekly Courier, newspapers of said county, a notice on said 20th day of July, 1869, and daily thereafter till the 25 th day of August, in these words:
“To the qualified voters of Tippecanoe county, Indiana.
“ Pursuant to an order of the board of commissioners of said county, notice is hereby given that the several voting places and precincts in said county will be open on Saturday, the 28th day of August, 1869, for the purpose of taking the votes of the legal voters of said county for or against the appropriation of three hundred and seventy-three thousand dollars, to be taken as stock in the Lafayette, Muncie, and Bloomington Railroad Company, to aid said railroad company in the construction of a railroad through said county.
“A. J. Castater,
“Auditor of Tippecanoe county.”
In compliance with the law, the sheriff of said county posted handbills in three public places in each of the townships of said county, the last being posted on the 31st of July, 1869, which were copies of the notices published in the Courier by the auditor and above set out.
There was no other notice given to the voters of the county except that published in the Courier and- by handbills posted by the sheriff.
The coihplaint avers, that oh the nth day of December, 1868, the board of commissioners made and entered upon their record an order in relation to districting the several townships of said county for voting purposes and fixing places for voting, as follows:
“ They order that the township of Fairfield be districted
It is averred that this order continued in force till August 26th, 1869, when the board of commissioners, at a special meeting, set aside the same and passed the following:
“ Ordered, by the ■ board, that the "order passed by this board on the nth day of December, 1868, and recorded * * in relation to districting the several townships for voting purposes be and the same and every part thereof is hereby vacated, repealed, and set aside; and the board further order that there be established four election precincts or voting places in Fairfield township, to be numbered one, two, three, and four, for holding elections, which voting places shall be as follows: Precinct, or voting place, number one, at the county recorder’s office, in the city of Lafayette; precinct, or voting place, number two, at the county auditor’s office, in said city; precinct, or voting place, number three, at the west, wing of the office of the clerk of the circuit court, in said city; precinct, or voting place, number four, at the east wing
The complaint alleges, that there was no notice given of this repealing order changing the places of voting in Fair-field township; that on the 28th day of August, 1869, the polls were opened pursuant to the notice given, and “ a vote of a portion of the voters of said county, being all the legal voters who offered to vote at the voting places where the polls were opened, was taken upon the question of said railroad appropriation, which vote in the township of Fairfield, i-n said county, was taken at the following named places, and not elsewhere, in the city of Lafayette,” to wit: at the places named in the repealing order of August 26th above copied, in the recorder’s, auditor’s, and clerk’s offices. It is charged that more than half of the votes cast upon the question of the appropriation were cast in Fairfield township, at said offices, which were in buildings not over forty yards apart.
The complaint proceeds to allege that on the Thursday next succeeding the day of the voting, all those composing the board of canvassers under said act, “ except the inspectors of two voting places, to wit, one in Wabash and one in Washington township, in said county, at which places polls rvere opened and votes were cast, to whom the judges’ certificates, poll-books and tally sheets of said precincts had been delivered, met at the proper time and place and canvassed the vote of said county, except in this, that the certificates, poll-books and tally sheets of the two voting places above mentioned were not present, nor were the inspectors present who had the same in charge; and on said day, at said time and place, those of said board present as aforesaid prepared and signed a statement of the number of votes cast on said day for and against said appropriation, except as to the two precincts last mentioned.”
For the appropriation, - 3,253
Against the same, ----- - 2,404
Thus showing a majority in favor of - - - 849
This certificate was signed by seventeen out of nineteen inspectors, and attested by the auditor of the county as chairman.
The complaint admits “ that the vote of said two omitted precints, if the same had been counted, would still have left a majority of the votes cast in said county, of between five and six hundred, in favor of the railroad appropriation.”
At the regular June session of the board of commissioners for 1870, the complaint avers, two orders were made, one on the 8th of June in these words:
“Whereas a petition was presented to this board at a special session duly convened on the 20th day of July, 1869, signed by William S. Lingle and sundry others, making in all over one hundred freeholders of Tippecanoe county, Indiana, asking said board to make an appropriation of three hundred and seventy-three thousand dollars to aid the Lafayette, Muncie, and Bloomington Railroad Company in the construction of its railroad through said county, which petition was duly entered of record, and this board then ordered the several polls at the several voting places in said county to be opened on the 28th day of August, 1869, and the votes of the legal voters of said county to be taken upon the subject of said appropriation of money to aid said company in the construction of said railroad; and whereas it appears from the official certificates of the auditor and sheriff of said county that notice of the opening of said polls on said 28th day of August, 1869, for the purpose aforesaid, was duly published and given as required by law, and it further appears from the written statement of the board of canvassers, of said county, that the said polls were opened pursuant to
“Now, therefore, in pursuance of the statute in such case made and provided, the Board of Commissioners of the County of Tippecanoe hereby grant the prayer of said petitioners contained in the petition so presented on the 20th day of July, 1869; and because the whole amount named in said petition exceeds one per centum upon the amount of the taxable property on the tax duplicate of said county, for the year 1870, the board now hereby levy a tax of one half the amount of said appropriation so asked for as aforesaid, to wit, the sum of one hundred and eighty-six thousand five hundred dollars, upon the real and personal property in said county of Tippecanoe, to be collected pro rata upon the same; and the auditor of said county is hereby directed to assess and apportion the same against and upon the tax duplicate as required by law.”-
The other order was made on the 14th of June, in these words:
“ Ordered by the board, that there be levied'for county puiposes for the year 1870, twenty cents on each one hundred dollars of valuation of taxable property, and one dollar on each poll, to be assessed, levied, and collected according to law, and a .speciál tax of ninety cents on each one hundred dollars valuation of taxable property, to aid in the construction of the Lafayette, Muncie, and Bloomington Railroad through Tippecanoe county, said tax to be used in taking stock in said railroad company in the name of said county when said tax is collected.”
The complaint avers that the railroad company, defendant, procured the petition of the freeholders to be filed, and the
The complaint alleges, that the defendant Castater, as auditor of the county, was about to proceed, in obedience to the above quoted orders of the commissioners, to apportion, the special tax to be levied for the railroad appropriation upon the property in said county, and would do it unless restrained ; that he would apportion and impose a part of the same, to wit, seventy-five dollars, upon Geiger’s property, and put it on the tax duplicate for the purpose of collecting the same through the treasurer of the county; that said tax .would, if put on the duplicate, be a cloud and incumbrance upon his property, &c.
