City of Savannah v. Kelly

108 U.S. 184, 2 S. Ct. 468, 27 L. Ed. 696, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 1022
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 2, 1883
Docket198
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 108 U.S. 184 (City of Savannah v. Kelly) 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
City of Savannah v. Kelly, 108 U.S. 184, 2 S. Ct. 468, 27 L. Ed. 696, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 1022 (1883).

Opinion

Me. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Savannah, Albany & Gulf -Railroad Company was a corporation of Georgia, authorized to construct and. operate a railroad, the principal and beginning point of which was the city of Savannah. That city was, in fact, owner of more than one-half of its capital stock, which it had subscribed in pursuance of law to aid in its construction. For purposes of construction, that is, partly to pay debts incurred for construction then made, and partly to pay for future improvements, the railroad company in 1859 made an issue of its bonds in the usual form, payable to bearer, twenty years after date, amounting in the aggregate to $300,000, bearing interest at thé rate of seven per cent. per. annum. On each of. this series of bonds there was indorsed the following:

“State of Georgia. For value received, the Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Savannah and hamlets thereof, hereby, as authorized by a public meeting of the citizens thereof, held on the 14th day of May, 1859, guarantee the payment of the within bond, principal and interest, as the same may become due, according to the tenor thereof. Witness the hand of the mayor, with the seal of said corporation affixed. . [Seal of city.] Thomas M. Turner, mayor. Attest: Edward G. Wilson, clerk of council.”

The bonds were issued with this guaranty indorsed, and were purchased .in open market for value.’ The present action was brought by the defendant in error to enforce’The liability of the city of Savannah upon this guaranty. And it is not denied *188 that the city is hable upon it, if at the time it was made there was authority of law for the city to bind itself in that form for such purposes. The judgment of the circuit court affirms this liability, and is sought to be reversed, upon this writ of error, for that cause.

The .fifth section of an act which took effect December 27th, 1838, entitled “ An Act to extend the limits of the ■ city of Savannah, and to authorize the corporate authorities of said city to borrow money for works of internal improvement,” authorizes the mayor and aldermen to obtain money on loan, on the faith and credit of said city, for the purposes of contributing to works of internal improvements.” This provision is relied on as conferring authority for the guaranty in question.

It is claimed, however, on behalf of the plaintiff in error, that this provision'of the act of 1838 was not in force at the date of the guaranty, having been repealed by an act of March 4th, 1856. Wilson’s Dig. 526. This act expressly repeals only such acts as conflict with it, and the repeal, if effected, must be, therefore, by implication. The 8th section of the act of 1856 is supposed to have wrought this result. It is as follows:

And whereas, doubts have been entertained whether certain bonds issued and disposed of by the city of Savannah for internal improvements were legal and valid, therefore, be it further enacted, that all bonds heretofore issued by the constituted authorities of the city of Savannah are hereby declared legal and valid, and from and after the passage of this act the mayor and aldermen of the city of Savannah, and the hamlets thereof, upon the recommendation of a public meeting of the citizens of Savannah, called for that purpose, shall have power and authority to cause bonds to be issued and disposed of in such manner as they may direct, for purposes of internal improvement, which bonds, so issued, shall be legal and valid.”

Whether the latter repeals the former law depends on whether the two are inconsistent; and in the present instance, ■that depende on whether it is mahifest from the words of the enactments that both cover the same ground, and that the' *189 latter Was intended to be a substitute for tbe former. The act of 1856 relates.entirely to the issue of bonds by the .city of Savannah; the act of 1838' does not specify bonds at all as a mode of obtaining money on loan, on the faith' and credit of the city. If it be assumed that the only mode by which that could be done‘under the act of 1838 was ,by issuing bonds, it might then be. argued that the two acts covered the same subject, and the latter Was designed to supersede the former. But to assume that construction of the act of 1838 to be correct, is to beg the question at issue, which is, whether that act requires the issue of bonds as the exclusive mode of obtaining money on loan on the faith and credit of .the city. For if it does not, there is no inconsistency between the two statutes, and the act of 1838 is not repéaled. Whether it be repealed, then, depends on what it means-; and if it authorizes a guaranty such as that sued on, then it is not repealed;' unless it might be supposed that the term “ bonds,” used in the act of’ 1856, was generic and not technical, and was designed to embrace every form of obligation, whereby the city might extend the aid of its credit to purposes of internal improvement. In that event, the repeal Of-the act of 1838 might be effected, by conceding that the act of 1856 was large enough to embrace every c^se, even that of a guaranty, which might have been included in the act of 1838.

But conceding, as we are disposed to do, for the purposes of this case, that the term “ bond,” as used in the act of 1856, is to be taken in a strict sense, as confined to direct municipal obligations in the usual form of securities known as such, then we are clear that the act of 1838 is not repealed by any necessary implication; because it is not confined to the case of bonds of that description; and the question remains whether it fairly includes that of an obligation such as the guaranty sued on. The argument for the plaintiff in error moves in a circle. It is, that the act of 1838 does not confer authority to make the guaranty, because it is repealed; and that it is repealed, because it does not confer-authority .to make a guaranty.

The language of the act of 1838 is broad and unqualified. It confers upon the mayor and aldermen plenary power “ to obtain money on loan, on the faith and credit of said city for the *190 purposes of contributing to works of internal improvement.” The money paid for the guaranteed bonds was obtained on loan and upon the faith and credit of the city, and it was for the purpose of contributing to works of internal improvement. The fact that it was not advanced directly to the city, but, upon its assurance of repayment, to the railroad company, is not a departure even from the letter of the law, much less its meaning; nor does the fact that the money was advanced partly on the credit of the railroad company diminish the presumed reliance of the purchaser upon that of the city, with which it was joined. It is difficult to conceive of language more comprehensive than that employed, to embrace every form of security in which the. faith and credit of the city might be embodied; and that in such cases it is not important-to the character of. the transaction that the money is obtained in the first instance by the railroad company, upon the credit of the city, was directly ruled in Rogers v. Burlington, 3 Wall. 654, and affirmed in Town of Venice v. Murdock, 92 U. S. 494.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 U.S. 184, 2 S. Ct. 468, 27 L. Ed. 696, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 1022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-savannah-v-kelly-scotus-1883.