Gibbons v. Mobile & Great Northern Railroad

36 Ala. 410
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 36 Ala. 410 (Gibbons v. Mobile & Great Northern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbons v. Mobile & Great Northern Railroad, 36 Ala. 410 (Ala. 1860).

Opinion

STONE, J.

1. The constitutionality of the legislation, under which the city of Mobile has obliged itself to aid the Great'Northern railroad, is assailed, as not being a legitimate exercise of the taxing power, but a talcing of private property without just compensation, even if the use for which it is taken be public.

This subject has undergone much aud earnest discussion in many of the States composing this Union ; and however grave the subject might be regarded, if it were an open question, we feel bound to consider it, in this State, res adjudicata. In coming to this conclusion, we are not unmindful of the opinion, which must obtain some credence, that we run counter to some of the arguments and illustrations found in the case of Sadler v. Langham, 34 Ala. 311. The principle we are discussing, however, was settled and re-asserted in this court, -long before the case of Sadler v. Langham came up; and on a question involving such momentous results, as does this — one in which the public welfare is so deeply,concerned — we feel it our duty to adhere to the rule, stare decisis.

In the case of Stein v. The Mayor of Mobile, (24 Ala. 591,) a question very like the one we are considering w.as directly presented. "This court reviewed many adjudged cases of sister States, pronounced on the identical question involved in that case and this; and,in a most elaborate opinion, decided, “that the acts authorizing the city authorities of Mobile to levy a tax on the owners of real estate within the limits of the city, to aid in the construction of the'Mobile and Ohio railroad, were constitutional ;” and that although the only legitimate object-of taxation is the support and maintenance of government, yet this purpose embraces a wider range than the mere machinery employed in its administration : that the power authorizes the employment of the necessEiry appliances to augment the aggregate wealth and prosperity of the inhabitants of the city; aud that this may be accomplished by providing outlets for commerce, opening channels of intercommunication with other parts of the State, &c. The Mayor &c. of Wetumpka v. Winter, 29 Ala. 651; [438]*438Pierce on Railways, 108 to 125, and notes; Redf. on R ilways, 583, and notes; Sharpless v. Mayor, 21 Penn. State R. 147; L. & N. Railroad v. County Court, 1 Sneed, 637.

[2.] As a reason why we should reinstate the injunction in this cause, it has been pressed on our consideration, that the terms of the act, approved February 8th, 1858, (Pamphlet Acts, 165,) were not complied with by the city authorities of Mobile. We deem it unnecessary to institute an inquiry into this subject. Before any aid was extended to the railroad, or determined on by the city, under the act of 1858, the act approved November 29tb, 1859, was passed, which decía, ed, “ that the vote of the people of the city of Mobile, taken on the 21st day of March, 1859, under an act of the legislature of Alabama, approved the 8th of February, 1858, entitled ‘An act to authorize the corporate authorities of the city of Mobile to aid in the construction of a railroad upon a vote of its citizens ’, shall be sufficient authority to the corporate authorities of said city of Mobile, and they are hereby authorized and empowered to aid in the construction of the. Mobile and Great Northern railroad”, &c. So, whether the act of 1858 was complied with or not, the act of 1859 conferred on the city authorities ample power to aid said railroad, to the extent, and under the terms prescribed by the last mentioned act. Pamph. Acts of 1859-60, p. 294.

[3.] The doctrine is well settled, that to authorize a municipal corporation to take stock in, or aid in the construction of a railroad outside ,of the limits of such corporation, there must be an express grant of power. — See City Council v. Plank-road Co., 31 Ala. 76; Pierce on Railroads, 108. The power wa's expressly conferred in this case. It is contended for appellants in this case, that in making their contract, the city authorities transcended the power conferred on them by the statute, in this, that whereas the statute only authorized them to aid in the construction of the railroad by the issue of city bonds, in an amount not exceeding one million of dollars, yet they have in fact issued their bonds and coupons, and furnished them to the railroad, amounting to over two mil[439]*439lions of dollars. This argument is more specious than solid. The bonds are for the precise sum of one million of dollars; no more,,no less. These bonds mature at various times, extending from one to twenty-five years. The excess over one million of dollars consists in obliga-, tions, in the shape of coupons, to pay interest on the said one million of dollars, until such time or times as the principal of the bonds shall be paid. This, we think, is in strict conformity with the spirit of the statute, which evidently contemplated that the bonds should be interest-bearing, and therefore marketable., Anything less would not have furnished a million of aid to the railroad.

[4.] It is further urged in favor of a reversal of the chancellor’s decretal order, that by the terms of the contract between the city government and the railroad, no stock is to he issued to the assignee or appointee of the city, for the interest it may pay on the bonds. A full answer to this objection is furnished in the fact, that it would be no objection to the constitutionality of the contract, if no stock had been reserved for either the principal or interest to be paid by the city. The power to aid the railroad resting, as it does, on the taxing functions of the city, and not on the'constitutional provision in relation to the taking of private property for public use, no direct pecuniary compensation to the tax-payers is necessary to uphold it. — See City of Wetumpka v. Winter, and other authorities supra; Pierce on Railways, 115.

[5.] It is further objected to the validity of this contract, that while the acts of. the legislature, and the vote of the people, authorized aid to the railroad • only by bonds, and refused aid by taxation, yet the city authorities have gone beyond this, and aided both by bonds and taxation.

The question submitted to the voters of Mobile, in this connection, was, whether they would aid by taxation upon all property subject to taxation, at a rate not exceeding two per centum per annum, for five years, or by the issue of city bonds, for an amount not exceeding one million dollars. — Ramph. Acts 1857-8, 165. The aid determined on and rendered in this case was by bonds, not exceeding one million dollars, [440]*440and not by taxation, limited in rate to two per centum per annum, and in duration to five years. The fact that a tax was also levied to meet the bonds, does not change the character of the aid furnished, nor violate the provisions of the statute The real point Was, whether aid should be rendered by heavy and rapid assessments, or by the longer and graduated process of city bonds, distributing the burden through a series of years. Such bonds, whenever, and by whatsoever authority issued, are necessarily an interest-bearing fund. They are, also, necessarily, due at some given time. The accruing interest, at the intervals agreed on, and the principal, at the time of the maturity of the bonds, must be paid. The bonds, being debts of the city, in the absence of a stipulation or specification to the contrary, import, ex vi

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ala. 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbons-v-mobile-great-northern-railroad-ala-1860.