Grant v. Cooke

7 D.C. 165
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 11, 1871
DocketNo. 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 D.C. 165 (Grant v. Cooke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Cooke, 7 D.C. 165 (D.C. 1871).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Cartter

delivered the opinion of the-Court:

While the controversy in this case embraces grave and interesting questions, ably and elaborately discussed, the importance of the issue is practically lessened in the fact that the political power of the District, pending the controversy, has wisely referred the subject to the people, thereby deferring their ultimate action to the popular determination. It is, nevertheless, here to be disposed of, and wTe will proceed to treat it as a living question.

[188]*188It will be seen by reference to the bill, answers, and ■demurrers in this case that the central and controlling subject of consideration is to be found in the issue, whether the loan authorized and the indebtedness proposed to be contracted in the act of the territorial government, of July 10, 1871, is in excess of the authority of the territorial government as established by the organic law of the District. It is charged in the bill that it is, and by the answers and ■demurrers in different forms denied.

Whether in excess of authority or otherwise, is again made to depend upon the relation of the indebtedness of the antecedent governments within the District to the indebtedness of the District.

If the indebtedness of the corporations of the cities of Washington and Georgetown, and the Levy Court, are by the act of territorial organization brought forward and ■engrafted upon the government of the District of Columbia to swell its aggregate debt in such wise as to make the District of Columbia, as a whole, debtor to the creditors of these several corporations, it follows that the loan authorized and in process of consummation, is beyond the limitations of the organic act, and ultra vires.

If, on the other hand, the several .indebtedness of these ■several corporations remain the several indebtedness of thé people and property of the corporations, not having been legally transferred to the shoulders of the present government, the $4,000,000 loan, authorized by said act, and in process of negotiation, is within the limitations of the organic law'. These results are made to follow upon the estimated valuation of the property of the District, as conceded in the argument.

Has Congress, therefore, by the organic act of the District, ■or otherwise, imposed this indebtedness upon the District? The first answer to this question is to be found in an utter want of constitutional power to do it. The Constitution does provide that the property of the private citizen may [189]*189be taken for public use upon fair compensation therefor, but in no principle or passage of the Constitution does the authority exist to transfer the property of one private citizen to another without his consent, or to transfer the legal burdens of one citizen to another without his consent. And what is true of natural persons is equally true of corporate persons. The search will be made in vain to find constitutional authority by which one corporate body, without its consent, can be made to bear the burden of another.

From this manifest want of authority to do it, it may be reasonably inferred that Congress did not undertake to do it. That they did not.undertake to do it is made manifest in the scheme asid by the terms of the organic act. The first section of the organic act provides that that portion of the territory of the United States within the District of Columbia, with the population thereof, shall be created, into a government. Not that the city of Washington, the city of Georgetown, and the county shall be transmigrated into a government; but that the territory and the people of the District of Columbia shall be created into a government, and, of necessity, without debtor or creditor, either of which is made to depend upon the act of the government posterior to its creation, inasmuch as all indebtedness and credits require parties to create them. The identity between this government and the old one is to be found nowhere. They are different in their geography, property, population, and power. The constituents of the present government is made up of old corporations, incompatible with each other, so far as their antecedent liabilities existed. The present government finds Washington City a large debtor, while Georgetown and the county are comparatively free from debt. To adjudge Georgetown and the county a joint debtor with Washington ■would be to compel them to respond to an indebtedness which they never created, and the benefits of which they never did and never can realize.

But Congress has not left this question to the force of [190]*190logic. The law maker undertook and accomplished the-solution of this question in the- 40th section of the organic-act, wherein it is provided that each of these corporations shall, respectively, pay its own debts and collect its own credits, to its respective and exclusive use, and its respective and exclusive obligation. To this end Congress provided in the same section that the life of the several charters-should be extended, with all the rights and liabilities in contract up to the end and time when they should be “ fully closed;” bringing the expiring corporations into no other relations with the present governrp.ent than to make the territorial legislature and other functionaries of the existing government the trustees under the law, and in the locusquo of the defunct officers of the former corporations to see that the proper machinery was employed to collect and pay their debts.

Other considerations might be added in aid of this conelusion; considerations drawn from the body of the act,, and outside of it; but enough has been said, in my judgment, to satisfy the mind that the complainants might as well have resorted to the trust and’ mortgage records of the District with a view to ascertain the individual indebtedness of its citizens, and, after having done so, claimed the sum total of such indebtedness as a part of the aggregate debt of the District, for such indebtedness sustains the same-relation to the present government as the indebtedness upon which they rely.

This conclusion makes it unnecessary to consider the-questions which have been made, and ably elaborated in argument, touching the jurisdiction of the court.

If the merits of the controversy fails to support the injunction, it is needless to inquire iiito the question of jurisdiction.

And, again, this conclusion makes it unimportant to inquire into the other features of the act, relative to the disposition of this fund when acquired; questions that do [191]*191not necessarily involve the power to create the indebtedness, but pertain to the legal mode of disposing of the treasure after it is acquired. It will be time to consider the question of the disposition of this fund after the Government comes into possession of it. There certainly is no legal propriety by injunction, or otherwise, for the court to interfere with it before it exists.

So of the question of taxation that has been raised. This is not a question involving the measure of taxation under the limitations of the act. No tax is levied in the premises, either within or beyond the limitations of the organic act; and it will be early enough to consider whether the law has been violated and the court has power to interfere with that violation by injunction when the violation is attempted.

Mr. Justice Mac Arthur said:

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Related

Tynes v. Gogos
144 A.2d 412 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
7 D.C. 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-cooke-dc-1871.