The complaint alleges, that said tax is wrongful and oppressive, and ought not to be collected, for the following, reasons;
1. That said act is unconstitutional and void.
2. That the proceedings of the commissioners in ordering; the vote and levying the tax were unauthorized and void.
3. That the petition of the freeholders and the proceedings of the commissioners in reference thereto and of those-acting under them are defective and irregular, in this, to wit;
(a) Because the prayer of the petition was in the alternative (i. e. for a donation or for taking stock), which- it was impossible to grant in the terms asked.
{S) Because if the petition was correct, the proposition should have been submitted to the voters in the alternative, so as to leave the commissioners free afterwards to determine the mode of appropriation.
(c) Because the inspectors of two voting precincts were not present and did not participate in the proceedings of the board of canvassers, nor were the votes cast at those precincts canvassed by the board.
(d) Because the simple question submitted.-to the voters-
(e) Because the commissioners, instead of taking the petition under advisement, determined, prior to the taking of the vote, that they would take stock in the company.
(/) Because, instead of taking the petition under advisement, the commissioners determined to take stock, and then merely submitted to the voters the question of whether they would or would not ratify their action.
(g) Because the notices required by statute were not given, ibut that the notices merely submitted the question of taking : stock.
(h) Because of the changing of the voting places in Fair-field township, no valid notices were given of the time and places at which the polls would be opened in the county (and 'especially in that township) for the reception of votes upon the- question of the railroad appropriation.
(i) Because the vote of Fairfield township was cast at the places designated by the commissioners in their order of August 26th, 1869, of which no notice was given, instead of at the usual places theretofore established.
Prayer for an injunction restraining the auditor from assessing sáid railroad tax, or any part of it, upon the tax duplicate, against the appellee’s property, &c.
A general demurrer to the complaint was filed by the defendants, which was overruled, and exception was taken.
The defendants refusing to answer further, the court entered a perpetual injunction against the levying or collecting • of the tax, in accordance with the prayer of the complaint, ;to which the defendants excepted.
Two errors only are assigned: first, that the court erred ¡in overruling the demurrer to the complaint; second, that tthe court erred in granting the injunction.
The first section of the act under consideration reads as 'follows:
“ Section i. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the -State of Indiana, That whenever a petition shall be presented
Section 12 of said act reads thus: “If a^ majority of the votes cast shall be in favor of such railroad appropriation, the board of county commissioners, at their ensuing regular June session, shall grant the prayer of said petition, and shall levy a special tax of at least one-half the amount specified in said petition, but not exceeding one per centum upon the real and personal property in the county or township, as the case may be, liable to taxation for state and county purposes, which tax shall be collected in all respects as other taxes are collected for state and county purposes; and if the sum so levied shall not be equal to the amount specified in said petition, then the residue thereof shall be levied by said board of county commissioners at the June session of the following year.”
The Supreme Court of Iowa, in a recent decision, (Stewart v. Board of Supervisors of Polk County, 30 Iowa, 9) in commenting upon a provision similar to, the one above quoted, say: “The people, then, have vested the legislative authority inherent in them in the General Assembly. The people were the original possessors of all the legislative authority in the state. By this section they vest it all in the General Assembly. Subsequently, in the same instrument, they withdraw some portions of this authority, and impose certain restrictions upon the exercise of the authority granted. It follows, therefore, as a logical sequence, that, within these limitations and restrictions, the legislative power of the General Assembly is supreme; that it is bounded only by the limitations written in the constitution. Wright, J., in Morrison v. Springer, 15 Iowa, 304, says, ‘The legislature clearly has the power to legislate on all rightful subjects of legislation, unless expressly prohibited from so doing, or where the prohibition is implied from some express provision. This theory must never be lost sight of by the courts in examining the powers of the legislature. It is elementary, cardinal, and frequently possesses controlling weight in determining the constitutional validity of their enactments. The General Assembly possesses all legislative authority not delegated to the General Government, or prohibited by the constitution.’ ”
The third article of our constitution provides, that “ the powers of the government are divided into three separate departments: the legislative, the executive, including the administrative, and the judicial; and no person, charged with official' duties under one of these departments, shall
The same division of powers exists in the federal constitution, and in most, if not all, of the state constititutions, and is essential to the maintenance of a republican form of government. These departments of government are equal, co-ordinate, and independent. The duties imposed on each are separable and distinct, and it is expressly provided, that “no person, charged with official duties under one of these departments, shall exercise any of the functions of another." The persons charged with the execution of these powers are alike .elected by, and responsible to, the people, in whom resides the sovereignty of the state. This division of power prevents the concentration of power in the hands of one person or one class of persons.
Upon the legislative department is conferred the power of making laws; upon the judicial department is imposed the duty of construing and interpreting the constitution and laws, and of making decrees determining private controversies; and upon the executive department is imposed the duty of executing the laws as made by the legislative department and construed by the judicial department. There is a wide and marked difference between the legislative power possessed by Congress and the legislature of a state, and in the rules and canons of construction in determining whether an act of Congress or of a state legislature is in conflict with the constitution. The federal government is one of limited and delegated powers, and Congress can exercise no power unless it has been expressly delegated, or shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the enumerated powers; and when the power of Congress to enact a law is called in question, it must be shown that the power to enact the law in question has been conferred in the manner above stated. Marshall, C. J., in speaking for the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of M'Culloch v. State of Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, says, “ This government is acknowledged by all to be one of enumerated powers. The principle, that
The true line of distinction between the powers of the federal and state governments was drawn with great clearness and force by Washington, J., in the case of Golden v. Prince, 3 Wash. C. C. 313. This great and learned judge said, “ The powers bestowed by the constitution upon the government of the United States were limited in their extent, and were not intended, nor can they be construed to interfere with other powers, before vested in the state government; which were, of course, reserved to those governments impliedly, as well as by an express provision of the constitution. The state governments, therefore, retained the right to make such laws as they might think proper, within the ordinary functions of legislation, if not inconsistent with the powers vested exclusively in the government of the United States, and not forbidden by some article of the constitution of the United States, or of the state; and such laws were obligatory upon all the citizens of that state, as well as others who might claim rights or redress for injuries, under these laws, or in the courts of that state.”
