42 F. 817 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Mississippi | 1890
This bill was filed by complainant against defendants in the chancery court of Madison county, and removed to this court by the defendants Mrs. Condet Smith and the Rank of Commerce, both nonresidents of this state. The bill seeks to enjoin Priestly, the treasurer, from paying the interest and bonds, described in the bill heretofore issued by the supervisors of Madison county to the Vicksburg, Canton & Yazoo City Railroad Company, and purchased and now held by said defendants and others. The questions to be decided arise upon the demurrer of these defendants to complainant’s bill.
The allegations stated in the bill as a defense to the payment of said bonds and interest are that the board of supervisors had no power to issue the same; that they purport to have been issued in payment for capital stock subscribed by said board in said corporation; anti that, to have authorized said board to subscribe for said stock, and to issue said bonds, with interest coupons attached, it was necessary that the assent of two-thirds of the qualified voters of said county should have been obtained, such number being ascertained by a vote had thereon at a general or special election held for said purpose. The bill alleges that there were 6,275 registered voters in said county, and that, at the time said subscription -was ordered to be made, the board of supervisors entered the order declaring that 1,067 votes were two-thirds of the votes of the qualified voters in said county, and that number of votes were cast at the election held for the purpose stated, which, the bill avers, was then known to be untrue. The bill admits the authority for holding said election, and that it was held; that there were 1,067 votes cast in favor of said subscription, and 77 votes against the subscription; that the order of the board was made, declaring that the election had been held in pursuance of the act of incorporation of said railroad company, and that more than two-thirds of the qualified voters of said county had voted in favor of said subscription, which order was made on the 27th day of April, 1872, directing the issuance and delivery of the bonds, with interest coupons attached, in payment for the stock which the president was
The decision made by,the supreme court of this state in the case of Hawkins v. Carroll Co., 50 Miss. 735, is mainly relied upon to sustain the validity of the bonds and coupons involved in this suit. This decision was rendered at the October term, 1874, but was not delivered until March, 1875, and not until those bonds were issued, delivered, .and put in circulation. The bill in the case of Hawkins v. Carroll Co. was to enjoin the board of supervisors or trustees from putting the bonds in circulation; and while the court construed the provision of the constitution of the state prohibiting counties, cities, and towns from subscribing for capital stock, and issuing bonds in payment in railroad corporations, unless assented to by two-thirds of the registered voters therein, the question as to whether or not this construction of the constitution would affect the validity of bonds issued before that time, and held by innocent holders for value, without notice, was not decided in that case, but was reserved. So that decision is not binding in this case. But, if it were otherwise, the decision of the supreme court of the United States of Carroll Co. v. Smith, 111 U. S. 556, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 539, subsequently decided, settles that question in favor of the validity of the bonds issued before the decision of Hawkins v. Carroll Co., and the same class of bonds enjoined in Hawkins v. Carroll Co., and which, in my opinion, is decisive of this case. The questions now presented were before the court upon the validity of the coupons upon the same bonds in the case of Smith v. Madison Co., (decided at June term, 1877,)
The cases of Bank of Commerce, and that of Mrs. Condet Smith are submitted together on demurrer, and are governed by the same rules. The bonds in both cases were issued before the decision of Hawkins v. Carroll Co., 50 Miss. 735. The holders in both cases are bona fide purchasers for value, without notice, and entitled to recover the amount of the interest coupons held by them, and will be entitled to recover the amount of the bonds when due. The result is that the demurrer to the bill in each case must be sustained, the injunction dissolved, and the bill dismissed, at complainant’s costs.
Before the publication of the Federal Reporter began.