Lee County v. Rogers

74 U.S. 181, 19 L. Ed. 160, 7 Wall. 181, 1868 U.S. LEXIS 990
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 74 U.S. 181 (Lee County v. Rogers) 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
Lee County v. Rogers, 74 U.S. 181, 19 L. Ed. 160, 7 Wall. 181, 1868 U.S. LEXIS 990 (1869).

Opinion

Mr. Justice NELSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

■ The defence is placed, by the learned counsel for the de fendant, in his brief, upon two grounds:

*183 1. That the county is not liable, .on the bonds or coupons, for the reason there was no power in the county to subscribe for the stock, to the railroad company, or to issue the bonds; that they are void, as against the constitution and laws of the State.

2.. That prior to the date of the bonds and coupons, certain suits were instituted, in the. District Court of Lee County, impeaching the validity of the bonds, if.issued, and charging that th,ey wopld constitute no indebtedness against the county, and claiming that the county judge, who was the fiscal agent of the county, should be enjoined from issuing the bonds;, that an injunction was granted, and that the bonds were issued,,lite pendente, and put on the market, with full notice of the pendency of the suit; that this suit was continuously'and successfully/prosecuted, and the courts of. the State had- adjudged the bonds to be null and void, and ■ the collection of the same perpetually enjoined.

' I. As to’the power or authority of the county.to subscribe for railroad, stóck, and to issue-bonds therefor.

Much the largest portion of the brief of the counsel is devoted'to a.-, very able discussidn'of this'question. But, after the decision of this court in the ease of Gelpcke v. The City of Dubuque, * and the series bf cases following it, we must decline a re-examinati'on of the question. We regret the difference of opinion on the subject of these bonds, between this court and the <?ourts of the State of Iowa; but it involves a principle and rule of property,' in ofir opinion, so just, and so essential to the protection of the rights of the bona fide nolder of this class of securities, that, however much we may respect the judgment of those differing from us, we cannot give up our own. Tjhat difference, as we understand it, consists in this:' This court held, in Gelpcke v. The City of Dubuque, that bonds, issued by counties, cities, or towns,- in Iowa, to railroad companies, for stock in' said - companies, -and which said bodies, at the time the bonds were issued, were held, by' the settled adjudications of the *184 highest courts of the State, to possess full power, under its constitution and laws, to issue the same, are ever after valid and binding upon the body issuing them, in the hapds of. a bond fide holder. Since these bonds were issued, and in the hands of bond fide holders for value, the courts of Iowa have reversed their previous decisions, and now hold that these bodies possess no such power under the constitution and laws of the State, and hence they are void, even in the hands of the bond fide holder. The learned and elaborate argument of the counsel for the plaintiff’ in erroi,-in this case, is devoted .to the support-of these more recent decisions, and the earnestness and care with which he has discussed the question, Which series of cases shall prevail? leave no doubt of the sincerity of his conviction. But, for the reasons stated, we must respectfully decline following him.

II. The second ground of defence involves the question of notice to the plaintiff’ below, or, in other words, the effect of the lis pendens, as claimed by the counsel. In order to examine this branch of the defence, understandingly, it will be necessary to recur, for a few moments, to the facts as they appear in the answer.

The first' suit, by McMillen and others v. Boyles County Judge, was. commenced. by petition or bill-, October, 1856, and terminated in a decree to enjoin the defendant, December Term thereafter.

The opinion of the Supreme Court, in this casej is in the record. * The court held, the election, by the-voters in the county, under the direction of the county judge, to have been irregular in several particulars, as not being in conformity to the act providing for a’submission of the question of subscribing for the- stock and issuing the bonds. At this time it does not appear that any stock had been subscribed for or bonds issued. The -question was presented, in tiffs case, ahd pressed by counsel for the petitioner, whether or pot the county possessed competent power to issue the bonds under the constitution and laws of the State?

*185 'Judge Stockton, who delivered the opinion!, as it respects this'question, observed, “We do not deem it expedient or necessary, at the present time, to enter into an examination of the other questions presented and discussed by counsel'. Their inherent importance, and the great interest felt in-their decision by a large portion of the people of-the State, admonish us of the. patient Study and deliberation with which their investigation must-be attended! ' Another reason, he observes, which has had its weight with us, is, it is understood that the questions raised have been pressed upon, and decided by, tfye former members of this court, in the case .of the County of Dubuque v. The Dubuque and Pacific Railroad Company.-

Soon after this decision, the legislature being ,in session, an act was passed to cure the defects in the proceedings béfore the county judge, in the submission of the question to the voters, which became-a law oruthe 29th January, 1857. This act is very comprehensive. - After confirming the proceedings in the first section,..it declares that “the subscriptions made by said -county, &c., and the /bonds of said counties, &c., issued in' pursuance of said votes and subscription, or hereafter to be issued, are hereby declared' to be legal and valid; and that all'such bonds issued, and hereafter to‘be issued, in pursuance of such votes and-subscriptions, Shall be a valid lien upon the taxable property-of said county, &e.”

The'second section is equally emphatic. It provides, that “ the-county Judge, &c., or other proper authorities of said county, &c., shall levy and collect á tax to meet the payment of the principal and interest of such bonds; and the counties, &c., shall not be allowed to plead in any suit brought to recover the principal or interest of such bonds, that the same ■ are usurious, irregular, or invalid, in conséquence of the in-formalities, cured, by this act,”

The-third section re-affirms the validity of all bonds theretofore issued by the county,, and the subscriptions to the railroads, notwithstanding any informalities or irregularities jn the submission of the question to the vote of the péople. •

*186 A second suit was brought by petition or bill, by McMillen and others, against'the judge of the county, on the 26th February, 1858, to' enjoin him from levying a tax, and to have the confirmatory law declared to be unconstitutional, and the bonds void.

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Bluebook (online)
74 U.S. 181, 19 L. Ed. 160, 7 Wall. 181, 1868 U.S. LEXIS 990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-county-v-rogers-scotus-1869.