Jonesboro City v. Cairo & St. Louis Railroad

110 U.S. 192, 4 S. Ct. 67, 28 L. Ed. 116, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1673
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 21, 1884
Docket1049
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 110 U.S. 192 (Jonesboro City v. Cairo & St. Louis Railroad) 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
Jonesboro City v. Cairo & St. Louis Railroad, 110 U.S. 192, 4 S. Ct. 67, 28 L. Ed. 116, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1673 (1884).

Opinion

Me. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court. '

This is an appeal from a decree in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of. Illinois, dismissing a bill in equity filed by the city of Jonesboro, in that State, *193 against the Cairo & St. Louis Railroad Company, an Illinois corporation, the auditor of State, the county clerk and sheriff of Union County, Illinois, and the “ Unknown holders of the Jonesboro City bonds, issued in aid of the Cairo & St. Louis Railroad Company.” The suit was commenced in one of the courts of the State. Its .object was to obtain a decree perpetually enjoining the State and county officers, who were made defendants, from levying, certifying, and extending any tax for the payment either of the principal or interest of. said bonds. There was no defence upon the part of those officers, and after publication against the •“ unknown holders ” of the bonds in the mode prescribed by tne local statute, a decree pro confesso was passed, giving the relief asked, and declaring the bonds invalid as against the city.

Subsequently Lúther R. Craves, a citizen of Yermont, presented his petition, in conformity with the State law, alleging his ownership of some of the bonds, and asking that the default be set aside with permission to him to plead, demur, or answer under the orders of the court. The petition was granted, and he was made a party defendant. Thereafter, on his further petition, the cause was removed to the court from whose decree this appeal was taken.

The evidence shows that on the 2d day of March, 1868, a resolution was passed by the city, council of Jonesboro submitting to the legal voters of that municipality; at its then next regular election, held April 6th, 1868, the question whether that city should, upon certain named conditions, subscribe $5.0,000 to the capital stock of the Cairo & St. Louis Railroad Company, payable in bonds within twenty years after date at the option of the- city, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum from the date of issue. The election was held at the time indicated.

Subsequently, by an act .of the general assembly of Illinois, which became a law on March 3d, 1869, entitled “ An Act to amend An act. entitled An Act to incorporate the Cairo & St. Louis Railroad Company,’” approved February 16th, 1865, authority was given to the several towns, cities, and counties through or near which that railroad might pass, and to the. *194 several townships in said counties which may have adopted, or might thereafter adopt, the township organization, to subscribe for and take stock in the company, or to make a donation in aid of the construction of the road, and issue bonds for such subscriptions or donations, to be paid by taxation upon the property of the municipality issuing them. It was provided ' that no subscription or donation • should be made, nor bonds issued, nor tax levied, unless a majority of the legal voters of the municipality, voting at an election called and held as provided in the act should assent to the subscription or donation. But it was further provided in the same act ■

that all elections heretofore had in any county, city, or town in reference to a subscription to said railroad, are hereby declared legal and binding, and the County Court of any county, and the corporate authorities of any city or town in which such elections have been already held, and a majority of the votes cast were for subscription, shall have authority to issue bonds for such an amount ’ as was voted for, notwithstanding any insufficiency, informality, or-irregularity in such election or in the, notice thereof.” Pri; Laws III. 1869, .vol. 3, pp. 256-7-8.

• By an ordinance of the city council of .Jonesboro passed July 21st, 1871 — irwhich referred to the resolutions of March 2d, 1868, and recited that at the election of April 6th, 1868, all the votes cast favored the subscription — it was enacted that the proposed ■ subscription of $50,000 “ be, and is hereby, made upon the conditions specified in said resolutions,” and that bonds be issued for the purpose of paying the same. The clerk was directed to have them prepared and. delivered to John E. Naill, who by the ordinance was

“ appointed agent on behalf of the city to receive from the clerk the said bonds and to deliver the same to the said company, its authorized agent or officer, upon Compliance by the said company with the conditions in said resolutions specified, and at the same time to receive from the said company its certificate or certificates of stock (paid up) in said company to an amount equal to the amount of the bonds so delivered, and that he immediately deliver such certificate or certificates to the city council.”

*195 Under date of July 1st,- 1872, there was executed and delivered to Naill $25,000 of the bonds directed to be issued. They purport to have been issued by the city, were signed by its mayor and countersigned by its treasurer and clerk, and made payable to the railroad company or ..-bearer at the Bank of Commerce in New York. Each one relates that—

“ This bond is issued uiader and by virtue of the charter of said city, and of ordinances passed in pursuance thereof, in payment ■of so much of the subscription by said city for fifty shares of the • capital stock of said Cairo and St. Louis Railroad'Company, ■ The proposition to subscribe for said stock having been first submitted, as required by law, to the qualified voters of said city for their approval or rejection, at a special election .regularly -held for that purpose at the various voting precincts or wards in and of said city, on the 6th day of April, a. d. 1868, and more than two-thirds of said voters having at said election assented • thereto, and said majority of voters also being a majority over all the votes cást at the last preceding regular election held in and for said city, and said Cairo and St. Louis Railroad Company-having duly performed all the'conditions of said subscription to be performed on its part before saidbond was to be issued.”

On the 13th day of October, 1874, there was filed in, the office of the auditor of State the official sworn certificate of the then mayor of Jonesboro (who as clerk had attested the bonds when issued), attested by the city clerk, to .the effect that the before-mentioned bonds, amounting to $25,000, were entitled to registration in the office of auditor under the act of April 16th, 1869', entitled “ An Act tb fund and provide for paying the railroad debts of. counties,” that they were issued by said city to said railroad company “ under and by authority of the provisions of an act of the general assembly of Illinois approved March 3d, 1869, and by a vote of the people of said city at an election held on the 6th day of April, 1868.” That certificate concluded:

And I, as mayor of. said city, do hereby certify that all the preliminary conditions in the' act in force April 16th, 1869,-re-quired to be done to authorize the registration of these bonds,'and *196

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Bluebook (online)
110 U.S. 192, 4 S. Ct. 67, 28 L. Ed. 116, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jonesboro-city-v-cairo-st-louis-railroad-scotus-1884.