1 Dill. 130 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Missouri | 1871
This application presents novel and interesting questions, some of which are of first impression. These will be noticed, however, only so far as may be necessary to reach a conclusion. The city corporation not now appearing by counsel, and the record of the judgment upon the bonds against the city reciting an appearance by it, and service of the summons haying been made upon the last chief officer of the city, the validity of the judgment must, in this proceeding, be assumed. 1 Rev. St. 1855, § 2, art. 2; Muscatine Turn Verein v. Funck. 18 Iowa, 469.
The city of Ste. Genevieve was specially incorporated in 1849, by a public act of the legislature of the state. Laws 1849, p. 298. Its charter has been several times amended, and it was in 1851 expressly authorized to issue the bonds to the plank road company, on which the plaintiff's judgment was rendered. Act Feb. 7, 1851. And it was subsequently authorized to levy and collect annually, a special tax. to pay interest on such bonds. Act. Feb. 23. 1853.
The constitution of the corporation is after the usual model of municipal corporations, having a special charter; the inhabitants are the corporators, the mayor is the chief executive officer, and the aldermen constitute the governing body.
It is suggested that the corporation thus created has been dissolved because of its failure to elect municipal officers, and the disuse of its corporate functions since September 4th, 1865. when all of the municipal offices became absolutely vacant by force of the ousting ordinance passed by the constitutional convention. To this proposition I cannot give my assent. I deny that a corpora
The effect at common law of the dissolution of a corporation was, that debts due by and to it were discharged, and its property reverted to the grantors. Formerly, corporations of all kinds, in England, both private and municipal, were usually created by royal charter, and the courts in that country have held, or assumed, that the loss of an integral part would dissolve a municipal corporation, or at least suspend its existence, and that its charter might, for a misuse of its franchises, be declared forfeited by judicial sentence in quo warranto, as in the famous case against the city of London in time of Charles II. Upon a critical examination of the decisions in England, I doubt whether it is settled law even in that country, that a municipal corporation can be totally dissolved in either of these ways; but if so, the doctrine has no application to our municipal corporations which are brought into existence for public purposes, by legislative act, and which do not, in the sense of the English books, consist of integral parts.
For non-user or mis-user, courts may judicially declare forfeited the charters of private, but not of public corporations.
The charter or constituent act of the corporation of Ste. Genevieve not being limited in duration, and not having been repealed by the legislature, is still in force, and the artificial body which it created still exists.
Under the constitution of the United States, which prohibits a state from passing any act which impairs the obligation of contracts, it may be doubted whether it would be possible even for the legislature of the state, notwithstanding its general supremacy over the public corporations, to dissolve a corporation so as to defeat The rights of its creditors. Van Hoffman v. Quincy, 4 Wall. [71 U. S.] 537; Butz v. Muscatine, 8 Wall. [75 U. S.] 583.
But if the state has the power, it has not attempted to exercise it; on the contrary, the act of February 19, 1800. recognizes in the clearest terms, the corporations as still existing, notwithstanding their failure to hold their elections for offices made vacant by the ousting ordinance; and provides a method by which elections may be held, and corporate officers supplied. There is much discussion in the adjudged cases, and some contrariety of opinion with respect to the right of officers to hold over in the absence of express provisions, beyond their terms, and until their successors are elected and qualified. But that question is not in this case, because whatever might otherwise be the legal right of the officers of the city to hold over, they cannot do so if they fail to take the oath required by tbe ousting ordinance.
The officers of the city having failed to take the prescribed oath, their official existence was absolutely at an end on the 4th day of September. 18G5. and at that time the corporation had no legal officers. The corporation offices became vacant, and not having been filled, are still vacant. And we have the anomaly presented of a public corporation without any officers de jure or even de facto to execute its powers or fulfil its duties.
It is now suggested that the old corporation, if not dissolved in the manner before considered, was nevertheless dissolved or superseded by the organization in I8G7 of the town corporation by the county court, under the general laws of the state. Rev. St. 1865, p. 240, c. 41.
If it was thus superseded the inquiry would arise whether the town corporation was any thing more than the authorized legal successor of the old corporation, and bound to discharge its obligations.
