Adams v. Board of County Commissioners

1 McCahon 235
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 17, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 McCahon 235 (Adams v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Board of County Commissioners, 1 McCahon 235 (kan 1868).

Opinion

Delahay, J,

These two suits concern, substantially, the same subject-matter. The first is instituted for the purpose of enjoining the county of Douglas, through its corporate authorities, from issuing certain bonds to the amount of $300,000, to the Leavenworth, Lawrence and Galveston Railroad — the second is to enjoin the treasurer, and other officers of the county, from the collection of a tax imposed by the commissioners, for the payment of the coupon due January 1st, 1869, upon a bond for $300,000, already issued, and from the application of the proceeds of such tax, to the liquidation of the coupon.

The facts in brief are, that the question of issuing bonds to the amount of $300,000, to this company, was submitted by an order of the board of county commissioners, to the voters of the county, by virtue of an act of the legislature of the state, as far back as the 8th day of February, 1867.

The terms and conditions upon which the issuance of the bonds was to be made, are expressly stated in the submission, as follows : “ Shall the county of Douglas subscribe $300,000, in full paid stock, to the capital stock of the Leavenworth, Lawrence and Galveston Railroad Company, and issue bonds of the county therefor, in bonds, payable thirty years after date, bearing interest at the rate of seven per cent-per annum, from date of delivery, to be issued to said company when twenty-four miles of said railroad track shall be completed and in full operation, from [237]*237Lawrence, Douglas county, via Baldwin city : 'provided, that no greater amount of bonds shall be issued than the amount of stock issued by the railroad company, to the county of Douglas.

“ 2d. The conditions of the above, is with the express understanding and agreement, that the said company shall relinquish all claim to the bonds for subscription of stock heretofore voted to said company, to-wit: on the 12th day of Septembe, 1865.” The vote was taken with this result: 2,170 for the proposition, and 424 against, a majority of little less than five-sixths of the entire vote.

The board of commissioners, by resolution, on the loth day of April, 1868, reciting the above submission, the vote and the result, declared that the company having complied with all the requirements, stock to the amount mentioned, should be subscribed, and the bonds issued. Since this time, a series of suits in the state courts, some of which (though by no means pertinently), were recited in the second bill, has been instituted for the purpose of restraining, by injunction, the said board, from issuing these bonds, and thus subscribing to the capital stock of the company. Now for the first time, the same species of litigation is proposed in the federal courts. Phineas Adams, a nonresident of the state of Kansas, and a resident of the state of New Hampshire, as the complainant, has filed, on the equity side of the circuit court of the United States for the district of Kansas, the several bills mentioned, for the purpose of obtaining an injunction, as already stated.

[238]*238It will be seen, from this review of the facts, that the cases affect very large pecuniary interests, and the nature of the work, the early completion of which, may much depend upon the aid contributed by the subscription for its stock, shows that the interest other than those merely pecuniary, must be even greater. Not to introduce into this opinion, the ordinary speculations, as to the advantages to arise to the state, and especially to that region, through which the proposed road will pass, it will suffice to call attention to the vote of the people of Douglas county, in illustration of their own estimate of these advantages. But in a country where railroad intercommunication commands so large a share of public interest, and elicits such immense outlays of capital, I might feel myself justified in enlarging upon this subject, were it not that holding the scales of justice, and performing the duties of her minister, I am not allowed to be swayed from her dictates by any consideration of the character of one or the other of the litigants in her courts. The complainant is entitled, small though his interest may be, in comparison to that appertaining to the other parties in this proceeding, to have that interest protected, provided he brings himself within the class of persons, and exhibits an interest over which this court has jurisdiction.

The respondents have moved for a dissolution of the injunctions which had been temporarily issued in the two cases, and insist, as grounds for their motion, from the showing of the bill and the papers filed in the cases :

[239]*239First, That this court has no jurisdiction.

Secondly, That there are not such equities disclosed as entitle the complainants to a continuation of this relief.

These propositions will be disposed of in their order.

The jurisdiction of the courts of the United States is prescribed by law, that of the circuit court included. Its jurisdiction is derived from the nature of the subject in controversy in some cases, and in others, from the character of the parties, and in some, from the union of those several elements. The latter, is the case in the present instance. It must appear in the bill, that the complainant is a non-resident of the state, to enable him to invoke the aid of this court, otherwise he is remitted for redress, to the courts of the state. In addition to this, it must appear in the bill, that there is in controversy, or in jeopardy, by the action of the respondents, whom he desires to restrain, an amount exceeding $500. Judiciary Act, 1789, c. 20, sec. 11. The non-residence of the complainant, sufficiently appears, and the respondents make no point to the contrary-. Whether the bill shoves more than the sum of $500 to be involved in the proceeding, is another question. The respondents say, as one of their grounds of motion, that it does not. The complainant insists that it does. If, in any proper sense, the sum of $300,000 the amount of bonds, the issue of which, is asked to be enjoined, may be said to be in controversy, then, of course, in the first case, no question can exist. There is a sense in which this amount may be said to be in controvery. But is it a [240]*240sense which will determine the question in favor of the complainant. To be in controversy, certainly can not, properly, be understood in any other sense than as being in an attitude to be decided in favor of, or against the party, who asks the interference of the court. While that amount is really the subject of which the court is asked to adjudicate, it is not the amount which the complainant claims that he is in jeopardy of losing by the respondents, unless they are restrained.

We do not see how any other test of jurisdiction can be maintained, than that when more than $500 are required as the basis of jurisdiction, it must mean an amount exceeding $500, which the plaintiff is liable to lose or gain, by the result of the suit. It could never have been intended by the act of congress, that because a subject-matter may have been involved in the proceeding, worth more than $500, therefore, any non-resident may have brought his suit in the circuit court, even although his own interest may have been a very small amount of the item of property.

The result of such a doctrine would be, or might be, to throng these courts with proceedings in which a mere trifle might be claimed by the complainant, simply because that trifle comprised a part, a small part, of some large interest.

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Bluebook (online)
1 McCahon 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-board-of-county-commissioners-kan-1868.