Green v. Dyersburg

10 F. Cas. 1099, 2 Flip. 477, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1970
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee
DecidedJuly 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 1099 (Green v. Dyersburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Dyersburg, 10 F. Cas. 1099, 2 Flip. 477, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1970 (circtwdtn 1879).

Opinion

HAMMOND, District Judge.

Some of the grounds of this demurrer, as stated, are rather in the nature of replications, but I shall treat it as raising the questions made in the argument.

The first question is, as to the power of the town to issue these bonds. The supreme court have declared that “a municipal corporation cannot issue bonds in aid of extraneous objects without legislative authority, of which all persons dealing with such bonds must take notice at their peril.” Town of South Ottawa v. Perkins, 94 U. S. 260-262. And they are equally invalid in the hands of innocent purchasers. Marsh v. Fulton Co., 10 Wall. [77 U. S.] 676. The argument of the defendant’s counsel denying the legislative authority to issue these bonds is based upon a distinction between paying for a subscription to the capital stock of the railroad company by levying taxes and paying the money, and issuing bonds in payment of the subscription; and it is contended that there being no express power granted to issue bonds in payment of subscription to stock, none will be implied; and the case of Police Jury v. Britton, 15 Wall. [82 U. S.] 566, and the eases cited in Dill. Mun. Corp. § 407, and note, and Folsom v. School Dist. [91 Ill. 402], are relied on. The plaintiff contends that the statutes referred to in the statement of the case, confer express power to issue these bonds, and, if not, then that the power is a necessary implication from the authority given to make the subscription to the capital stock of the railroad company.

The act of March 13, 180S. amending the Code, would undoubtedly have been sufficient to support these bonds, if it had not been subsequently modified by the act of December 9, 1S6S (chapter 11, § 26). The act of December 16, 1871, does not confer any new power, or enlarge the powers of the town in the matter of issuing bonds. It clearly contemplates subserij)tion under the Code, g 1142 et seq., and only removes the restrictions there found as to the amount allowed to be subscribed by the town. The recital in the record of the town proceedings referring to the election of September, 1871, and the act of December 16, 1871, authorizing them to re-vote the subscription, shows conclusively that the town authorities supposed that they were making this subscription under the provisions of the Code, § 1142 et seq., as modified by the special- acts relating to this particular town, as no doubt they were. Neither is there anything in the act of December 15, 1871 (chapter 129), which confers on this town the power to issue these bonds, nor anything from which such power may be implied.

The act of February 26, 1869 (chapter 59, § 20), as modified by the act of February 8, 1870 (chapter 55, § IS), unquestionably authorizes the town to issue short bonds, whatever that may mean, bearing six per cent, interest, “in anticipation of the collection of the annual levies.” By the very terms of these acts the. subscription is payable in four or six years, and I think the proper construction is, that the bonds shall not be longer running to maturity than the time within which the subscription is payable. The bonds are only to anticipate the annual collections of taxes to pay the subscription, which must all be paid “in not exceeding” four or six years. The legislature did not contemplate that the people should be burdened with a long debt, bearing interest from date, when the statute required that the taxes to pay the subscription should be levied and paid within a time specified in the act itself. If bonds were issued under the power conferred by these statutes, necessarily they must be payable when the taxes levied to pay them are collected, for it is not to be supposed that the town would be required to levy and collect the taxes and keep them in the treasury idle to meet bonds maturing years after the collections are made. It is not like the case of State v. Anderson Co., Sup. Ct. Tenn. 1874, at Knoxville [8 Baxt. 249], where the statute authorized thirty years’ bonds to be issued, and the county in exact compliance with the statute issued bonds for that time, but upon a vote of the people proposing to pay the subscription in six annual installments. At the time the vote was taken in that case, the statute made no other requirement as to the time of payment than that not more than thirty-three and one-third per cent, of the subscription should be collected in one year. Act 1S52, c. 117, g 8 [Acts Tenn. 1S51-52, p. 163], Code, § 1154. Here the requirement of [1103]*1103the statute was that the amount should be paid in six years. There a subsequent statute varied the terms which the vote had fixed; here the vote varies the terms which the statute has fixed. Nor is this like the case of Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Davidson Co., 1 Sneed, 638, where it was held that the act of 1S52 did not prohibit the county from making more than three installments. A comparison of section 8, c. 117, of the act of 1S52, with section 20, c. 59, of the act of 1809, and with .section IS, c. 55, of the act of 1870, shows that while, under the act of 1852, there was no other restriction than that the time was not to be less than three years, under the two latter acts the time fixed is “not exceeding” six years. This is the necessary construction of the two acts of 1809 and 1870 taken together, even if it be admitted that the act of 1870, applying to “any city or incorporation” was intended to modify the special act of 1869 applying only to the town of Dyersburg. In this view the departure from these acts cannot be regarded as falling within the fourth resolution of the court in Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Davidson Co., supra. The principle of directory statutes cannot be applied here, and the authority conferred must be pursued in its material requirements. Winston v. Tennessee & P. R. Co., 1 Baxt. 61.

Besides these acts only allowed six per cent, interest, and the bonds here bear seven per cent This cannot be a change within the discretion of the town to make — it is an additional burden, not a beneficial modification of the requirements of the statute. I am not unmindful of the conventional interest act of February 23, 1870, c. 69 [Laws Tenn. 1870, p. 87], allowing an Increase by contract to any rate, not greater than ten per cent It will be observed that the first of these Dyersburg acts fixed no rate of interest for the bonds, and the second, limiting the rate to six per cent, was passed only a few days before the conventional rate of interest act just referred to, the latter being a general public law and the former a special private act I do not think, under the general law, the town could enlarge the rate of interest. It was a municipal corporation acting under a special grant of power which could not be exceeded. The result is that these bonds, being for a longer time and greater rate of interest than allowed under these two acts, cannot be supported by them. Bell v. Mobile & O. R. Co., 4 Wall. [71 U. S.] 598; New Albany v. Burke, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 96. The case does not come within the case of Township of Rock Creek v. Strong, 96 U. S. 271, and Commissioners of Marion Co. v. Clark, 94 U. S. 278, where-there was a substantial compliance with the legislative requirement. Dill. Mun. Corp. .§ 414. It may be that if the bonds had been issued according. to the terms of the act they would be valid pro tanto for six per cent, interest, as ruled in City of Quincy v. Warfield, 25 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 1099, 2 Flip. 477, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-dyersburg-circtwdtn-1879.