But on examining the abovementioned statute, under which the supposed new incorporation was attempted, and on which it rests for all the legal virtue it possesses, we find that it only authorizes, in the mode therein prescribed, the incorporation of towns and cities not already incorporated. It does not empower a town or city incorporated by special charter, and which cannot therefore destroy its corporate life at its own pleasure, to abandon its charter without the consent of the legislature which gave it. thereby leaving the locality without municipal government or rule.
Legislative sanction is, in this country, indispensably necessary to the existence of every corporation; and as this new town organization is without legislative authority, it is wholly without validity, and its officers have no right in law to exercise powers under the general incorporation act; much less have they the right to exercise the functions of officers under the special charter.
The city corporation being that which was established by the legislature under the charter, and that corporation remaining in existence, although it is without officers, it is clear that no validity can attach to an unauthorized organization under the general law. Offices must be de jure, but officers may be such de facto. To say that an officer is one de facto, when the office itself is not created or authorized by the legislature, is a political solecism, having no foundation in reason nor support in law. Decorah v. Bullis, 25 Iowa. 12, 18; Hildreth's Heirs v. McIntire’s Devisee, 1 J. J. Marsh. 206; People v. White, 24 Wend. 520. 540.
If the gentlemen who are claiming under the new organization to be the officers of the
The corporation under the special charter, and its amendments, is the legal and only corporate body; the new organization is a bald usurpation of the franchises of the state, and its acts, unless ratified by the legislature, are simply void. Decorah v. Bullis, 25 Iowa. 12.
Thus we perceive the suggestion that the new organization destroyed or superseded the old corporation, to be unfounded. Not only so, but the foregoing observations answer the further suggestion that the creditor should cause a writ of paandamus to be issued and directed to the officers who are acting under the new town organization.
The way is thus cleared to the immediate question which the court is called upon to decide, viz.: Whether it will appoint its marshal, or some other proper person, to assess and collect from.the property of the municipality a tax sufficient to pay the plaintiff’s debt.
For that debt he has the judgment of this court. Execution has been returned nulla bona. If the corporation had officers, a mandamus to require them to levy and collect the tax would be a remedy not only proper in itself, but one to which the judgment plaintiff is entitled as of right. This is settled law in this court, and it is not necessary to cite cases upon the subject decided by the supreme court of the Unitea States. The corporation, however, has no officers, and we fear it is but too plain that the reason why the inhabitants do not elect officers under the act of February 19, 1866, is that they cherish the delusion that they can defeat the rights of creditors, and by taking on a new organization escape old liabilities. Such notions of justice or corporate morality, if entertained, receive no countenance in the legislation or judicial decisions in Missouri, or elsewhere. Lindell v. Benton, 6 Mo. 361; Rev. St. 1865, p. 244; Butz v. Muscatine, 8 Wall. [75 U. S.] 575, 581-584; Bank of Alexandria v. Patton, 1 Rob. (Va.) 499; Van Hoffman v. Quincy, 4 Wall. [71 U. S.] 537.
This court must protect and enforce the rights of its constitutional suitors. The sending of its marshal into an indebted municipality, armed with authority to levy and collect a tax, is the exercise of a delicate and extraordinary power, to be avoided whenever possible; but which it will use whenever judgments it renders cannot otherwise be enforced. Riggs v. Johnson Co., 6 Wall. [73 U. S.] 166, 198; U. S. v. Treasurer of Muscatine Co. [Case No. 16,538]. Were there any municipal officers in esse, the court certainly would not, in the first instance, appoint its marshal, but would issue its command to them.
Under the peculiar circumstances of this case, which is without a precedent, there seems to be no remedy to the plaintiff but to make the order he asks. Anxious, however, to avoid, if may be, the carrying of this order into effect, and to allow the corporation time to elect officers and itself to levy and collect the tax, the execution of the order will be suspended for the space of three months, and the right reserved to suspend it longer if a showing be made to the court, or any of its judges, that an election of municipal officers, as provided by the law and charter, has been duly held, and that the proper body has levied, and is proceeding, according to law. to collect the taxes necessary to satisfy the plaintiff’s judgment. Ordered accordingly.