When this ease was here before (
The questions decided before need not be called in controversy. We must take it that our former opinion settles that the town had authority to compromise a valid liability for a smaller sum, and that the Act of 1891, Ch. 815, on its face, authorized the election. When the second trial was had below the point was taken for the first time, that, conceding, as this Court had held, that the Act of 1891, Ch. 315, by its terms authorized the election, that act was invalid because not passed as required for all acts empowering counties, cities and towns to issue bonds. The Constitution, Art. II., Sec. 14. This section of the Constitution is imperative and not recommendatory, and must be observed; otherwise this wise and necessary precaution inserted in the organic law would be converted into a nullity by judicial construction. It was intended as a safeguard, and has been held mandatory in all other courts in which that question has been presented, as will be seen below. This point was not raised below in the former trial, nor in this Court, as the plaintiff was then relying upon the charter of the town, which we held invalid for that purpose. On this second trial, when the plaintiff *221 offered for the first time the Act of 1891, Oh. 315, as authority to show a valid election authorizing the indebtedness of $40,000 as a basis to authorize the compromise, (for, except as a compromise, the judgment would be void on its face, being ultra vires,) the defendant contended that the Act of 1891, Oh. 315, while valid as a railroad charter, was unconstitutional and void so far as authorizing the creation of an indebtedness by the town, because not enacted in the manner required by the Constitution, Art. II., Sec. 14. The Journals were putin evidence and showed affirmatively that the act was not read three several days in eaeh House, and that the ayes and noes were not entered on the readings in the House, as required by the Constitution for acts authorizing the creation of public indebtedness. The point, therefore, thus arises for the first time in ihis case, and was not presented and could not be presented in the former appeal for the reasons above given. The point is one of transcending importance, and is simply whether the people, in their organic law, can safeguard the tax-payers against the creation of State, county and town indebtedness by formalities not required for ordinary legislation, and must the courts and the Legislature respect those provisions ? This safeguard is Section 14 of Article II. of the Constitution. It provides : “No law shall be passed to raise money on the credit of the State, or to pledge the faith of the State, directly or indirectly, for the payment of any debt, or to impose any tax upon the people of the State, or to allow the counties, cities or towns to do so, unless the bill for the purpose shall have been read three several times in each House of the General Assembly and passed three several readings, which readings shall have been on three different days and agreed to by each House respectively, and unless the yeas and nays, on the second and third reading of the bill, *222 shall have been entered on the Journal.” The Journals offered in evidence showed affirmatively that ‘l the yeas and nays on the second and third reading of the bill” were not “ entered on the Journal.” And the Constitution, the supreme law, says that, unless so entered, no law authorizing State, counties, cities or towns to pledge the faith of the State or to impose any tax upon the people, &c., shall be valid.
This case has no analogy to
Carr
v.
Coke,
The following is a list of the authorities, in number 93, sustaining this view either directly or by very close analogy. It is believed that no Federal or State authority can be found in conflict with them. Decisions can be found, as for instance Carr v. Coke, supra, to the effect that where the Constitution contains no provision requiring entries on the Journal of particular matters, such, for *224 example, as calls of the yeas and nays on a measure in question, the enrolled act cannot in such case be impeached by the Journals That, however, is a very different proposition from the one involved here, and the distinction is adverted to in Field v. Clark, 143 U. S., on p. 671. The authorities are as follows :
Alabama
—
Arlcansas —19 Ark., 250; 27 Id., 366 ; 32 Id., 496; 33 Id., 17; 40 Id., 200; 51 Id., 559.
California
—8 Sawyer, 238 ;
Colorado
—
Florida
—
Georgia—23 Ga., 566.
Illinois —14 Ill.,297 ; 17 Id., 151; 25 Id., 181; 35 Id., 121; 38 Id., 174; 43 Id., 77; 62 Id., 253 ; 68 Id., 160 ; 120 Id., 322.
Indiana
—
Iowa
—
Kansas—15 Kans., 194; 17 Id., 62; 26 Id., 724.
Kentucky
—
Louisiana —44 La., Ann., 223.
Maryland
—
Michigan
—2 Gibbs, 287;
Minnesota
—
Missouri
—
Nebraska
—
Nevada
—
New Hampshire —35 N. H., 579; 52 Id., 622.
*225
New York
—
Ohio
—
Oregon
—
Pennsylvania —26 Pa. St., 446.
South Carolina —12 S. C., 300 ; 13 Id., 46.
Tennessee
—
Texas
—
Virginia—79 Va., 269.
