Graves v. Saline County

161 U.S. 359, 16 S. Ct. 526, 40 L. Ed. 732, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 2171
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 2, 1896
Docket510
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 161 U.S. 359 (Graves v. Saline County) 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
Graves v. Saline County, 161 U.S. 359, 16 S. Ct. 526, 40 L. Ed. 732, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 2171 (1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shiras,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

Under the authority of certain acts of the general assembly of the State of Illinois, and in pursuance of an election duly ordered and held according to law, and in payment of a subscription to stock in the St. Louis and Southeastern Kailway Company, the county of Saline issued bonds to the amount of $25,000, bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent, to the said railway company, bearing date January 1, 1872, payable twenty years after date. These bonds were delivered to the railway company February 1, 1872, and were, purchased in open market by the appellants, for value and without notice of any defence, prior to the year 1876.

The contract of subscription contained a condition that the said St. Louis and Southeastern Kailway should pass and a depot be established within one half-mile of the old courthouse in Kaleigh and within one half-mile of the church in Galatia. The railroad was not constructed within the prescribed limits, but was constructed ..in said county in a different direction, and compliance with the said condition \yas waived by the board of commissioners of said county.

*369 By the seventh section of the act of April 16, 1869, it is provided that “ any county, township, city or town shall have the right, when making any subscription or donation to any railroad company, to prescribe the conditions upon which such bonds and subscriptions or donations shall be made, and such bonds, subscriptions or donations shall not be valid and binding until such conditions precedent shall have been complied with.”

The constitution of Illinois, which took effect July 2, 1870, provides as follows: “No county, city, town, township or. other municipality shall ever become subscribers to the capital stock of any railroad or private corporation, or make donation to or loan its credit in aid of such corporation: Provided, however, That the adoption of this article shall not. be construed as affecting the right of any such municipality to make such subscriptions where the same have been authorized, under existing laws, by a vote of the people of such municipalities prior to such adoption.”

Such an election was held by the people of Saline County on October 9, 1868; and the subscription was made January 15, 1870.

The validity of these bonds so issued to the St. Louis and Southeastern Railway Company was continually recognized by the county of Saline by the payment of interest thereon and by the refunding of the samé into new bonds of the county in July, 1885 ; and the said county has always retained and now has the stock in said railway company.

This state of facts brings the case, as respects the bonds originally issued to the St. Louis and Southeastern Railway Company, clearly within the decision of this court in the precisely similar case of Insurance Co. v. Bruce, 105 U. S. 328, 331, and where, per Mr. Justice Harlan, it was said:

“The statute did not make it obligatory on the town to impose conditions upon the performance of which its liability “should depend. It conferred simply the right to do so, leaving the town at liberty to prescribe conditions or to make an unconditional subscription. Consistently with the statute the town could issue and deliver bonds for the subscription in *370 advance of the construction of any part of the road. But when conditions were prescribed, good faith and the obligations which everywhere arise out. of negotiable securities required — if the town intended to rely upon them—that the public, who were expected to buy the bonds or to advance money upon them, should be informed by their recitals that the town had exercised its statutory right to impose conditions upon its liability. The officers both of the town and the railroad company knew, however, that bonds could not be negotiated in the market had their recitals disclosed the fact that payment depended upon conditions thereafter to be fulfilled by the railroad corporation. To the end, therefore, that money might be raised for the construction of the proposed road, or in reliance upon the performance by the railroad company of the conditions imposed, the constituted authorities of the town, and the officers or agents of the company, cooperated in putting out bonds negotiable in form, and with recitals that gave no intimation even that the subscription was conditional.- The fact that conditions had been prescribed was omitted in recitals full of everything necessary to induce the public to buy the bonds. The statement, on the face of the bonds, that they were issued by virtue of the statutes of April lo, 1869,- and April- 16, 1869 — the first of which contains an absolute requirement that the bonds be issued and delivered upon the subscription being voted, while the second gives the right, but does not make it imperative, to impose conditions—and the further statement that the people had voted for subscription and to issue bonds therefor, fairly imported that nothing remained to be done in order to make the bonds binding obligations upon the town in the hands of bona fide purchasers. Under these circumstances, the town, by every principle of justice, is estopped, as against a bona fide holder, to plead conditions, the existence of which was withheld,from the public, either to facilitate the negotiation of the bonds in the markets of the country, or because it had full confidence that the railroad company .would meet the prescribed conditions. It should not now be heard to make a defence inconsistent with the representations contained in the *371 recitals upon its bonds, or upon the ground that the conditions imposed, of which purchasers had no notice, have not been performed.”

Similar conclusions were reached in the' case of Oregon v. Jennings, 119 U. S. 74, where, citing Insurance Co. v. Bruce, it was held that bonds issued by the town of Oregon, a municipal corporation of the State of Illinois, in compliance with a vote of the people held prior to the adoption of the Illinois constitution of 1870, in pursuance of a law providing therefor, were valid, although a condition as to the completion of the road was not complied with, because the recitals in the bonds were made by officers entrusted under the statute with the duty of determining whether the condition had been complied with, and the town was thereby estopped from asserting the contrary. The doctrine of the case of County of Jasper v. Ballou, 103 U. S. 745, is applicable.

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Bluebook (online)
161 U.S. 359, 16 S. Ct. 526, 40 L. Ed. 732, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 2171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-v-saline-county-scotus-1896.