Board of Liquidation v. McComb

92 U.S. 531, 23 L. Ed. 623, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1793
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 10, 1876
Docket609
StatusPublished
Cited by184 cases

This text of 92 U.S. 531 (Board of Liquidation v. McComb) 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
Board of Liquidation v. McComb, 92 U.S. 531, 23 L. Ed. 623, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1793 (1876).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court.

Tbe decree appealed from in tbis case was for a perpetual injunction to restrain the Board of Liquidation of tbe State of Louisiana from using tbe bonds known as tbe consolidated bonds of the State, for tbe liquidation of a certain debt claimed to be due from the State to the Louisiana Levee Company, and from issuing any other State bonds in payment of said pretended debt.

Tbe decree was made upon a bill filed by tbe appellee, McComb, a citizen of Delaware, in which he alleges that be is a bolder of some of these consolidated bonds, and that tbe employment of the bonds for the purpose proposed, namely, tbe payment of tbe claim of tbe Levee Company, will be a violation of tbe pledges given by tbe act creating tbe bonds, and will greatly depreciate their value. Tbe bill sets out tbe circumstances of tbe case, and prays for an injunction. Tbe defendants demurred; and, tbe demurrer being overruled, they declined to answer, and stood upon tbe supposed defects of tbe plaintiff’s case. Thereupon tbe decree appealed from was rendered; and tbe question is, whether the injunction ought to have been decreed upon tbe statements made by tbe bill.

It appears that, by an act of the legislature of Louisiana, passed tbe 24th of January, 1874, called tbe Funding Act, tbe governor of tbe State, and other State officers, were created a *533 board of liquidation, with power to issue bonds of the State to an amount not to exceed $15,000,000, or so much thereof as might be necessary for the purpose of consolidating and reducing the floating and bonded debt of the State, and to be called “ consolidated bonds of the State of Louisiana; ” which bonds were to bear date the 1st of January, 1874, and to be payable in the year 1914, with interest at seven per cent per annum. The act provided that these bonds should be exchanged by the board for valid outstanding bonds of the State and valid warrants of the auditor issued prior to the passage of the act (except warrants issued in payment of constitutional officers of the State), at the rate of sixty cents in consolidated bonds for one dollar in outstanding bonds and warrants; and that they should be used for no other purpose. An annual tax of five and a half mills on the dollar of the assessed value of all the property of the State was levied, and directed to be collected, to pay the interest on these bonds, and to purchase and retire them. Other provisions were added, making it penal for the officers to divert the funds thus provided, or to obstruct the execution of the act, or to fail in the performance of any of the official duties required by it; and it was declared that no court or judge should have power to enjoin the payment of the bonds or the collection of the tax provided therefor. The eleventh section further declared, that each provision of the act should be a contract between the State and each and every holder of the bonds issued under the act: and section thirteen provided that the entire State debt, prior to the year 1914, should never be increased beyond the sum of $15,000,000 authorized by the act; it being declared to be the intent and object thereof, and of the exchanges to be effected under it, to reduce and restrict the whole indebtedness of the State to a sum not exceeding $15,000,000, and to agree with the holders of the consolidated bonds that said indebtedness should not be increased beyond that sum during said period. On the day of passing this act, the general assembly passed another act, proposing to the people of the State an amendment to the constitution of the State, which was adopted at the ensuing election; and provided that the issue of the consolidated bonds authorized by the funding act should create a valid contract between the State and each *534 holder thereof, which the State should not impair; prohibited the issue of any injunction against the payment of the bonds or levy of the tax; directed that the latter should be levied and collected without further legislation; and declared that, whenever the debt of the State should be reduced below $25,000,000, the constitutional limit should remain at the lowest point reached, until it was reduced to $15,000,000, beyond which it should not be increased.

The language of this clause is explained by the fact that, in 1870, a constitutional provision had been adopted limiting the State debt to $25,000,000; and the further fact, stated in the bill, that in 1874, when the funding act was passed,'the outstanding bonds and valid warrants fundable under the act equalled this amount; so that, at sixty cents on the dollar, the debt to be funded would require the issue of the whole $15,000,000 of consolidated bonds. Besides these classes of debts, others to a considerable amount were then outstanding, as will appear further on.

The board of liquidation created by the funding act entered upon the performance of their duties, and, up to the commencement of proceedings in this case, they had issued a little over $2,000,000 under the act.

On the 2d of March, 1875, the general assembly passed an act authorizing the board to issue a portion of the above-mentioned consolidated bonds to the Louisiana Levee Company, in liquidation of a debt claimed to be due it under a contract made with the State in 1871, by which that company was to reconstruct and keep in repair the levees on the Mississippi River and its branches and outlets. The act of 1871, in and by which this contract was made, had provided and set apart certain taxes to be levied and collected throughout the State, to meet the payments which would accrue to the company. But it seems that these taxes had failed to reach their destination, as a committee appointed by the act of 1875, to investigate the subject, reported that there was $1,700,000 still due the company, which had accrued prior to October, 1873, and which the act authorized the board of liquidation to pay in the said consolidated bonds. This debt was not one of the debts to fund which the consolidated bonds had been created. It was not *535 represented by outstanding bonds of the State, nor by valid warrants.of the State auditor; and the complainant in this case, in his bill, insists that it is not a debt of the State at all, being provided for by the special taxes appropriated for its payment. Another objection made to the proposal to fund it is, that it is to be paid in full, whilst the funding act authorized the payment of only sixty cents on the dollar of the debts to be replaced by the issue of the consolidated bonds, — the great object of the act being to effect a reduction of the State debt within manageable limits. It is insisted that the act of 1875, authorizing the appropriation of consolidated bonds to the payment of the levee debt, defeats this scheme, and impairs the validity of the contract made with those who have accepted the bonds according to the terms of the Funding Act, and is therefore void. The plaintiff, being a holder of these bonds, filed his bill for an injunction to prevent the consummation of the wrong which he alleges will be committed by carrying out the act of 1875.

The decree of the court below is sought to be sustained on several grounds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 U.S. 531, 23 L. Ed. 623, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-liquidation-v-mccomb-scotus-1876.