When the constitution of a state vests in the General Assembly all legislative power, it is to be construed as a general grant of power, and as authorizing such legislature to pass any law within the ordinary functions of legislation, if not delegated to the federal government or prohibited by the state constitution.
Dewey, ]., in speaking for the court, in the case of Beauchamp v. The State, 6. Blackf 299, with his usual clearness and ability, draws, the line of distinction between the powers of the federal and state governments. He says, “ This is not a grant of special, limited, and enumerated powers, implying a negative of all others, as is the case with the constitution of the United States.. The legislative authority of this. State
Perkins, J., in Doe v. Douglass, 8 Blackf. 10, says, “If, then, this act is unconstitutional, it is because it infringes some restrictions upon the legislative power of the state, for that power is supreme except wherein restrictions have been imposed.”
In the case of Vanhorn’s Lessee v. Dorrance, 2 Dall. 304, the true nature of our government is stated with great clearness, force, and accuracy. The court say, “ In England, the authority of parliament is transcendent and has no bounds. It has sovereign and uncontrollable authority; being the place where the absolute, despotic power, which must in all governments reside somewhere, is entrusted by the constitution of the kingdom.- Its authority runs without limits, and rises above control, and the validity of an act of parliament cannot be drawn in question by the judicial department. But in America the case is different. Every state in the Union has its constitution reduced to writing. This constitution is the form of government, delineated by the people, in which the first principles of fundamental laws are established. It is certain and fixed, and is the supreme law of the land. It is paramount to the power of the legislature; the legislature is the creature of the constitution. The powers of the legislature are derived from the constitution, and their acts must be conformable to it. Every act of the legislature repugnant to the constitution is absolutely void.”
The principles by which a court should be governed in holding a law to be unconstitutional are stated with very' great clearness and completeness by Marshall, C. J., in the case of Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch, 87, and by Frazer, J., in the case of Brown v. Buzan, 24 Ind. 194.
Marshall, C. J., says, “ The question, whether a law be void for its repugnancy to the constitution, is at all times, a
Frazer, J., says; “The constitution is paramount to any statute, and whenever the two are in conflict, the latter must be held void. But where it is not clear that such conflict exists, the court must not undertake to annul the statute. This rule is well settled, and is founded in unquestionable wisdom. The apprehension sometimes, though rarely, expressed, that this rule is vicious, and constantly tends toward the destruction of popular liberty by gradually destroying the constitutional limitations of legislative power, results from a failure to comprehend the character of our forms of government, and the fundamental basis upon which they rest. The legislature is peculiarly under the control of the popular will. It is liable to be changed, at short intervals, -by elections. Its errors can, therefore, be quickly cured. The courts are more remote from the reach of the people. If we, by following our doubts, in the absence of clear convictions, shall abridge the just authority of the legislature, there is no remedy for six years. Thus, to whatever extent this court might err, in denying the rightful authority of the law-making department, we would chain that authority, for a long period, at our feet. It is better and safer, therefore, that the judiciary, if err it must, should not err in that direction. If either department of the government may slightly overstep the limits of its constitutional powers, it should be that one whose official life shall soonest end. It has the least motive to usurp power not given, and the people, can
Blackford, J., in the case of The State v. Cooper, 5 Blackf. 258, in speaking of the constitutionality of an act of 1831, says, “ In questions of this kind, it is our duty to decide in favor of the validity of the statute, unless its unconstitutionality is so obvious as to admit of no doubt.”
Dewey, J., in the case of Beauchamp v. The State, 6 Blackf. 299, in speaking of the constitutionality of a law, says, “If it be unconstitutional, all such proceedings are void. The consequences are evident. Before we can consent to open a door to themj we must have the fullest conviction that stem duty demands it at our hands. We have not that conviction. We are not satisfied that the general authority of the legislature is so trammeled by any portion of the constitution, as to be incompetent to pass this beneficial law. We had this subject under consideration on a former occasion, and after much reflection, came to the same conclusion which we now express. If the views here advanced do not leave the constitutional question in regard to this law free from all difficulty, we feel well assured they involve it in too much doubt to authorize us to declare the statute a nullity.”
In the case of Maize v. The State, 4 Ind. 342, Stuart, J., speaking for the court, says: “Such questions are always
Black, C. J,, in Sharpeless v. The Mayor of Philadelphia, 21 Penn. St. 147, says, “There is another rule which must govern us in a case like this, namely, that we can declare an act of assembly void, only when it violates the constitution clearly, palpably, plainly, and in such a manner as to leave no doubt or hesitation in our minds.”
We recognize as correct the doctrine so repeatedly enunciated by the highest courts and ablest lawyers, that constitutions are to receive a strict construction, and that acts of the legislature are to be liberally construed.
As we will be required in the decision of this case to place a construction upon, and give an interpretation to, several sections of our constitution, it is important and essential that we should. ascertain the rules of constitutional cojistruction. The Supreme Court of the United States have enunciated several rules of constitutional construction, among which the following are important:
1st. The framers of the' constitution must be undertsood to have employed words in their natural sense, and to have intended what they said; and, in construing the extent of the powers which it creates, there is no other rule than to consider the language of the instrument which confers them in connection with the purposes for which they were conferred. The court should look to the nature and objects of the particular powers, duties, and rights in question, with all
2d. The court should look to the history of the times, and examine the state of things existing when the constitution was framed and adopted, to ascertain the old law, the mischief, and the remedy. Thus, the language used in the federal constitution as to the power of pardoning must be construed by the exercise of that power in England prior to the revolution, and in the states prior to the adoption of the constitution. Rhode Island v. Massachusetts, 12 Pet. 657; Ex parte Wells, 18 How. U. S. 307.
3d. A cotemporary exposition of the constitution, practiced and acquiesced in for a period of years, fixes the construction ; and the court will not shake or control it. Stuart v. Laird, 1 Cranch, 299; M’Culloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316; Briscoe v. Bank of Kentucky, 11 Pet. 257; Prigg v. Pennsylvania, 16 Pet. 539; N. J. Steam Navigation Co. v. Merchants Bank, 6 How. 344; West River Bridge Co. v. Dix, id. 507; Cooley v. Wardens of the Port of Philadelphia, 12 How. 299; The Genesee Chief v. Fitzhugh, id. 443.
