Keith County v. Citizens' Savings & Loan Ass'n

116 F. 13, 53 C.C.A. 525, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4305
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 1902
DocketNo. 1,620
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 116 F. 13 (Keith County v. Citizens' Savings & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keith County v. Citizens' Savings & Loan Ass'n, 116 F. 13, 53 C.C.A. 525, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4305 (8th Cir. 1902).

Opinion

THAYER, Circuit Judge,

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

The primary question which the record presents for our determination is whether any law of the state of Nebraska authorized municipal precincts to issue bonds in aid of the construction of canals at the time the precinct bonds which are involved- in this suit were issued, registered, and sold? The facts pertinent to the decision of this question are as follows: A law was enacted by the legislature of the state of Nebraska on March 6, 1885 (Raws Neb. 1885, p. 268, c. 58), that was in force when the bonds in suit were executed, which authorized “any precinct, township or village (less than a city of the second class), organized according to law, * * * to issue bonds in aid of works of internal improvement, highways, bridges, railroads, court houses, jails, in any part of the county, and the drainage of swamp and wet lands, to an extent not exceeding ten per cent, of the assessed value of the taxable property at the last assessment, within such township, precinct or village.” This act further provided, in substance, that fifty freeholders of the precinct should petition the county commissioners to call an election in the precinct to vote on the proposition to issue bonds, and that at such election two-thirds of those voting should favor the proposition to warrant an issuance of bonds. Section 4 of the act of March 6, 1885, repealed section 7, c. 45, Comp. St. Neb., which repealed section declared that “any precinct in any organized county of this state, shall have the privilege of voting to aid works of internal improvement and be entitled to all the privileges conferred upon counties and cities by the provisions of this act.”

[16]*16It so happens that section 7, c. 45, Comp. St. Neb., thus repealed, was the section of the act of February 15, 1869, which is referred to by the recital contained in the bonds in suit as the source from whence the power to issue them had been derived. The mistake thus made in the recital was doubtless due to the fact that the person who drafted the form of the bonds was unaware that this section of the act of February 15,1869, had been repealed and re-enacted in a modified form by the act of March 6, 1885. It is now contended that inasmuch as the repealed section of the act of February 15, 1869, as re-enacted on March 6, 1885, specified highways, bridges, railroads, warehouses, jails, and the drainage of swamp lands, after the general phrase, “works of internal improvement,” no power was thereby conferred upon precincts by the section as re-enacted to aid in the construction of works of internal improvement, except such as are particularly enumerated, and that no power was conferred by the act to aid in the construction of a canal, because such works were not specially mentioned.

The argument would have force were it not for the fact that the ■contemporaneous construction of the act of March 6, 1885, in the' state of Nebraska, has been different, and that bonds have been issued, under that act, by municipal precincts, in aid of the construction of ■canals for the purpose'of irrigation, upon the assumption that the act authorizes precincts to aid in the construction of any work of internal improvement. And this court has twice decided, at the present term, that an irrigation canal is an internal improvement and also a work of a public character, in aid of which the taxing power may be lawfully ■exercised. City of Kearney v. Woodruff (C. C. A.) 115 Fed. 90; Perkins Co. v. Graff, Id. 441. See, also, Cummings v. Hyatt, 54 Neb. 35, 74 N. W. 411, and Laws Neb. 1889, § 9, c. 68.

We are not aware that the people of any municipal precinct in the state of Nebraska have challenged the power of such precincts, under the act,of March 6, 1885, to issue bonds in aid of the construction of ■canals for purposes of irrigation, when a proposition to issue bonds for that purpose has been pending, for the reason that the act does not confer that pow,er. It seems to have been assumed that irrigation ■canals are works of such great public utility in some sections of that state that the legislature intended to authorize municipal precincts to aid in .their construction. Certain it is that the power to issue the bonds in suit was not challenged, so far as the record discloses, although it does appear from the special finding that the bonds were certified by the secretary of state and the auditor of public accounts ■of the state of Nebraska as having been issued according to law; that they were sold in the open market by the treasurer of Keith county; that the sum of $35,000 was realized therefrom by the precinct; and that taxes have been continuously levied, since 1890, to pay the interest thereon, the amount collected under such levies aggregating, at the present time, the sum of $20,786.50. Under these circumstances, if it should be conceded that it was originally somewhat doubtful whether the legislature intended to authorize municipal precincts to aid in the construction of all works of internal improvement, yet we should feel constrained to adopt a construction of the act of March 6, 1885, which would sustain the validity of the bonds in suit, since the act is [17]*17plainly susceptible of such a construction. As this court said, in substance, in the case of Washington Co. v. Williams, 49 C. C. A. 621, hi Fed. 801, when an act, under which a municipal corporation has exercised the power of issuing municipal bonds, is fairly susceptible of different interpretations, and its right to issue the bonds is, in a measure, doubtful, the fact that they were issued by the municipality, without protest on the part of any of its citizens, and sold for value, and that they have been recognized by the municipality and its inhabitants as valid for a period of years, and that the interest payable thereon has been levied and collected in the meantime, without objection, will entitle an innocent purchaser of the bonds to a more liberal interpretation of the powers of the municipality than would1 have been permissible if the right to issue the bonds had been challenged when they were issued or shortly thereafter. In the case at bar, we are of opinion that the act of March 6, 1885, may well be construed as conferring on municipal precincts in the state of Nebraska the authority to extend aid to any work of internal improvement. Possibly that is the most reasonable interpretation of the act, and, for the reasons above suggested, we think that it should be so interpreted.

But it is said that even if the laws of the state of Nebraska did permit municipal precincts to aid in the construction of all works of internal improvement, including canals for irrigation purposes, yet the bonds in suit were not issued in strict conformity with the statute from which the power to issue them must be derived, and that, inasmuch as they contain a false reference to the act under which they were issued,—that is to say, a reference to the act of February 15, 1869, and its amendments, instead of a reference to the act of March 6, 1885,—a purchaser of the bonds in the open market is not entitled to the protection of any of the recitals which the bonds contain, but must prove strict compliance with all the provisions of the act which did warrant the issuance of such securities.

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Bluebook (online)
116 F. 13, 53 C.C.A. 525, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-county-v-citizens-savings-loan-assn-ca8-1902.