33 Wis. 288 | Wis. | 1873
The cases of Whitiny v. Railroad Co., 25 Wis., 167, and Judd v. Fox Lake, 28 Wis., 583, mast be taken to have settled the law of this state, that injunction is the proper remedy to stay and prevent the execution and delivery by its officers of the negotiable bonds or other commercial obligations of a town or municipal corporation, when the case made by the plaintiff, being a tax payer of the town or municipality and a party likely to suffer pecuniary loss, shows that such officers threaten or are about to execute and put in circulation such bonds or other negotiable paper of the corporation in contravention of the authority given by law for that purpose, or in violation of the trust reposed in them by the legislature, or by the taxable inhabitants of the town, or other municipality, whose officers they may be. The case of Judd v. Fox Lake approves, and it was so intended by the court at the time, the jurisdiction in this respect which was silently exercised in Whitney v. Railroad Co., and which jurisdiction had also received the express approbation of the court in Phillips v. Albany, 28 Wis., 340, 353. The reason for distinguishing cases of this kind from others in which it has been held that injunction will not be granted to restrain the proceedings of municipal officers, and for maintaining the jurisdiction, sufficiently appears from what is said in Judd v. Fox Lake. The officers of the town appoi nted to execute and deliver the bonds under these special acts of the legislature granting authority to the town for that purpose, are but the agents of the tax-payers or inhabitants within the town, constituting the body politic and corporate thereof; but whether such agency is general or special is a point of some difficulty, and one not clearly settled by the decisions of the state courts. This court held, in Veeder v. Lima, 19 Wis., 280, 291, that such agency was special, and the same proposition has been maintained in several state decisions cited in that opinion. On the other hand, the reasoning and decision of the supreme court of New Hampshire, where a somewhat similar question arose in Blackman v. Charlestown, 42 N. H., 125, also cited in Veeder v.
The conclusion that the voters or inhabitants of the town are the contracting party upon one side, and the railroad company upon the other, and that the supervisors, or, as in this case, the chairman of the board of supervisors of the town and the town clerk, are the mere agents of the former, is settled by the decision of this court in Rochester v. Alfred Bank, 13 Wis., 432,
And in Phillips v. Albany, supra, speaking of a case where, without express authority given, or requirement made by the legislature, a special agreement had been entered into, or proposition submitted by the railroad company, which had been ratified by the voters, this court said : “ If the proceeding here was _ to restrain the officers or authorities of the town from violating the terms of the agreement, or executing and delivering the bonds contrary to its provisions, and that fact were shown, we should have little difficulty in upholding the injunction.”
The act of the legislature here in question expressly provides for the issue of the bonds “ upon such terms and conditions as shall be agreed upon by and between the town and the railroad company.” The terms and conditions are to be contained in “a definite proposition in writing, signed by the president or secretary of said railroad company, and sealed with the common seal of said company.” Upon receipt of such proposition, the clerk of the town is to give notice of an election to be held by the legal voters of the town, which notice shall contain a full statement of the proposition, and at which election the voters are to deposit a ballot upon which shall be written or printed the words, “ for the railroad proposition,” or the words, “against the railroad proposition.” The act furthermore provides that, in case of a majority of votes “for the railroad proposition,” it shall be the duty of the proper officers to cause the bonds, so voted, to be issued and delivered to the railroad company, “ on performance by said company of the terms and conditions contained in such railroad proposition.'” Laws of 1889, ch. 126, secs. 1, 2, 4.
It appears from the complaint in this action, that the requisite proposition was made, an election held, and a majority vote obtained in favor of the proposition. Of the conditions contained in the proposition, and which were in their nature strictly precedent, and to be performed by the company before delivery
It is understood from the arguments of counsel at the bar, but not from any allegation to that effect found in the complaint, that the railroad company defendant has procured the license or permission of the Northwestern Railway Company to run over its track for the distance of two or three miles into the town of Menasha. The terms of this license or lease, and whether for a long or short period of time, has not been made known to us, nor does it seem material that we should know. It is enough that one of the conditions of the proposition submitted by the company to the voters plainly required the company to construct an independent line of road, of which it should be the owner, from one or the other of the points named in the proposition, to the Wolf river, and that it is averred that such condition has not been complied with by the company. Counsel for the company urges that the advantages to the town are and will continue to be the same as if an independent line of road had been built. This court can not say that those things are or will be so; but if it could, it has no power to dispense with the performance of the condition. Courts can not place
By the Court. — Order affirmed.