Evans v. Tillman

17 S.E. 49, 38 S.C. 238, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 23, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 49 (Evans v. Tillman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Tillman, 17 S.E. 49, 38 S.C. 238, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 69 (S.C. 1893).

Opinions

The following order was filed:

This is an application addressed to the court in the exercise of its original jurisdiction, for an injunction to restrain the defendants from entering into a contract for the sale of the 41 per cent, bonds of this State (a copy of which contract is appended to the proceedings in this case), upon the ground that such a proposed contract is not authorized by the terms of “au act to provide for the redemption of that part of the State debt known as the brown consol bonds and stock by issue of other bonds and stock,” approved 22d day of December, A. D. 1892.

In the judgment of the majority of this court, based upon the consideration of the several sections of the act in question, the contract is not in excess of the power given the defendants by the said act when its provisions are construed together, and hence there is no ground for the injunction prayed for.

It is, therefore, ordered, that the prayer of the petitioner be refused, and the petition be dismissed.

An opportunity at an early day will be used to prepare and file an opinion stating more at large the reasons influencing the judgment of a majority of this court in rendering this conclusion. S. McGowan, A. J.

Y. J. Pope, A. J.

I regret very much indeed to say that I am unable to concur in the conclusion reached by a majority of this court, and will take the earliest opportunity which the pressure of official duties will permit, to give in writing the grounds upon which my dissent is based. Henry McIver, O. J.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Me. Justice McGowan.

This was a sworn petition filed in the original jurisdiction of this court by John Gary Evans, stating that he is a citizen and taxpayer of the State of South Carolina, and that B. E. Tillman is governor and William T. C. Bates treasurer of said State, respectively.

[240]*2402. That at the last session of the legislature of said State, an act was passed, entitled “An act to provide for the redemption of that part of the State debt known as the brown consol bonds and stocks, by issue of other bonds and stocks.” That among other and various provisions, section 6 of said act reads as follows: “That the governor and State treasurer are hereby authorized and instructed to sell the issue of bonds herein provided for at not less than par or face value, and the iiroceeds thereof shall be applied to the payment of the consolidated bonds and certificates of stocks, commonly called brown con-sols, and to no other purpose.” See act of 1892, 21 Stat., 24.

3. That your petitioner has been informed by the governor and treasurer aforesaid, and he believes the same to be true, that they have entered into, or are about to enter into, a contract with parties unknown to petitioner, which contains, among other stipulations, the following, to wit: “The said bonds and stocks so purchased shall bear date January 1, 1893, and shall carry interest from January 1, 1893,. payable semiannually. They shall be sold by the parties of the first part, and purchased by the party of the second part, at par flat— that is to say, nothing additional shall be paid for any interest which may have accrued at the time of delivery,” &c. (See copy of contract in the record.)1

4. That deponent is informed that said contract is without authority of law, as provided in the act aforesaid, in that the governor and treasurer are not authorized, under the terms of said act, permitting said bonds to be sold at par or “face value,” to sell the same for less than principal and accrued interest.

Wherefore petitioner prays that a writ of this court do issue, requiring the said B. B. Tillman, governor, and W. T. C. Bates, treasurer, as aforesaid, to appear and show cause why they should not be perpetually enjoined, &c.

The parties were summoned before the court, and made return, admitting the material facts, but demurring that the allegations were not sufficient to authorize the court to grant the injunction prayed for.

[241]*2411 The State, in her sovereign capacity, is not complaining, but a taxpayer, who alleges that the aforesaid agents of the State are about to exceed the powers granted to them by the act referred to. No other point was suggested or argued. When an agency is created by a written instrument, and grows wholly out of it, the nature and extent of the authority must be ascertained from the instrument itself. Here the principal is the State of South Carolina, and the act of the legislature is, as it were, the power of attorney. In giving interpretation to the refunding act, consisting as it does of many various provisions in the same act, and upon the same general subject, they must all, as far as practicable, be construed together, in order to ascertain the intention, which must control. In his interpretation of statutes, section 35, Mr. Endlich says: “It is an elementary rule that construction is to be made of all the parts together, and not of one part only by itself. A survey of the entire statute is almost always indispensable, even when the words are the plainest, for the true meaning of every passage is that which best harmonizes with the subject and with every other passage of the act.”

2 In the effort to reach the true construction of the redemption act, the date is not without significance. It was ratified and became a law on December 22,1892, only ten days before January 1, 1893. At that time it could not be foreseen when the redemption could be effected. It might be immediately, and in that case there would be no interest, as the bonds by the act itself were to bear interest only from “their issue.” This was the situation when the act passed, containing the words “face value” of the bonds, and the question now is, what the framers of the act intended by the expression? As I understand it, that question in fairness must be determined, not by constructions which may have been given elsewhere, and under different circumstances, but by the redemption act itself, which considered as a whole is the law of the case. Thus considered, it is suggested with some confidence that the expression “face value” was used in this act to express the idea of denomination, the amount, printed on the face of the bonds referred to.

The precise expression “face value” occurs five times in the [242]*242act — twice in section 1, and in sections 6, 8, and 15. (1) In the first part of the first section, where direction is given as to the number of blank bonds to be prepared in order to cover the whole issue, it reads: “shall cause to be prepared a sufficiency * * * as will provide for a total issue of an amount (face value) in the aggregate,” &e. (2) And in further directing as to the character of the new bonds, the latter part of the same section proceeds as follows: “said bonds to be of the denominations of $500 and $1,000, and said certificates of stock to have their respective ‘face values’ left blank, so that the same may be filled as may be most convenient,” &e. Now we suppose that there can not be the least doubt, that in both these instances ‘ ‘face value” meant the arithmetical number printed on the face of the bonds and certificates, and nothing else.

Section 15 provides: “That the holders of the South Carolina . four per cent, bonds, issued for the redemption of the brown consols, shall have the right to surrender the said four per ceut.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E. 49, 38 S.C. 238, 1893 S.C. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-tillman-sc-1893.