4th. Where a statute admits of two interpretations, one of which brings it within, and the other presses it beyond, the constitutional authority of the legislative department, the judiciary will adopt the former construction; because a presumption ought never to be indulged that the legislature meant to exercise or usurp any unconstitutional authority, unless that conclusion is forced upon the court by language altogether unambiguous. United States v. Coombs, 12 Pet. 72.
Having laid down the rules by which we are to be governed in construing the constitution and the law in question, we proceed to consider the real questions involved in this case. The first and principal objection urged against the validity of the action of the board of commissioners is,
“ Sec. 6. No county shall subscribe for stock in any incorporated company, unless the same be paid for at the time of such subscriptmi; nor shall any county loan its credit to any incorporated company, nor borrow money for the purpose
The second rule laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States, in construing a constitution, reads thus:
“The court should look to the history of the times and examine the state of things existing when the constitution was framed and adopted, to ascertain the old law, the mischief, and the remedy.”
In 1836, the State of Indiana engaged in a general system of internal improvements. The State issued her bonds for millions of dollars, which were sold in the market at a heavy discount. The money thus procured was squandered on various railroads and canals, without completing any of them. The State was unable to pay either the interest or principal of her bonded debt. The bonds of the State greatly depreciated in value, and her credit was utterly ruined in the money market. This wasteful, reckless, and extravagant expenditure of money continued until 1842, when the whole system broke down, and the completion of the works commenced was abandoned by the State. On the 28th day of January, 1842, the legislature passed an act, entitled “an act to provide for the continuance of the construction of all or any part of the public works of this State, by private companies, and for abolishing the board of internal improvements and the offices of fund commissioners and chief engineer.” The sixty-first section of said act reads as follows :
“It shall be lawful for any county within this State to take stock in such association; and for this purpose, the several boards doing county business are hereby empowered to subscribe therefor, and to levy a tax as for county purposes, not exceeding one dollar on every hundred dollars of assessed property, to be applied to such object; and the county shall hold such stock as individual stock is held in such association.”
Under this act many private companies were formed. A
On the 14th of February, 1848, the legislature passed an act incorporating the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad Company, the twelfth section of which reads as follows :
“ It shall be lawful for the county commissioners of any county in the State of Indiana through which said railroad passes, for and on behalf of such county, to authorize, by order on their records, so much of said stock to be taken in said railroad as they may deem proper at any time within five years after opening the books of subscription to said stock: provided, however, that it shall be and is hereby made the duty of said county commissioners in any county through which said railroad may pass, in the State of Indiana, to subscribe for stock for and on behalf of said county, if a majority of the qualified voters of said county, at any annual election within five years after said books are opened, shall vote for the.same by placing on their tickets, subscription to railroad stock.”
Under this act, the most of the counties through which the said railroad passed, in the State of Indiana, made subscriptions of stock in said company, and issued their bonds to secure the payment thereof. Charters were granted to several other companies with similar provisions. Under the State system the State had become bankrupt, and under the county system many of the counties had created heavy and onerous debts. In 1846 and 1847, the State effected a compromise with her bond holders, by surrendering to them the Wabash and Erie canal for one half the debts, and issuing new bonds for the other half. Such was the condition of our State when the constitutional convention assembled in 1850; and in placing a construction upon the provisions of our present constitution, we are required to take into consideration the provisions of the old constitution, existing laws, the mischiefs resulting therefrom, and the remedy .proposed in the new constitution.
“ Sec. 5. No law shall authorize any debt to be contracted, on behalf of the State, except in the following cases: to meet casual deficits in the revenue; to pay the interest on the State debt; to repel invasion, suppress insurrection, or, if hostilities be threatened, to provide for the public defense.”
This section does not prohibit the State from building railroads or canals, but it does provide that no debt shall be contracted for that purpose. The legislature undoubtedly possesses the power, under the general grant of powers, to engage in the construction of works of public use, provided she has the money and pays for the work as it progresses. The only limitation or restriction on the power of the general assembly is, that no debt shall ever be contracted on behalf of the State for such object. Sections five and six of article ten engaged the earnest and serious attention of the convention. The discussion of. the matters embraced therein consumed six entire days, and was conducted with great earnestness and marked ability. The debates in the convention on the matters embraced in sections five and six show that nearly every speaker referred to the financial condition of the State, counties, cities, and the people, produced by the attempt to construct railroads and canals on credit; nearly every speaker expressed himself in favor of the construction of such works, but declared that the past experience had demonstrated that it was neither wise, safe, nor politic to permit either the State or counties to create any debt for such purpose. There was great diversity of sentiment in the convention. Some of the members advocated absolute prohibition; a few opposed any restriction; but the great majority were in favor of retaining the power, and desired to place such restrictions and limitations upon the exercise of the •power as would prevent in the future the evils that resulted from the credit system. The result was the adoption of sections five and six, which, by plain implication, admit that by
Let us analyze section six, and see what it contains. It contains four propositions; first, no county shall subscribe for stock in any incorporated company, unless the same be paid for at the time of such subscription; second, no county shall loan its credit to any incorporated company; third, no county shall borrow money for the purpose of taking stock in any such company; fourth, that the General Assembly shall never, on behalf of the State, assume the debts of any county, city, town, or township, or of any corporation whatever. These propositions are plainly stated, and seem to be easily understood, except the clause prohibiting a county from loaning its credit to any incorporated company. The meaning of this clause is rendered plain by reference to the practice that prevailed under the act of 1842. Quite a number of the counties had guaranteed the payment of bonds issued by the private associations that had been organized under the act of 1842. The object of the inhibition in question was to prohibit and render impossible this practice. These propositions are all stated negatively. They were intended as limitations upon the general powers granted by section 1 of article 5, and necessarily assumed the negative form. Let us transpose the first clause, and state it affimatively. Thus transposed, it would read, “Any county may subscribe for stock in any incorporated company, if such stock is paid for at the time of such subscription.” This is the plain and undoubted meaning of this clause. If thé purpose had been to absolutely prohibit a county from subscribing for stock, the object would have been effectually accomplished by omitting the condition. The section would then have read, “ No county shall subscribe for stock in any incorporated • company.” Such language would have been plain and unambiguous, and there would have been no room for doubt. The
