Bolles v. Brimfield

120 U.S. 759, 7 S. Ct. 736, 30 L. Ed. 786, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2014
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 21, 1887
Docket279
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 120 U.S. 759 (Bolles v. Brimfield) 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
Bolles v. Brimfield, 120 U.S. 759, 7 S. Ct. 736, 30 L. Ed. 786, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2014 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

In Anderson v. Santa Anna, 116 U. S. 356, 364, we had occasion to consider the validity of so-much of the act of the legislature of Illinois of February 28, 1867, in reference to municipal subscriptions to the stock of the Danville, Urbana, Bloomington and Pekin Railroad Company, as declared that where elections had been held, and a majority of the legal voters of any township or incorporated town declared in favor of a subscription to the stock of that company, “ then and in that case no other election need be held, and the amount so voted for shall be subscribed ” as in that act provided; further, “ that such elections are hereby declared to be legal and valid,” as .though that act had been in force at the time thereof, and all .its provisions had been complied with. An election was held in the township of Santa Anna, July 21, 1866, but there was no authority of law for its' being held. It was, however, conducted in the., customary mode, and the proposition lor a subscription was sustained by a majority of the legal voters of the township. The subscription was made October 1, 1867, in pursuance of that vote, and of the curative act of February 28, 1867. The validity of bonds issued in payment of the subscription was disputed upon the ground that the last named act was in violation pf the constitution of Illinois. We held, in'accordance with numerous decisions of this court cited in the opinion, that subsequent legislative ratification of the acts. of a municipal • corporation, which might lawfully have -been performed under legislative sanction in the first instance, was equivalent to original authority. We referred, in that case, to *761 United States Mortgage Co. v. Gross, 93 Ill. 483, 484, where , the Supreme Court of Illinois said, that “unless there be a constitutional inhibition, a legislature has power,'when it interferes with no vested right, to enact retrospective statutes to validate invalid contracts or to ratify and confirm any act it might lawfully have authorized in the first instance.”

As a municipal .corporation, organized for public purposes, has, as a general rule, and as between it and the state, no privileges or powers which are not subject at all times, under the Constitution, to legislative control, and as the legislature might legally have authorized a subscription by the township of Santa Anna, with .the assent of a majority of its legal voters, we adjudged that the act of February 28, 1867, to be within the constitutional power of the legislature to pass.

Does the present case come within these principles ?

By the sixth section of an act of the General Assembly of Illinois, approved March 5, 1867, incorporating the Dixon, •Peoria and Hannibal Eailroad Company, it is provided that “ the several counties in which any part of said road may, hereafter be located, ’ and the several townships in said. counties which have adopted or may hereafter adopt township organizations, and the cities and incorporated towns in said counties, are hereby authorized to subscribe aiid take stock in said Dixon, Peoria and Hannibal Eailroad Company.” 2 Private Laws 111. 1867, 604, 606. The act restricted a subscription by a county to $100,000, and a subscription by a township, city or town to $35,000.

It is admitted that at an election duly notified and held, on the 3d day of August, 1868, the town of Brimfield, by a vote of one hundred and fifty as against fifty-six, lawfully voted to subscribe $35,000 to the stock of the railroad company, and to issue its bonds therefor. At the same time and place, but, without authority of law, an, election was held- to take the sense of- the voters of the town as to an additional subscription by it of $15,000 to the stock of the same company, for which ' coupon bonds should be issued, payable in ten, fifteen and twenty years. This last proposition was sustained by a vote of one hundred and fifty-three as against fifty-five.

*762 On the 31st of March, 1869, the General Assembly of Illinois passed an act declaring “ that a certain election, held in the township of Brimfield, in Peoria County, on the 3d day of August, 1868, at which a, majority of the legal voters in said township, in special town meeting, voted to subscribe for and take fifteen thousand dollars of the capital stock of the Dixon, Peoria and Hannibal Railroad Company over and above the amount authorized to be taken by the charter of said company, is hereby legalized and confirmed, and is declared to be binding upon said township, and may be collected from said township, in the same manner as if said subscription had been made under the provisions of said charter.” 3 Priv. Laws III. 1869, 372.

Subsequently, May 5,1869, the township, by its proper officers, issued to thé company its coupon bofids for $35,000, in pursuance of the vote at the first-named election, and also its coupon bonds for $15,000, pursuant to the above vote at the' same time and place, payable in ten, fifteen and twenty years as aforesaid.

The present suit is upon bonds and coupons of the latter issue. A demurrer to a special plea setting forth these facts was overruled, and, the plaintiff electing to stand by the demurrer, the action was dismissed.

From this statement of the case, it is apparent that the judgment below is inconsistent with the decision in Anderson v. Santa Anna. It is not disputed that the bonds in suit would be valid obligations of the town of Brimfield if the election of August 3,1868, at which they were voted, had been previously authorized by statute. In other words, according to’ the settled doctrines of the Supreme Court of Illinois, it would have been competent for the legal voters of the town, under legislative authority for that purpose previously given — such voters being its corporate authorities ” in the meaning of the state constitution as interpreted by the highest court of Illinois — to'have required the subscription to be made, and the bonds to be issued, which were in fact made and issued pursuant to the unauthorized election of August 3, 1868. The question, then, is, could the legislature, by subsequent ratification, make that legal which was originally without legal sanction, but" which *763 it might, in the first instance, have authorized ? A negative answer to this question would be in conflict with numerous decisions of this court upon the general question as to the power of a legislature to enact curative statutes, when not restrained by constitutional provisions — the last of those decisions being Anderson v. Santa Anna. We adhere to what has been heretofore said by this court upon that subject; and, in doing so, we do not infringe upon the rule that, in respect to rights arising .under, and depending upon the interpretation of, the constitution and laws of a state, this and other courts of the United States will accept as controlling the established doctrines of the highest court of the state, as announced before such rights accrued. Burgess v. Seligman, 107 U. S. 20, 33 ; Carroll Country

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Bluebook (online)
120 U.S. 759, 7 S. Ct. 736, 30 L. Ed. 786, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolles-v-brimfield-scotus-1887.