Coquard v. Village of Oquawka

61 N.E. 660, 192 Ill. 355
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 61 N.E. 660 (Coquard v. Village of Oquawka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coquard v. Village of Oquawka, 61 N.E. 660, 192 Ill. 355 (Ill. 1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

The question is presented by this record whether the defendant, as a municipal corporation, had any power to make and issue the bonds sued on. The question is not one of mere irregularity, but of power, and consequently it is immaterial to the decision of the case what was the consideration of the bonds or what the status of the holder, for it must be conceded that municipal corporations, organized, as they are, for restricted governmental purposes, have no power to issue commercial paper unless such power has been conferred by statute, and without such power such paper is void, even in the hands of an innocent holder for value before maturity. These bonds were issued, and so purported on their face, under an act of the legislature entitled “An act relating to county and city debts, and to provide for the payment thereof by taxation in such counties and cities.” (Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 789.) Section 1 provides: “In all cases where counties or cities have heretofore, under any law of this State, issued bonds or securities for money on account of any subscription to the capital stock of any railroad company, or on account of, or in aid of, any public improvement, and the same remain outstanding, or any debt arising thereout remains unpaid, the board of supervisors or county court of such county, and the city council or municipal authority of such city, as the cáse may be, having issued such bonds or securities, may, upon due surrender of any such bonds or securities, or cancellation of such debt, issue in place thereof to the holder or owner, new bonds, in such form, for such amount, upon such time, and drawing such interest as may be agreed upon with the holder or owner: Provided, such new bonds shall not be for a greater sum than the principal and accrued or earned interest unpaid of the . bonds or debts in place of which they shall be given, nor bear a greater rate of interest than six per cent per annum, payable on the first day of July in each year; and such bonds shall show on their face that they are issued under this act, and, if so agreed, may provide for payment of five per cent of the principal thereof, annually, until fully paid.” Section 9 provides: “If it shall be deemed advisable, any such county or city may issue such new bonds for the purpose alone of satisfying or taking up their respective bonds or debts.”

It will be observed that the act, by section 1, was limited by its terms to counties and cities which had before its passage issued bonds, etc., and section 9 does not broaden the act so.as to include any municipal corporation other than such counties and cities as had theretofore become indebted. When passed it had no application to towns or to villages, nor to cities generally, but was confined to counties and cities which had theretofore become indebted. Ho municipality could be brought within its provision bjr changing its,form to that of a city. Without considering the alleged illegality of the incorporation of the town in 1871 as a city, the act no more applied to the city so organized after the act went into force than it did to the town superseded by such city. This court said in People v. Lippincott, 81 Ill. 193, that “the first section of the act by express terms limits its operation to debts created previously to the passage of the act;” and further, that the act limited the right to refund to counties and cities; that it “applies to only a comparatively small class of bonds,—those issued by counties and cities prior to February 13, 1865.” This is apparent from the language of the act. No room is left for interpretation or construction. The same conclusion was reached by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, in Village of Oquawka v. Graves, 82 Fed. Rep. 568, in a suit on some of the same series of bonds sued on in this case, and it was there further held that the power to issue refunding negotiable bonds does not exist in a municipal corporation as of course, merely because it is indebted.

This brings us to the second proposition of plaintiff in error, that the town or city had the power to compromise, settle, take up and cancel the original bonds constituting an outstanding indebtedness against it, and to issue in lieu or payment thereof new bonds, negotiable, interest-bearing- securities, payable at a future date, and this without statutory authority. That it had the power to settle and pay its debts which it had been authorized to create, and to take up and cancel its bonds which it had been authorized to issue, cannot be doubted; but it does not necessarily follow that the power to issue new, or refunding, negotiable bonds in the place of ^nd to take up the old cau also be implied. If it can, then, against the policy of our laws and without legislative authority, a municipal debt may forever be kept alive, and the municipality be subjected to the many disabilities and hardships which the law imposes on the makers of negotiable instruments when such instruments are held by innocent holders for value before maturity.

Section 12 of article 9 of the constitution of 1870 provides that any municipal corporation incurring any indebtedness shall, before or at the time of doing so, provide for the collection of a direct annual tax sufficient to pay the interest on such debt as it falls due, and also to pay and .discharge the principal thereof within twenty years from the time of contracting the same. It is not meant to be said that this provision of the constitution was violated by the issue of the bonds in question, but only that it is thus indicated that it is against the policy of our laws that municipal corporations should, at their pleasure or convenience, exercise the mere implied power of issuing- and putting upon the market negotiable securities, even though they are issued to refund an outstanding indebtedness of unquestioned validity. This is also indicated by various acts of the legislature authorizing such corporate bodies to refund their indebtedness and to issue new bonds therefor, under such restrictions as are imposed by such acts. Thus, the act of March 26, 1872, (Gross’ Stat. p. 115,) and the act of 1877 amending the said act of 1865, recite, in substance, that certain municipalities in this State have outstanding bonds and other evidences of indebtedness due or soon to fall due, and that such municipalities were without authority to refund or renew the same. But it so happened that no statute authorizing any such refunding and issuing of refunding bonds applied to the town or city of Oquawka, and we are of the opinion that such power cannot be implied merely from its ordinary powers as a municipal corporation, or from its power conferred by statute to issue the original bonds. Merrill v. Monticello, 138 U. S. 673; Brenham v. Bank, 144 id. 173; County of Hardin v. Mc-Farlan, 82 Ill. 133; Locke v. Davison, 111 id. 19.

Counsel for plaintiff in error refers us to cases in other jurisdictions holding a contrary doctrine, and to cases decided by this court containing expressions also at variance with the view here taken. We are referred to City of Quincy v. Warfield, 25 Ill. 279, as sustaining his conten: tion. But in that case it was expressly said that while no express power is granted to issue a bond for and in lieu of an over-due bond, the general power to issue bonds within certain fixed limits was expressly given by the charter of the city and without any regard to the purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.E. 660, 192 Ill. 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coquard-v-village-of-oquawka-ill-1901.