The sixth section provides, that “ no county shalllsubscribe for stock in any incorporated company” &c. This language is general. It does not define the character or-purposes of1' the company. It, therefore, becomes necessary to ascertain, if possible, the character and purposes of the; Gompany in—
It is quite clear to us that the framers of the constitution, fin using the phrase “ incorporated company,” referred to the second grand class of incorporations as above defined. This ■is manifest from several considerations. The power was being conferred upon counties, which are included in the first grand class. It certainly was not the intention to authorize counties to 'subscribe for stock in townships, cities, or downs. It is equally plain that it was not intended that ■counties should subscribe for stock in strictly private corporations, such as banking, insurance, manufacturing, or trading companies. It was broadly admitted in argument, and is well settled on principle, and by a long and unbroken line of decisions, that the power of taxation cannot be exercised for ■private purposes; it must be for a public use. The meaning and intention of the framers of the constitution are rendered ■quite plain and<obvious, when we “ look to the history of the times, and examine the state of things existing when the constitution was framed and adopted.” The policy of the State had been to encourage counties to take stock in canal and railroad companies. Laws then in existence authorized .such subscriptions. Besides, the debates in the convention
It was admitted, in argument, that a county might subscribe for stock in a railroad company, if the money was in the treasury to pay for it when the subscription was made, but it was contended that no power existed to adopt means to carry into execution the powers granted. It is the duty of the court to give such construction to the section under consideration as will execute the power granted. It is the duty of this court to execute, and not defeat,' the will of the people, as expressed in the constitution. It is admitted that when the legislature has authorized it, counties may subscribe for stock in railroad companies, on the condition that the money is paid when the subscription is made. The counties are prohibited from loaning their credit or borrowing money to subscribe for such stock. The board of commissioners are prohibited by the law from collecting, by taxation, more money than is absolutely required for the current expenses of the county. If the commissioners obey the law, and act honestly and fairly with the people, there will never be any considerable surplus in the treasury. It will occasionally happen that there will be a deficit, and then again a small surplus. The great and wise men who framed our present constitution surely never intended, to grant a power that could not be honestly and fairly executed. Surely, it was never intended that the boards of commissioners of the several counties should, under the guise of raising money for the ordinary expenditures of the counties, accumulate a surplus of money with which to subscribe for stock in incorporated companies. Such a practice would be a fraud upon the people. Prior to the adoption of our constitution, the practice had been to submit the question to the vote of the people. The constitution is silent as to the mode of .ascertaining the wishes of the people. Th’e legislature has provided for a vote. This is an honest and fair mode of acting. The people should never be cheated or defrauded into taking stock in a railroad. If the question is fairly submitted
Having arrived at the conclusion that section six of article ten recognizes the existence of the constitutional power in the legislature to authorize municipal corporations to subscribe for stock in railroad companies, subject to the limitations prescribed, we are next required to determine whether this power carries with it, by necessary implication, the power to adopt such means as may be adequate to accomplish the end proposed.
Marshall, C. J., in delivering the unanimous decision of the court, in the case of M’Culloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, says, “We admit, as all must admit, that the powers of the government are limited, and that its limits are not to be transcended. But we think that the sound construction of the constitution must allow to the national legislature that discretion with respect to the means by which the powers it confers are to be carried into execution, which will enable that body to perform the high duties assigned to it in the manner most beneficial to the people. Let the end be legitimate, let it be within the scope of the constitution, and all means which are appropriate, which are plainly adapted to that end, which’are not prohibited, but consist with the letter and spirit of the constitution, are constitutional.”
In the case of Thayer v. Hedges, 23 Ind. 141, this court adopts the rule of construction laid down by Marshall, C. J. Frazer, J., in speaking for the court, says, “To do so, it may resort to any measure which is appropriate, which plainly conduces to that end, and which is not prohibited, and is not inconsistent with the letter or spirit of the constitution.”
In support of this rule of construction, we refer to the following authorities: Martin v. Hunter's Lessee, 1 Wheat, 304; Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat, 264; Bank of the U. S. v. Norton, 3 A. K. Marsh. 422; Braynard v. Marshall, 8 Pick. 194; Hempstead v. Reed, 6 Conn. 480; Commonwealth v. Lewis, 6 Binn
It is conceded that section one of article five and section six of article ten, combined, confer on the General Assembly the power to authorize, by appropriate legislation, municipal corporations to subscribe for stock in railroad companies, on the express condition that the money is paid at the time of such subscription; that counties cannot loan their credit or borrow money for such purpose; that the counties have no means of obtaining money except by taxing the people; and that it would be a fraud upon the tax-payers to obtain the money by indirect, unfair, and illegal modes. Does it not necessarily and unavoidably result from these premises, that the only fair and legitimate mode of obtaining the money for such purpose, is to submit the question to the people; and-that the means adopted in the case under consideration were appropriate, plainly conduced to the end, were not prohibited, and are not inconsistent with the letter and spirit of the constitution ?
We have heretofore shown that it is a rule of construction that a cotemporary exposition of the constitution, practiced and acquiesced in for a period of years, fixes the construction; and that the court will not shake or control it. We have shown what was the policy of the State, as declared in her' legislative acts. We now proceed to show what .exposition has been given of the old constitution and the laws passed under it, authorizing counties to take stock in railroad companies, and of the new constitution.
-The question was submitted to the voters of Knox county, under the twelfth section of the special charter of the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad Company, whether they' were in favor of the county subscribing for stock in such company. The vote was in favor of such subscription. The bonds of the county were issued prior to the adoption of the present
After the rendition of this judgment, the commissioners of said county refused to levy a tax to pay such judgment. The same plaintiffs commenced a proceeding by mandate against the commissioners of said, county in the circuit court of the United States, to compel them to levy a tax to. raise money to pay said judgment. A peremptory mandate, was awarded. The commissioners again appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States, where the judgment, below was again affirmed. See 24 How. 376.
