Jones v. Hurlburt

13 Neb. 125
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 13 Neb. 125 (Jones v. Hurlburt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Hurlburt, 13 Neb. 125 (Neb. 1882).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

Section 2, of article XII, of our state constitution, provides that no city, county, town, or precinct, municipality, or other subdivision of the state shall ever make donations to any railroad or other work of internal improvement, unless a proposition so to do shall have been first submitted to the qualified electors thereof at an election by authority of law, with a proviso that such donations of a county, with the donations of such subdivisions in the aggregate, shall not exceed ten per cent of the assessed valuation of such county.

The first point made by the appellee to sustain the decree in this case is that the court found that at the date of the submission and vote upon the question of making the donations involved in this case, the county of Seward was indebted for bonds donated to the Midland Pacific Railroad, the sum of‘one hundred thousand dollars; for unpaid interest due on said bonds, twenty-nine thousand eight hundred and nineteen dollars, and that Seward precinct, now constituting G and E precincts, was indebted for bonds issued to the Midland Pacific Railroad twenty-five thousand dollars, and for unpaid interest due thereon, three thousand and eighty-one dollars, making an aggregate county and precinct debt of one hundred and fifty-seven thousand nine hundred dollars, and no money in the treasury.- That the assessed valuation of the county was not to exceed one million six hundred twenty-nine thousand three hundred forty-four dollars. Ten per cent of this assessed valuation'only, amounting to one hundred and sixty-two thousand nine hundred and thirty-four dollars and forty cents, left a margin of only five thousand thirty-four dollars and forty cents between the donations already made by said county and its subdivisions to railroads and the limit of ten per cent on the assessed valuation of said county. If this [130]*130proposition coulcl be sustained, it would be conclusive of the case. But I do not think that the language of either the provision of the statute or of the («institution warrants us in taking into consideration the unpaid interest now due on. the county or precinct bonds in arriving at the amount of donations already made by the county and its subdivisions to railroads and other works of internal improvement. If the county had had the money on hand there can be but little doubt but she could have donated it, instead of her bonds, to the Midland Pacific Railroad, in which case the promoters of that work would have had the use of the money, and of course returned no interest to Seward county. She did not have the money, so she agreed to pay interest for a term of years for the use of money to donate to that promising work, and finally to pay the principal. She did not donate the interest in any sense. Nor do I think that the district court, by its general finding, could have intended to embrace that proposition. Therefore in arriving at the sum which the county had already donated to railroads or other works of internal improvement in order to see what sum she might still donate to such purposes, we must reject the items of unpaid interest. And the question whether the county had or had not money on hand to pay such interest is irrelevant. But tire county had donated one hundred thousand dollars, and one subdivision thereof, to-wit, Seward precinct, now precincts F and Gr, had donated twenty-five thousand dollars, making “such donation of a county, with the donations of such subdivision, in the aggregate” amounting to one hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars, while upon the assessed valuation of the county, such donations under the constitutional and statutory limitation might reach the amount of one hundred and sixty-two thousand nine hundred and thirty-four dollars. Thus leaving a margin of thiriy-seven thousand nine hundred and thirty-four dollars. So we see that the constitutional limitation was not exceeded [131]*131by tbe voting of an additional county donation of thirty-six thousand dollars, there still remaining after that was voted a margin of nearly two thousand dollars.

In the case of the State, ex rel. A. & N. R. R., v. County Commissioners of Lancaster County, 6 Neb., 214, this court held (I quote from the syllabus): “The limitation in section two, art. XII of the constitution, prohibiting counties, except on a two-thirds vote, from issuing its bonds in excess of ten per cent of the valuation, does not prohibit a precinct from issuing its bonds in addition to the amount which may be issued by a county

While as an individual member I am inclined to doubt the correctness of that decision, I know of no disposition on the part of the majority of the court to reconsider it. So for the purposes of this case it must be considered as the law of this court. ■

The appellee makes the further point against the county bonds that they are in excess of the limitation, for the reason that at the same time of the submission of the question of the county indebtedness there were also submitted questions of precinct indebtedness amounting in the aggregate to thirty-nine thousand dollars. Without questioning the premises of counsel, that the bond is not the indebtedness but is only the evidence of it in negotiable form, that the obligation accrues at the date of the popular assent, I do not think that it leads to the conclusion which he seeks to establish, but the contrary. The argument says, were it •not for these precinct bonds the county bonds might lawfully be voted. But there are no precinct bonds, nor obligation to issue or pay them, until the very moment of time when, by reason of the same vote, the obligation to issue and pay the county bonds becomes perfect. Can it be said that that which has no existence can stand in the way and prevent that which were otherwise lawful?

The proposition to make the donation of the county bonds,, as submitted to the voters of Seward county, con[132]*132tains at least four distinct conditions, but one of which, however, it is deemed important to notice. It is in the following words: “Provided said county commissioners shall be authorized * * * and also be authorized by a two-thirds vote of the legal voters of the precinct through which said line of railroad shall be located to issue and give thirty.-nine thousand dollars of precinct bonds to aid the construction of said line of railroad, which amount of precinct bonds shall be made up as follows: P precinct, three thousand dollars; I precinct, three thousand dollars; O precinct, twelve thousand dollars; J precinct, five thousand dollars; G precinct, ten thousand dollars, and C precinct, sis thousand dollars * * * ”

It is doubtful whether any other thing may be attached as a condition precedent to the taking effect of a vote of the people upon a proposition which by positive law is made dependent upon such vote alone. But possibly by analogy to the law which requires a person elected to a public office to take an oath and give a bond before entering upon the duties of such office, it may be that a condition, such as the construction of the whole or a part of a certain work of internal improvement, or possibly the giving of a bond with security for such construction, may be attached to a proposition to vote a donation to such work. But I do not think that a condition such as the result of a vote on another and distinct proposition submitted to the same or another constituency can be pi’operly attached to any such proposition. It may be objected to this view that in such case the condition would be rejected and not the proposition to which it had been improperly attached.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Carlson v. City of Helena
102 P. 39 (Montana Supreme Court, 1909)
Frank v. Butler County
139 F. 119 (Eighth Circuit, 1905)
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. City of Sioux Falls
131 F. 890 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Dakota, 1904)
Epping v. City of Columbus
43 S.E. 803 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1903)
Vicksburg, Shreveport & Pacific Railway Co. v. Goodenough
108 La. 442 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1902)
George v. Cleveland
74 N.W. 266 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1898)
Record v. Butters
60 N.W. 1019 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1894)
Township of Midland v. County Board
56 N.W. 317 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1893)
In re Senate File 31
25 Neb. 864 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1889)
State ex rel. Gardner v. Roggen
22 Neb. 118 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1887)
Spurck v. Lincoln & Northwestern Railroad
14 Neb. 293 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1883)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Neb. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-hurlburt-neb-1882.