Chicago, Burlington, & Quincy Railroad v. County of Otoe

2 Neb. 496
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Neb. 496 (Chicago, Burlington, & Quincy Railroad v. County of Otoe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Burlington, & Quincy Railroad v. County of Otoe, 2 Neb. 496 (Neb. 1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Strong

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The first question upon which the judges of the Circuit Court divided was, whether the act of the legislature of Nebraska, approved Feb. 15, 1869, authorizing the county of Otoe to issue bonds in aid of a railroad outside of the State, conflicts with the constitution of that State. The record contains an agreed statement of facts, exhibiting, inter alia, the act, the constitutionality of which is in controversy. Its preamble recited that the qualified electors of Otoe County had, at an election held for the purpose, authorized the commissioners of the county to issue its bonds to any railroad in Fremont County, Iowa, that would secure to Nebraska City an eastern railroad connection, to the amount of two hundred thousand dollars; and its first section, therefore, enacted that the said commissioners should be authorized to issue one hundred and fifty thousand dollars of the bonds aforesaid to the Burlington and Missouri-River Railroad Company, or any other railroad company that would secure to Nebraska City a direct eastern railroad connection, as a donation to said railroad company, on such terms and conditions as might be imposed by said county commissioners.

The second section enacted that said bonds, when so issued, [497]*497should he binding obligations on said county, and be governed by-the terms and conditions of an act entitled “An Act to enable counties, cities, and precincts to borrow money or to issue bonds to aid in the construction or completion of works of internal improvements in the State, and to legalize bonds already issued for such purpose,” approved February, A.D. 1869. Under this act, the bonds, for the interest upon which this suit was brought, were issued by the commissioners of the county to the Burlington and Missouri-River Railroad Company; and bythat company they were negotiated to the plaintiffs.

Unless we close our eyes to what has again and again been decided by this Court, and by the highest courts of most of the States, it would be difficult to discover any sufficient reason for holding that this act was transgressive of the power vested by the Constitution of the State in the legislature. That the legislative power of the State has been conferred generally upon the legislature is not denied; and that all such power may be exercised by that body, except so far as it is expressly withheld, is a proposition which admits of no doubt. It is true, that, in construing the Federal Constitution, Congress must be held to have only those powers which are granted expressly or by necessary implication; but the opposite rule is the one to be applied to the construction of a State constitution. The legislature of a State may exercise all powers which are properly legislative, unless they are forbidden by the State or National Constitution. This is a principle that has never been called in question. If, then, the act we are considering was legislative in its character, it is incumbent upon those who deny its validity to show some prohibition in the constitution of the State' against such legislation. And that it was an exercise of legislative power is not difficult to maintain. No one questions that the establishment and maintenance of highways, and the opening facilities for access to markets, are within the province of every State legislature, upon which has been conferred general legislative power. [498]*498These things are necessarily done by law. The State may establish highways or avenues to markets by its own direct action; or it may empower or direct one of its municipal divisions to establish them, or to assist in their construction. Indeed, it has been by such action that most of the highways of the country have come into existence. They owe their being, either to some general enactment of a State legislature, or to some law that authorized a municipal division of the State to construct and maintain them at its own expense. They are the creatures of law, whether they are common county or township roads, or turnpikes, or canals, or railways. And that authority given to a municipal corporation to aid in the construction of a turnpike, canal, or railroad, is a legitimate exercise of legislative power, unless the power be expressly denied, is not only plain in reason, but it is established by a number and weight, of authorities beyond what can be adduced in support of almost any other legal proposition. The highest courts of the States have affirmed it in nearly a hundred decisions; and this Court has asserted the same doctrine nearly a score of times. It is no longer open to debate.

Then what is there in the constitution of the State of Nebraska which denies this power to the legislature ? There is no direct or express prohibition. General legislative power is vested in the legislature. None was reserved to the people of the State. There are, however, certain restrictions that may be noticed. The constitution declares that “ the property of no person shall be taken for public use without just compensation;” and it is earnestly contended that this prohibits the legislature from passing any laws in aid of the construction of a railroad that may result in the imposition of taxes. It is said that the Act of Feb. 15, 1869, is taking private property for a public use without compensation. It would be a sufficient answer to this to say that a similar provision is found in the constitution of almost every State, the legislature of which has been held authorized to legalize municipal subscriptions [499]*499in aid of railroad companies. It has never been held to prohibit such legislation as we are now considering. But the clause prohibiting taking private property for public use without just compensation has no reference to taxation : if it has, then all taxation is forbidden ; for “just compensation means pecuniary recompense to the person whose property is taken equivalent in value to the property. If a county is authorized to build a court-house or a jail, and to impose taxes to defray the cost, private property is as truly taken for public use without compensation as it is when the county is authorized to build a railroad or a turnpike, or to aid in the construction, and to levy taxes for the expenditure. But it is taken in neither case in the constitutional sense. The restriction is upon the right of eminent domain, not upon the right of taxation.

We find nothing else in the constitution of the State that can, with any reason, be claimed to restrain the power of the legislature to authorize municipal aid to railroads or other highways. There is a clause that declares “the credit of the State shall never be given to, or bound in aid of, any individual association or corporation ; ” and another that ordains that the debts of the State shall never, in the aggregate, exceed fifty thousand dollars : but these refer only to State action and State liability. Patterson v. Board of Supervisors of Yuba, 13 Cal., 175.

In view, therefore, of the organic law of the State, and of the decisions which have been made in regard to other similar constitutional provisions both in the highest courts of the States and in this court, we think it cannot be doubted that the legislature of ^Nebraska had authority to authorize its municipal divisions to incur indebtedness and to impose taxation in aid of railroad companies.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Neb. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-v-county-of-otoe-neb-1873.