The people of Daviess county, by a popular vote under said twelfth section, decided in favor of taking thirty thousand dollars stock in said railroad. The vote was taken on the first Monday of March, 1849. The commissioners of said county,on the 10th of September, 1852, in pursuance of said act and election, subscribed for such stock and issued the bonds of the county. The new constitution took effect on the 1st day of November, 1851. The commissioners of said county refused to pay the interest on such bonds. The holders of the bonds commenced an action in the circuit court of the United States against the commissioners of said county, to recover two instalments of interest on such bonds. The judges of the circuit court divided and certified a division of opinion, and on that the case went to the Supreme Court of the United States. The vote had been taken under the old constitution, and the subscription had been made, and the bonds, had
The Supreme Court held that the vote in favor of the subscription was valid, but that the subscription and bonds were void for the reason that the sixth section of article ten of our constitution prohibited a county from subscribing for stock in a railroad company unless the .money was paid at the time the subscription was made.
We regard this decision as entitled to great weight in the case under consideration, for the reason that it furnishes a cotemporary exposition of the section under discussion, and shows that the prohibition in said section was not against a county subscribing for stock, but against issuing the bonds of the county, instead of paying the money as required by said section. The court held that the power conferred by the charter being upon a county, a public corporation, or civil institution of government, did not constitute such a contract as contemplated by the constitution, which prohibits any state from passing any law “ impairing the obligation of a contract.” See Aspinwall v. The Commissioners of Daviess Co. 22 How. 364.
We will next examine the adjudications of this court and see what construction has been placed upon the section under consideration. In The City of Aurora v. West, 9 Ind. 74, Perkins, J., in delivering the unanimous opinion of this court, says, “ The internal improvement of a state by means of roads and canals has always been a legitimate subject to call into exercise the legislative power of the state. It has been, and-still is, thus in Indiana. Under the old constitution, such improvements could be carried on by means of loans, creating a State debt. Under the new, they cannot be carried on by that particular means by the State, but must be paid for
This court, in case of Dronberger v. Reed, 11 Ind. 420, says, “ Can the taking in this case be regarded as having been by the state ? Strictly speaking, all private property taken for public use is taken by the state. No other power can take it. It must be taken by the sovereign power in the exercise of the right of eminent domain. The public necessity and convenience have always indicated highways as one of the objects for which the state might take private property. But the state does not always—scarcely ever, indeed—take, the property directly herself. She acts through agents. It is, nevertheless, the state that takes by her agents. But after the policy was adopted, of permitting corporations) such as canal, railroad, “and turnpike companies, to construct certain highways, or quasi highways, at their own expense and for their own profit, instead of the state, and to take private property for that purpose, it sometimes happened that certain of those companies became unable to pay for the property so taken; and
The foregoing cases have been referred to and approved by this court, in The Evansville, &c., R. R. v. City of Evansville, 15 Ind. 395; The Board of Commissioners of Bartholomew Co. v. Bright, 18 Ind. 93; and The City of Aurora v. West, 22 Ind. 88.
This court, in the case of Thompson v. The City of Peru, 29 Ind. 305, refers to and fully approves of the opinion and reasoning of Perkins, J., in The City of Aurora v. West, 9 Ind. 74. Gregory, C. J., in speaking for the entire court, says, “ It is insisted that this section is within the prohibition contained in sections five and six of article ten of the constitution. The former section prohibits the State from contracting a debt to aid in the work of internal improvement; and the latter prohibits counties from subscribing for stock in any incorporated company, unless the same be paid for at the time of such subscription.”
The section of the constitution under consideration is not self-executing. It requires the affirmative action of the legislature, authorizing the boards of commissioners to subscribe for stock. This doctrine is very fully discussed and decided in Harney v. The Indianapolis, &c., R. R. Co., 32 Ind. 244. Frazer, C. J., in delivering the unanimous decision of the court, says: “ The counties are corporations created for the purpose of convenient local municipal government, and possess only such powers as are conferred upon them by law. They act by a board of commissioners whose authority is defined by statute. One of the powers conferred is, to collect taxes levied upon the people and property within the county. In the disposition of the
Section six of article ten of our State constitution expressly prohibits a county from-borrowing money to pay for stock subscribed for by such county; consequently, so much of the above opinion as declares the right of a county to borrow money will not apply in this State.
The fourteenth section of the act in question provides, that “ said board of commissioners may, after the assessment herein provided for or any part thereof shall have been collected, take stock in such railroad company from time to time, in the name of the proper county or township, as the case may be, and pay therefor when the same is taken, out of the money so collected as aforesaid,” &c. Now it is plain from the above quoted provision that this act was not intended to bind a county for a dollar until the money shall be in the treasury from the special tax levied to pay for the stock, and no subscription is authorized to be made until that time. This complies with the plain and undoubted requirements of our constitution. When the money is in the treasury, there is no limitation or restriction contained in the sixth section.
We therefore hold that the General Assembly possessed the power under the constitution to authorize counties to subscribe for stock in a railroad company, on the express condition that the stock is paid for in money at the time
The case under consideration involves the right of a county to make subscriptions to a railroad. We only decide the real question involved in the case. There are other causes pending in this court involving the right of counties to malee donations to railroad companies, and of townships to subscribe for stock and to make donations to railroad companies. As to these cases, we withhold the expression of any opinion.
It is next insisted by the appellees that the act in question violates the twenty-fifth section of article one of our State constitution. This section reads as follows: “ No law shall be passed, the taking effect of which ‘shall be made to depend upon any authority, except as provided in this constitution.”
It is claimed on the authority of the above section, first, that the act in question is no law; that it is not an expression of the legislative will as law, but only a proposition to make law; second, that if it be law and an expression of the legislative will, still its taking effect is made to depend, not on the will of the legislature, but on the will of the people.
The point relied, upon is, that the vote of the people gives vitality and validity to the act; in other .words, that it does not become a law until it has been ratified by a vote of the people. The precise question was raised in the case of The C. W. & Z. Railroad v. Commissioners of Clinton County, 1 Ohio St. 77. The question is discussed with great clearness, force, and ability by Ranney, J., and as we fully concur in the views expressed by him, we will quote from his opinion. That able and learned judge, speaking for the court, says: “That the General Assembly cannot surrender any portion of the legislative authority with which it is invested, or authorize its exercise by any other person or body, is a proposition too clear for argument, and is denied by no one.
