121 Ind. 206 | Ind. | 1889
— The mayor of the city of Rushville appointed a committee, composed of the members of the common council, to investigate and report upon the question of the expediency of buying an electric-light plant and machinery. The committee, in due time, reported to the common council in favor of making the purchase. On the 3d day of April, 1889, action was taken on the report at a regular meeting, at which all of the members of the common council were present, and the following resolution was introduced :
“ Resolved, That the report of the special committee, relating to lighting the city, be adopted, and that the officers therein named be instructed to sign the contract named therein.”
Three of the six members composing the common council voted in favor of the resolution, but the other three members, although present, declined to vote, and the mayor de
The meeting at which the resolution was adopted was a regular one, attended by all the members of the common council, and all who voted at all voted in favor of the resolution. The question, therefore, is: Does the fact that three of the members present declined to vote authorize the conclusion that the resolution was not legally adopted ? In our judgment it does not.
The rule is that if there is a quorum present and a majority of the quorum vote in favor of a measure, it will prevail, although an equal number should refrain from voting. It is not the majority of the whole number of members present that is required j all that is requisite is a majority of the number of members required to constitute a quorum. If there had been four members of the common council present, and three had voted for the resolution and one had voted against it, or had not voted at all, no one would* hesitate to affirm that the resolution was duly passed, and it can make no difference whether four or sis members are present, since it is always the vote of the majority of the quorum that is effective. The mere presence of inactive members does not impair the right of the majority of the quorum to proceed with the business of the body. If members present
The rule we have asserted is a very old one. The doctrine is thus stated by one of the earliest writers on municipal corporations : “ After an election has been properly proposed, whoever has a majority of those who vote, the assembly being sufficient, is elected, although a majority of the entire assembly altogether abstain from voting; because their presence suffices to constitute the elective body, and if they neglect to vote, it is their own fault, and shall not invalidate the act of the others, but be construed an assent to the determination of the majority of those who do vote.” Willcock Munic. Corp., section 546. In a recent American work it is said: “ Those who are present and who help to make up the quorum are expected to vote on every question, and their presence alone is enough to make the vote decisive and binding, whether they actually vote or not. The objects of legislation can not be defeated by the refusal of any one to vote, when present. If eighteen are present and nine vote, all in the affirmative, the measure is carried, the refusal of the other nine to vote being construed as a vote in the affirmative so far as any construction is necessary.” Horr & Bemis Munic. Police Ordinances, 42. The principle involved is asserted in many cases. State v. Green, 37 Ohio St. 227; Launtz v. People, 113 Ill. 137; County of Cass v. Johnston, 95 U. S. 360, 369; St. Joseph Tp. v. Rogers, 16 Wall. 644; State v. Mayor, 37 Mo. 270; Everett v. Smith, 22 Minn. 53 ; Oldknow v. Wainright, 2 Burr. 1017; King v. Bellringer, 4 Term Rep. 810; Inhabitants v. Stearns, 21 Pick. 148.
We can not agree with appellant’s counsel in the construc
The decision in the case of the State v. Porter, 113 Ind. 79, lends no support to the appellant’s argument, and the reasoning of the court is strongly against it. The point actually decided was that no act could be lawfully done unless a quorum was present, but it was said : “ The general rule is, that when a council, or collective body, consisting of a given number of members, is authorized by a statute to do an act, or to transact business, authority is thereby given to that body to act upon the subject committed to it, or to transact the business which it is authorized to conduct, whenever a majority of the members thereof are lawfully present. Cush. Par. Law, section 247. The body can not act without the presence of a quorum, and the act of the quorum is the act of the body. State, ex rel., v. Wilkesville Tp., 20 Ohio St. 288; McFarland v. Crary, 6 Wend. 298.” The logical sequence from the premises thus laid down is that the vote of the majority of the quorum present is effective. In Hamilton v. State, 3 Ind. 452, this court quoted, with approval, the statement of the court in Downing v. Ruger, 21 Wend.
It would not benefit the appellant if we should hold that the councilmen present and not voting did, in effect, oppose the resolution, and, certainly, the utmost that can, with the faintest tinge of plausibility, be claimed, is that their votes must be counted as against the resolution. It is inconceivable that their silence should be allotted greater force than their active opposition would have been entitled to have assigned it had it been manifested. If we should assume that their votes are to be counted against the resolution, then the mayor had the casting vote, and, by declaring the resolution adopted, he gave it in favor of the measure. This is so expressly decided in Small v. Orne, 79 Maine, 78. But we think that the law is as stated by Willcock, and that the members present and not voting assented to the adoption of the resolution. •
We have no doubt that the common council had power to contract for lighting the city or to furnish light from works of which it is, or may become, the owner. The power exists under the general act of incorporation. But we need not rest .our decision upon that act, for the authority is conferred by an act entitled “An act in relation to the lighting
The first section of the act provides that the common council of any city shall “ have power to light the streets, alleys, or other public places with the electric light, or other form of light, and to contract with any individual or corporation for lighting such alleys, streets and other public places with the electric light or other form of light,” and this provision, taken in itself, is broad enough to authorize the common council to buy and operate the necessary plant and machinery. But statutes are not to be considered as isolated fragments of law, but as parts of one great system. Bradley v. Thixton, 117 Ind. 255; Morrison v. Jacoby, 114 Ind. 84; Chicago, etc., R. W .Co. v. Summers, 113 Ind. 10; Robinson v. Rippey, 111 Ind. 112; Humphries v. Davis, 100 Ind. 274. If there were any doubt as to the meaning of the act it would be removed by considering it, as it is our duty to do, in connection with the general act for the incorporation of cities, for that act confers very comprehensive powers upon municipal corporations as respects streets and public works, and contains many broad general clauses akin to those which Judge Dillon designates as “ general welfare clauses.” Our own decisions fully recognize the doctrine that municipal corporations do possess, under the general act, authority as broad as that here exercised, and the operation of that act is
Where a municipal corporation has authority to purchase property it may issue its bonds in payment unless there is some statutory or constitutional prohibition. Miller v. Board, etc., 66 Ind. 162; Second Mat’l Bank, etc., v. Danville, 60 Ind. 504; Daily v. City of Columbus, 49 Ind. 169; Board, etc., v. Day, 19 Ind. 450; City of Lafayette v. Cox, 5 Ind. 38. In the case of City of Richmond v. McGirr, supra, it was said: “As to the kind and form of the evidences and obligations to be executed, the council, in the exercise of a sound discretion, must determine, and their determination, in the absence of fraud, is final.” Many authorities are cited in support of this ruling, and it is undoubtedly correct as applied to municipal corporations of such a class as cities and counties, but not as applied to school corporations and like corporations, with very limited powers. The decision in the case of City of Aurora v. West, 22 Ind. 88, has no relevancy to the question here under discussion, for there the question was as to the power of the- city to incur a debt in aid of a railroad company, while here the question is as to the authority of the city to issue bonds in payment for property it had power to purchase. The case of State, ex rel., v. Hauser, 63 Ind. 155, does not decide that a city may not issue bonds to pay for water-works purchased; what it decides is, that a city may not issue and sell bonds in order to obtain money to construct water-works. The difference between that case and this is very broad and very plain; here bonds are to be issued to pay for property purchased ; there they were issued to be placed on the market for sale. Issuing bonds to pay for property purchased is a very different thing from issuing bonds to obtain money.
Judgment affirmed.