5 Neb. 423 | Neb. | 1877
The act of Congress, approved April 19, 1864, to enable the people of Nebraska to form a constitution and state government, and for the admission of such state into the Union, granted to the state seventy-two sections of the unappropriated public lands, to be selected and located under the direction of the legislature, for the use and support of a state university and for no other purpose. The constitution adopted in pursuance of this act provides that “ the principal of all funds arising from the sale or other disposition of lands or other property, granted or intrusted to the state for educational purposes, shall forever be preserved inviolate and undiminished; and the income arising therefrom shall be faithfully applied to the specific objects of the original grants or appropriations.”
But this incorporation, under the name of “ The Regents of the University of Nebraska,” is not, in any sense, to be considered in the nature of a private eleemosynary corporation for the general promotion of learning, because its whole interests and franchises are the exclusive property and domain of the government itself, and, therefore, it is in the strictest sense a public corporation. Public corporations are not limited to those created for municipal purposes only, but, strictly speaking, public corporations are all such as are founded for public purposes, where the whole interests belong to the government. Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat., 508. And such “ public corporations are but part of the machinery employed in carrying on the affairs of state; and they are subject to be changed, modified or destroyed, as the exigencies of the public may demand.” Trustees v. Tatman, 13 Ill., 30. “ Over them the legislature has power, not limited by the constitution to impose such modifications, extensions or restraints, as the general interests and public exigencies may require, without infringing private rights. All corporations invested with subordinate powers, for public purposes, fall within this class, and are subject to legislative control.” Inhabitants of Yarmouth v. Trustees of North Yarmouth, 1 Am. Law Reg., O. S., 598. Coke Litt., § 413. Vin. Abr. Corp., A., 2. Phillips v. Bury, 2 Term Rep., 346. Allen v. McKeen, 1 Sumn., 276. People v. Morris, 13 Wend., 325. Penobscott Broom Corp. v. Lamson, 16 Me., 224. Hence it is very clear that the rights and franchises of such public corporations never become vested rights as against the
' Under the act of 1869, the university corporation had no control over or disposition of the endowment fund, and now by the act of February 23, 1815, the legislature has deemed it proper to abolish the office of treasurer of the university, and to make the state treasurer the custodian of the funds appropriated for the support and maintenance of the university, to be disbursed by him Upon warrants drawn by the state auditor, in the same manner as funds appropriated for the support of other state institutions, not incorporated, are disbursed. Hence, by this latter act, the custody and control of these funds are taken from the corporation and placed in the custody of the state treasurer for disbursement; and under the settled doctrine of the law, in respect to public corporations of this kind, the legislature had the undoubted authority to take these funds from the custody of the corporation, and divest it of any corporate power over them, and having done so, we think it clear that the regents, as such corporation, have no authority, in law, to bring or maintain this action. It acts simply by delegated authority, and can exercise only such powers as are expressly given to it, or which may be necessary to carry into effect those powers specially given.
The judgment of the district court must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.