West Virginia
—
Wisconsin
—
Wyoming
—
United States
—
Of these cases, especially pertinent are
To same purport are Black’s Constitutional Law, Secs. 31, 102; Cooley Constitutional Lim. (6th Ed.), 156, 163, 168; Smith Const. Lim., 833 ; Story Const., 590 ; Sedgwick Stat., 539, 551 ; Cush. Leg. Assemb., Sec. 2211;
Constitutional requirements as to the style of acts or the manner of their passage are mandatory not directory.
State
v. Patterson,
The history of the country at large, and of this State as well, has- shown the necessity of this safeguard as to acts authorizing the creation of public indebtedness, which has been incorporated also into several other State Constitutions. "We have no power nor wish to nullify so plain and mandatory a provision, so carefully and explicitly worded, and which has been held binding by all other courts wherever the question has been presented.
The judgment on its facéis by consent and for a railroad subscription. It is therefore on its face to be treated as void, being
ultra vires,
unless a special authority is shown authorizing the indebtedness for which it was a compromise
(Kelly
v.
Milan,
The consent judgment entered into by the town authorities could not bind the town to a subscription to a railroad unless the power to subscribe or donate had been legally granted by the Legislature.
Consent judgments are in effect merely contracts of partii-s, acknowledged in open court and ordered to be recorded. As such they bind the parties themselves thereto as fully as other judgments, but when parties'act in a representative capacity such judgments do not bind the cestuis que trusteni unless the trustees had authority to act, and when (as in the present case) the parties to the action, *227 the town authorities, had, as appears above, no authority to issue the bonds, their honest belief, however great, that they had such power would not authorize them to acquire such power and bind the town by'cousenting to a judgment. It is not a question of a fraudulent judgment but a void judgment from want of authority to consent to a decree to bind principals — the tax payers — for whom they had no authority to create an indebtedness by consenting to a judgment, any more than they would have had by issuing bonds. If authorized to create the indebtedness, either the bonds or the-consent judgment would be equally an estoppel, but as they had no such authority neither bonds nor judgment is binding on the tax-payers. It is not their bond nor judgment. In Kelly v. Milan, supra, Blatcheokd, J., says:, “The declaration of the validity of the bonds contained in the decree was made solely in pursuance of the consent to that effect contained in the agreement signed by the mayor and the officers of the railroad company. The act of the mayor in signing that agreement could give no validity to the bonds, if they had none at the time the agreement was made.The adjudication in the decree, under the circumstances, cannot be set up as a judicial determination of the validity of the bonds. This was not the case of a submission to the court of a question for its decision on the merits, but was aconsentin advance to a particular decision by a person who had no right to bind the town by such consent, because it gave life to invalid bonds, and the authorities of the town had no more power to do so than they had to issue the bonds originally.”
In
Tex. & Pac. R. R.
v.
So. Pacific
Co.,
In
Lawrence Mfg. Co.
v. Janesville,
In
Lamb
v. Gatlin, 22 N. C.,
37,
(cited and approved by the Supreme Court of the United States
ut supra,)
Gaston, J., says, as to the effect of a consent judgment by an executor, that it did not bind the beneficiaries of the estate, as here the tax-payers are not bound by the consent judgment entered into by the town authorities, because “ it is not in truth a decree
in invitum,
and by a judgment of the court to which the defendant was compelled to submit, and which, therefore, would not only bind him, but those also for whose benefit he held the estate, unless it can be impeached for fraud ; but it is a voluntary settlement between the defendant and the persons then claiming, which the parties to that settlement have chosen to invest with the forms of a judicial determination. The decree_was avowedly adopted because
it was made by the parties.
A decree thus rendered as against the present plaintiffs (who were the principals whom the defendant in the consent judgment represented) has no force except so far as it is seen to be just.” There are other authorities to the like effect and purport, but the above will suffice. A recital of facts which the corporate officers had no authority to determine, or a recital of matters of law, do not estop the corporation.
Dixon Co.
v.
Field,
The certificate of the Speakers is not good for more than it
*230
certified, i. e. that the bill has been read three times in each House and ratified. And ordinarily that makes the bill a law. Bnt for this class of legislation the Constitution provides that the facts thus certified by the Speakers will make no law unless it further appears that the yeas and nays have been recorded on the Journals on the second and third reading in each House. The Constitution makes the entry on the Journals essential to the validity of the act. If it be conceded that presumption of regularity arises from the publication of the act in this case, it was rebutted, for the Journals were offered by the defendant, and showed that no constitutional authority had been conferred to issue the bonds or contract the indebtedness. It is incumbent upon the purchaser of municipal bonds to examine whether the power to issue has been duly granted.
Lake
v.
Graham,
In instructing the jury upon the evidence to find the issues in favor of the plaintiff there was error.
Error.
