64 P. 427 | Ariz. | 1901
The plaintiffs, December 31, 1896, filed their petition in this court, which prayed for a writ of mandate to compel the defendants, who were then, respectively, governor, auditor, and secretary of the territory, and who, by virtue of holding said offices at the date of the. filing of said petition, were the loan commissioners of the territory, to fund the bonds, and the interest due thereon, issued by Pima County in aid of the Arizona Narrow-Gauge. Bailroad Company under the provisions of a territorial act of February 21, 1883. The defendants demurred to the petition, and, by way of answer, set up that the bonds sought to be funded, in the suit of Lewis against Pima County, by the district court of said Pima County, were declared to be void and of no binding obligation upon the said county; that the judgment of the district court was, upon appeal, affirmed by the supreme court of the territory, and on appeal from the judgment of this court the latter was affirmed by the supreme court of the United States; that the judgment so rendered and affirmed in the Lewis case was res adjudicada, and binding upon the plaintiffs in this suit. The records of this court in the present case show that the demurrer to the petition was sustained, and the petition dismissed, whereupon an appeal was taken to the supreme court of the United States. The latter court reversed the judgment of this court, and remanded the cause “for further proceedings not inconsistent with the opinion.” Utter v. Franklin, 172 U. S. 424, 19 Sup. Ct. 183, 43 L. Ed. 498. In the. opinion the supreme court held that the judgment in the case of Lewis, holding that the bonds were invalid because the territorial legislature had no authority to authorize their issuance under the organic law, “was res adjudicada only of the issues then presented, of the facts as they then appeared, and under the legislation then existing”; that the act of Congress of June 6, 1896, cured this defect, and validated the territorial act of February 21, 1883, and made it the duty of the loan commissioners to fund the bonds in question. Upon the filing of the mandate of the supreme court in this court, the defendants asked leave, to file an amended return raising new issues of fact, and setting up that the bonds in question were “not sold or exchanged in good faith and in
Upon the first point raised we deem it sufficient to say that the weight of authority in the state courts is in favor of the view that the writ of mandamus operates on the office, rather than on the individual who occupies the office, and therefore does not abate by a change of personnel in the office, and that no revivor is necessary against a successor of the officer against whom the proceedings were instituted. This also appears to be the rule as followed in the supreme court of the United States whenever a proceeding is to enforce a continuing duty against a corporation or municipality. Thompson v. United States, 103 U. S. 482, 26 L. Ed. 521; Commissioners v. Sellew, 99 U. S. 624, 25 L. Ed. 333. The loan commissioners were, by the statute creating the board, made a continuing body, and the delinquency complained of ■ related to a continuing duty of the commission; and we see no reason why the doctrine as applied in the above cases does not apply to the present proceeding. Ex parte Parker, 131 U. S. 221, 9 Sup. Ct. 708, 33 L. Ed. 123.
The question as to whether the loan commission has been abolished is one which involves a consideration of not only the repealing statute, but, as well, the various acts, congressional and territorial, relating to the creation of the commission, its dnties, and the general subject of funding. In the Revised Statutes of 1887 there, was incorporated, as title 31, an act which provided for the creation of a commission to be known as the “Loan Commissioners,” and the funding by this commission of the outstanding and existing indebtedness of the territory. This commission was to be. composed of the governor, auditor, and secretary of the territory. Congress, by the act of June 25, 1890, amended the territorial act in important particulars, and then “approved and confirmed” the same, “subject to future territorial legislation.” The territorial legislature, construing the clause “subject to future territorial legislation’5 to mean that Congress, having
The repealing statute which we have referred to (being act No. 32 of the Laws of 1899) reads as follows: “That paragraph 2039, section 1, chapter 1, title XXXI, of the Revised Statutes of the territory of Arizona; also that section 1 of act No. 79, Session Laws of the sixteenth legislative assembly of the territory of Arizona; also act No. 33 and act No. 74, Session Laws of the eighteenth legislative, assembly of the territory of Arizona, are hereby repealed.” Paragraph 2039, referred to in this act, was reincorporated as the first section of the congressional act of June 25, 1890, and reads as follows: “For the purpose of liquidating and providing for the payment of the outstanding and existing indebtedness of the. territory of Arizona, the governor of the said territory, together with the territorial auditor and the territorial secretary and their successors in office, shall constitute a board of commissioners to be styled the. loan commissioners of the territory of Arizona, and shall have and exercise the power and perform the duties hereinafter provided.” Act No. 79, referred to, is the act of March 19, 1891. Act No. 33 and act No. 74, sought to be repealed by the act, do not pertain to the creation of the board of loan commissioners, and their consideration is not important in this connection. The act of Congress of June 25, 1890, covered the
