Amey v. Mayor of Allegheny City

65 U.S. 364, 16 L. Ed. 614, 24 How. 364, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 413
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 65 U.S. 364 (Amey v. Mayor of Allegheny City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amey v. Mayor of Allegheny City, 65 U.S. 364, 16 L. Ed. 614, 24 How. 364, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 413 (1861).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case has been sent to this court on a certificate of division of opinion between the judges of the Circuit Court for the western district of Pennsylvania.

The plaintiff has sued the mayor and aldermen and citizens of Allegheny city, in actions of debt, upon several coupons of bonds which were issued by that corporation, and made payable to the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad Company, in payment for two subscriptions, of two hundred thousand dollars each, to the stock of the latter.

It was agreed by the parties upon the trial of the cause to submit it for the opinion of the court upon a statement, in the nature of a special verdict, and that verdicts upon the coupons should be entered accordingly.

The judges, however, in their consideration of th'e.-cagé, dif fered in opinion ©n the following points: “Whether the several acts of Assembly recited in the cáse stated conferred any *368 authority on the corporation of the city of Allegheny to issue bonds with coupons, as had been done, or whether the same are altogether null and .void, by reason of such want of authority,-or for' any other irregularity connected with their issue.” 1

■ It is admitted that the bonds were issued and delivered in payment for subscriptions of stock to the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad Company; that they were made payable,to that company or its order; that the company had negotiated them to raise funds to construct the road, and that the road had been completed in conformity with the conditions of th(. subscriptions of the defendants.

The parties agree that the subscriptions had been made by the authority of acts of the Legislature of the State of Pennsylvania, in conformity with the charter of the railroad company, and were intended to be in pursuance of resolutions and ordinances of the select and common councils of the city of Allegheny.

The mayor was first instructed to subscribe for four thou, sand shares of the capital stock of the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad Company, to be paid for in bonds, with coupons attached for interest, payable semi-annually, the bonds having twenty-five years to run. The railroad agreed to pay the interest'upon the bonds until the completion of the road, or so much of .it as may be adequate to pay the interest, and that the proceeds of the bonds were to be applied to the construe tion of the road from the city of Allegheny to the. mouth of the Big Beaver river, about twenty-five miles. And to secure the city and the bondholders, it was stipulated, in addition to the legal obligátions incurred in making the subscription, that the stock, with the interest, earnings, and dividends of the road, should be pledged to pay the interest, and finally to redeem the bonds. Accordingly two hundred bonds of $1,000 were prepared, and were delivered to the railroad company, on the 1st of January, 1850, and the city at the same time received a certificate of four thousand shares. The Coupons now sued upon were a part of those- which were attached tc lliose bonds.

*369 The second subscription was made in virtue of another, act of the Assembly of Pennsylvania, and in compliance with a resolution of the city,- dated June 19th, 1852. That act authorized the city to increase its subscription to the capital stock of the railroad company, to any amount not exceeding its first subscription, upon the laws and conditions which had been prescribed for the first; but it restrained the city from making an issue of bonds of a less denomination than $100. The act also exempts the stock from the payment of -any tax in consequence of the payment of any interest to stockholders, until the net earnings of the company shall realize six per cent, per annum on the capital stock. The city authorities passed an ordinance for this additional subscription, but it was not published in compliance with the charter of the city, nor was it recorded in the manner which it is said the charter requires the city ordinances to be. ' Eor those neglects, it is said the ordinance was null and void, and that the city had not the power to make the second subscription under the act of the Legislature. But the city bonds were issued, and the sub.scription was made. It is also objected that the ordinance was endorsed upon the bonds, without any proviso'requiring the railroad company to pay the interest upon them according to its stipulation. But it is admitted that- the road was built first from the city to the Big Beaver river, and afterwards completed to. its termination on the western border of Ohio, and thence to Chicago.

The city continues to hold its stock in the railroad company. It has received five dividends from the • company — one of $14,000, another of $16,000, anotherof $12,000 — which were retained by the company by the consent of the city, and had been appropriated to the payment of the coupons for interest; and that $4,000 of those dividends had been paid in cash, .and others in stock. Prior to the city’s second subscription, it appears that the debt of the city had become $500,000, the limit prescribed by an act of the Legislature. That act is, “that it should not be lawful for the councils of the city, either directly or indirectly, by bond's or certificates of loan of indebtedness, or by virtue of any contract, or by any means or device whai *370 soever, to increase its indebtedness to a sum which, added to the existing debt, shall exceed $500,000, exclusive of the subscription of $200,000 to the Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroad -Company.”

' It is admitted, also, that the stock of the city in the railroad company had been voted at all.elections.of it by order of the city, except in a single instance, when the city refused to vote. The city was incorporated on the 11th April, 1840, with all the powers and authorities then vested by law in the select and common' council's of the city of Philadelphia.

We have given the agreed case of the parties in every particular in any way bearing upon the points about which the judges in the' court below were divided in-opinion, and will now consider them.

The subscriptions of the defendants were made under the acts of the 5th April, 1849, and that of the 14th April, 1852. The first permitted a subscription of $200,000, to be paid for by “certificates of loan.” The second permitted the increase of it, to an amount not exceeding the first, without, however? having altered the manner in which the corporate credit of the city was to be used for the payment of the second subscription. We infer from the words of the act, and do not see how it can be otherwise, that it was to be paid for by the same certificates of indebtedness which the Legislature had directed to be issued and used for the payment of the first subscription.

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Bluebook (online)
65 U.S. 364, 16 L. Ed. 614, 24 How. 364, 1860 U.S. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amey-v-mayor-of-allegheny-city-scotus-1861.