“ But while this is so plain as to be admitted, we think it equally undeniable, that the complete exercise of legislative power by the General Assembly does not necessarily require the act to so apply its provisions to the subject matter as to compel their employment without the intervening assent of other persons, or to prevent their taking effect, only upon the performance of conditions expressed in the law.
“ Indeed, the whole body of our legislation, as well as that of every other state, is divided between laws which imperatively command or prohibit the performance of acts, and those which only authorize or permit them. Time and space would both fail me, to refer in detail to all of those of the latter description. A few, however, will serve to illustrate the whole. The county commissioners in each county are authorized, but not required, to erect public buildings, and to erect and establish poor houses, in their respective counties, and to levy taxes for these purposes. In these cases, with many others that might be mentioned,.the discretion is vested in the county commissioners. * * *
“ But because such discretion is given, are these, and all
“ The act under consideration is mandatory in some of its provisions, and leaves a discretion in others. It commands the vote to be taken, and if the subscription is made, it imperatively directs all the subsequent proceedings. But it submits to the discretion of the voters of Clinton county, who are chiefly interested and to bear the burden, if assumed, whether the subscription shall be made, and the law thus fully executed. But this power of deciding upon its execution, so far from being contradictory to or inconsistent with the act, is the condition prescribed by the law making power itself, upon which alone it is permitted to have effect. It is not the vote that makes, alters, or even approves the law, but, as well remarked by one of the counsel, it is the law that makes the vote, and prescribes everything to be done consequent upon it.”
The above decision draws a distinction between the taking effect of a law and its execution .or enforcement. The same distinction has been made by this court in several cases. In the case of The Board of Commissioners v. Spitler, 13 Ind.
This court, in the case of Thompson v. City of Peru, 29 Ind. 305, say, “ The twenty-fifth section of the bill of rights provides, that ‘ no law shall be passed, the taking effect of which shall be made to depend upon any authority, except as provided in this constitution.’ The right of petition, as a condition precedent to the exercise of this power by the common council, if it existed as to subscriptions of stock, would not render this section void under this provision. The law is in force. The petition is only necessary to call into action the power conferred on cities.”
Judge Cooley, in his very learned and valuable work on Constitutional Limitations, in discussing the question under consideration, says : “ One of the settled maxims in constitutional law is that the power conferred upon the legislature to make laws, cannot be delegated by that department to any other body or authority. Where the sovereign power of the
“ For the like reasons, the question whether a county or township shall be divided, and a new one formed, or two townships or school districts formerly one be re-united, or a county seat located at a particular place, or after its location removed elsewhere, or the municipality contract particular debts, or engage in works of local improvement, is always a question which may, with propriety, be referred to the voters of the municipality for decision.”
The learned judge refers to sixty-one decisions made by the
If there is no well founded distinction between a law being in force and its execution, then a large number of the laws of this State are not in force. Prior to the adoption of the present constitution, special charters were passed for cities, towns, railroads, canals, manufacturing and trading companies. After the adoption of the new constitution general-laws were passed on all these subjects, and there is a provision that any incorporated city, town, or other company acting under a special charter may abandon its rights under the special charter, and may organize under the general laws.. If the position assumed by the appellee be correct, these general laws are not in force until those acting under special-charters avail themselves of the privilege granted, and if they-never accept the provision made for them, then the laws wild', never be in force. We cannot endorse such a construction. If the execution of a law cannot be made to depend upoir the action of the people, then another large class of our legislation will be stricken down. Soon after the adoption of our present constitution, a law was passed authorizing achange of the county seat of Clay county! This law was correctly held by this court to be local and special, and was in conflict with sections twenty-two and twenty-three of article four of the constitution, because a general law could be made on that subject. See Thomas v. Commissioners of Clay Co., 5 Ind. 4. The General Assembly then passed a general law providing for the change of county seats. The General Assembly has also passed a general law providing for the creation of new counties. The boards of commissioners possess no jurisdiction to act under either of these laws, until the matter is presented to them by petition. There has been but one new county created under the general law, and very few applications have been made for the creation of new counties. There have been very few applications made for changes of county seats, and only three.
It is maintained with great earnestness, that the act under consideration was not in force until the vote of the people of Tippecanoe county put it in force. If its being in force depends upon the vote of the people, then it never has been and never can be in force. By what authority was the question submitted to the vote of the people ? It was under and by virtue of this act. If it was not in force by virtue of having been passed by the legislature and approved by the governor, then the commissioners of said county possessed no power or authority to submit the question to the vote of the people, and the vote would be nugatory and void. Surely it will not be maintained that a nugatory and void vote can have the force and effect of putting a law in force. Such a principle can be maintained neither on principle nor by authority. That the vote of the people can have no such effect, is settled by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Aspinwall v. Commissioners of Daviess County, 22 How. 364.
The case mainly relied upon by the appellees to support their position is the case of Maize v. The State, 4 Ind. 342.
The liquor law of March 4th, 1853, was held to be unconstitutional on two grounds, first, because it conflicted with section twenty-five of the bill of rights, which declares, that “no law shall be passed, the taking effect ®f which shall be made to depend upon any authority, except as provided in this constitution;” second, because it conflicted with sections twenty-two and twenty-three of article four, which prohibit local and special laws. The law under consideration cannot be affected by the constitutional prohibitions against local or special law's. The sixth section of article ten of the constitution makes the subscription of stock depend upon the separate and independent action of each county. While the law may be general and uniform, the exercise of the
The principle involved in the case under consideration is clearly distinguishable from that decided in the Maize case. In that case, the law could have been made general, while under the operation of the voting clause it might be prohibitory in one township, and in an adjoining township it would be lawful to retail intoxicating liquors; in one township a citizen was liable to be indicted and punished for an offense, while another citizen in an adjoining township for doing the same thing was guilty of no offense.
The railroad law is géneral and in force in every part of the State, open to any county or township to avail itself of its privileges upon complying with its terms. It has no double aspect according to the views or consent of the voters in the several townships. There is no essential difference between the vote taken in the mode required and a petition signed by the voters for the county commissioners to appropriate the aid asked. • The law requires, as preliminary, that there shall be a duly organized railroad company, that the road to be aided s^jiall run in or through the county or township, that a petition of one hundred freeholders of the former or twenty-five of the latter shall ask the amount desired to aid the road, and notices must be published stating how much is to be voted for; so that each voter when he deposits his ticket “for the railroad appropriation” or “against the railroad appropriation,” in effect petitions the county commissioners to grant it or remonstrates against it, according as his ticket reads. The mode of ascertaining the wishes of the voters, upon the. subject is, for the sake of convenience
It is also claimed by the appellee that the act in question violates section one of article ten of our constitution, which provides, that “ the General Assembly shall provide by law for a uniform and equal rate of assessment and taxation,” &c.