Mr. Justice Brown, in the opinion delivered in this case in the supreme court, construing the act of Congress of June 6, 1896, said: ‘ ‘ The first section of the act requires the funding of all outstanding obligations of said territory and its municipalities, and all outstanding bonds, etc., of the territory
“Section 1. Upon information in writing to the chairman of the board of supervisors of Pima County, Arizona Territory, by the president of the Arizona Narrow-Gauge Railroad Company, the corporation of that name which filed its articles of association with the secretary of said territory on the 23d day of November, A. D. 1882, that said railroad company is ready to exchange bonds with the said county of Pima, according to the provisions of this act, it shall be the duty of said chairman, and he is hereby directed to call a meeting of said board, to be held- within five days after the receipt of said notification, and it shall be the duty of said board of supervisors, and they are hereby directed to meet within five days, at the county seat of said county, and then and there to order issued two hundred thousand dollars 'of bonds of said county, in denominations of one thousand dollars each, and bearing interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, interest payable semiannually, the principal payable in twenty years, which said bonds, and the interest coupons thereto attached, shall be signed by said chairman and the clerk of said board, and shall, within thirty days after the said -order of issuance thereof has been made, be delivered by the clerk of said board to the county treasurer of said county of Pima, to be by him
“Sec. 2. Upon the application of said railroad company to the said treasurer, and the. tender by said company of fifty thousand dollars of the first mortgage bonds of said company in like denominations, bearing like interest and payable in like time as those of said county, it shall be the duty of said treasurer and he is hereby directed to deliver fifty thousand dollars of bonds of said county to the president and secretary of said railroad company, in exchange for fifty thousand dollars of the first mortgage bonds of said railroad company, so tendered as above provided. And whenever and so often as each five miles of said railroad shall have been graded, laid with ties and iron, said treasurer shall upon proof thereof, which proof shall be the certificate of the county surveyor to that effect, exchange with the said president and secretary of said railroad company fifty thousand dollars of said bonds of said Pima County for fifty thousand dollars'of said bonds of said company, for each five miles so completed, until the two hundred thousand dollars of bonds of said Pima County are exchanged for a like number of bonds of said railroad company.”
It is to be noted that under the provisions of these sections of the statute the bonds of the county were to be exchanged for the bonds of the railroad company under the condition therein provided, and it does not provide for a sale of the same. It is also to be noted that of the issue of two hundred thousand dollars of the bonds of the county, called for by the act, fifty thousand dollars was to be exchanged upon the organization of the company, and upon notice to the county of the company’s readiness to exchange a like amount of bonds the county was to deliver to the company bonds to the amount of fifty thousand dollars; that a like amount was to be delivered by the county treasurer to the company in exchange for a like amount of railroad bonds whenever the county surveyor should certify that five miles of the company’s railroad had been graded and laid with ties and iron, and thereafter, upon the completion of an additional five miles of said railroad as provided, the. county treasurer, upon proof thereof by the certificate of the county surveyor to that effect, should exchange a like amount of county bonds
Do these facts show that the bonds in question are included among those required by the act of Congress of June 6, 1896, to be funded? It must be conceded that the county of Pima derived little or no benefit from the building of the few miles of the Arizona Narrow-Gauge Railroad. However, there can be no question, under the proof, that the terms of the act of February 21, 1883, were fully complied with, both on the part of the county and, as well, on the part of the railroad company, in the matter of the issuance and exchange of the bonds, to the extent that the legislative act specifically provided. There was nothing in evidence showing bad faith on the part of the railroad company, in so far as the first exchange of bonds was concerned; nor is there any evidence
Street, O. J., Doan, J., and Davis, J., concur.