This section has received a construction by this court, which shows that it is not obnoxious to the objection urged.
This court, in Bright v. McCullough, 27 Ind. 223, say: Section one of article ten “ does not require that the rate of assessment shall be uniform and equal for all purposes throughout the State; and we think its meaning clearly is, that the rate of assessment and taxation must be uniform and equal throughout the locality in which the tax is levied. If the levy is for State purposes, then the fate must be equal and uniform in all parts of the State; and if the levy be for county purposes, the rate must be uniform and equal throughout the county in which the levy is made; and so in townships, where the levy is for township or road purposes. It was simply intended that the uniformity and equality of rate should be co-extensive with the territory to which the tax applies.”
It was conceded in theargument that the above construction of section one of article ten was correct, but it was maintained that as the railroad extended from Muncie, in Delaware county, through the counties of Madison, Tipton, Clinton, Tippecanoe, and Benton, in this State, it was necessary that each and all of the counties must vote for an appropriation and assess the same amount of tax in each county, to make it uniform and equal. This position is wholly untenable. We have already shown that section six -of article ten of our constitution has legalized the subscription of stock by counties, and made it depend upon the separate and independent action of each county, uninfluenced and uncontrolled by the
We therefore hold that the law in question is not in conflict with any provision of our constitution.
But it is urged that the proceedings of the Board of Commissioners of Tippecanoe county were irregular and illegal. The objections were presented in argument in detail, but when genalized they amount to three. The first is, that the commissioners changed the places of voting of Fairfield township two days before the vote was taken for or against the appropriation to the railroad.
The second is, that the inspectors in two of the townships made no return of the votes taken therein.
The third is, that the question submitted to the voters of the county was for or against a subscription of stock by the county in said railroad, and thereby excluded from the voters the question of donating the money to aid in the construction of the said railroad.
Section four of the act under consideration reads as follows:
“ Sec. 4. The polls shall be opened at the several voting places in the county, or township, as the case may be, by the proper judges and inspectors of election, on the day fixed by said commissioners, and the boards shall be organized and poll books and tally sheets shall be kept, and the whole voting, and taking and certifying of votes, shall be conducted as nearly as may be in the manner provided by law for conducting the voting and certifying the votes at the general election for State and county officers.”
Section four of the election law of May 13th, 1869, provides, that “the board of county commissioners ofthe proper county, may designate one or more places of holding elections in any township, or form precincts of two or more townships, when public convenience require it.” Acts of 1869, p. 59.
Section fifteen of the act to provide for contesting elections provides as follows:
There is no allegation of fraud; it is not alleged that any legal voter was prevented from voting, or that any illegal voter was permitted to vote. It is stated in the complaint, admitted in the briefs, and was conceded in the oral argument, that if all the votes in the two townships from which no returns were made were counted against the appropriation, there would be a clear majority of all the votes cast in favor of the appropriation.
It was said by this court, at the present term, in case of Gass v. The State, post, 425, that “ it is settled by authority that statutes regulating the mere mode of conducting elections are directory, and that any departure from the prescribed mode will not vitiate an election, if the irregularity does not deprive any legal voter of his vote, or admit a disqualified voter to vote, or cast uncertainty on the result, and has not been occasioned by the agency of the party seeking to deríve a benefit from it.” Cooley Const. Lim. 617, 618, and authorities there cited.
The following case is much in point: The question submitted to the voters was the removal of a county seat, and it was claimed that there had been gross irregularities in the proceedings of the judges of‘the election, some of whom were personally interested. The court say: “ But the burden of proof is on the contestant to show that there were irregularities, mid, that they affected the result!’ In support of this conclusion numerous authorities are cited. Again, the court say: “The facts stated in the notice being admitted by the demurrer, the question presented is, whether these errors or irregularities render void the election in said towns. It will be observed that fraud is not charged, nor is it alleged that any illegal votes were polled, or that any legal votes were excluded. The law requires the judges of elec
Where -the question of aiding a railroad by a county subscription was submitted to the voters, and the sheriff was required by statute to have the polls opened to receive the votes, but failed to do it at one precinct, wherefore it was claimed the voting was void, the court, after a careful consideration of the point, decided: “The failure of the sheriff to have the polls opened at one precinct does not invalidate. To have that effect it must appear also by the facts that such failure did or might have affected the general result of the contest.” L. & N. R. R. Co. v. County Court, 1 Sneed, 637.
There is no doubt that the board of commissioners possessed the power to designate the places of holding the election. The law does not prescribe the time when it shall be done, nor does it require any notice to be given when there is a change of places of holding the election. If the votes given in the two townships from which no returns were made would have changed the result, the consequences would have been very different. The law regards the substance, and not mere forms. It is the duty of the courts to
The third and last objection has given us more trouble. When the commissioners ordered a vote to be taken, they adopted a resolution to the effect that if the vote of the county was in favor of an appropriation, they would subscribe for stock in said railroad, for and on behalf of the county. This resolution was published in the election notice. The vote, however, was taken according to the law, “ For the Railroad Appropriation,” and “Against the Railroad Appropriation.” The fourteenth section of the act provides, that after the vote and after a part of the tax is collected, the board of commissioners may either take stock in, or donate money to, the company. The members composing this court have been unable to agree upon this question. Downey, J., is of the opinion that the board of commissioners possessed no power to exercise the discretion vested in them until after the vote, and after a part of the tax was collected, and the giving of notice to the voters that a vote on subscription of stock only would be taken may have prevented persons from attending the election and voting, who would have done so if they had supposed that the money, when collected, would be donated to the said railroad company. While concurring with the opinion of the court upon the- other questions decided, he feels constrained to dissent from the judgment of the court, for the cause aforesaid.
Pettit, C. J., and Worden, J., are of the opinion that the
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause is remanded, with directions to the court below to sustain the demurrer to the complaint, and dissolve the injunction, and for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.