New Orleans v. Clark

95 U.S. 644, 24 L. Ed. 521, 5 Otto 644, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2216
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 17, 1877
Docket257
StatusPublished
Cited by108 cases

This text of 95 U.S. 644 (New Orleans v. Clark) 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
New Orleans v. Clark, 95 U.S. 644, 24 L. Ed. 521, 5 Otto 644, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2216 (1877).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Field

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action upon several coupons for interest .annexed to bonds issued by the late city of Carrollton, in Louisiana, to the Jefferson City Gas-light Company, a corporation created .under the laws of that State, for laying gas-pipes through certain .streets of the city, and introducing gas for the use of its citizens. The bonds were indorsed by the president of the company, with its- guaranty, for the payment of their principal and interest. His authority to make this guaranty, so far as it relates to the interest, was denied by the company; but the Circuit Court held that ,the admissions and evidence in the case showed a prima facie case of liability:

The bonds were issued pursuant to an ordinance of the city, which provided for the payment of the interest thereon, but-.made no provision for the payment of the principal; and for this omission, and because they were issued in aid of a private corporation, their validity was questioned by the city of New Orleans, upon, which the liabilities of Carrollton were cast upon its annexation to that city; and as it was contended in answer to this position that the legislature had subsequently, *651 in the act of annexation, legalized the issue, the power of the legislature to do this was denied, but the Circuit Court 'held that the legislature possessed the power; and the- city of New. Orleans was adjudged bound to pay the bonds.

The record shows that the bonds were issued after the work had been- done for which the contract was'made and the gas had been introduced into the city, and that they' were transferred to the plaintiff for a valuable consideration.

Two questions are presented for our determination: —

1st, Whether the'Jefferson City Gas-light Company is liable on the guaranty made by its president for the interest, on the bonds; and,

2d, Whether it was competent'-for the legislature of Louisiana to legalize the issue of the bonds, if for any cause they were originally invalid, or, more properly, to compel their payment by the city of New Orleans.

1. The ordinance which authorized the contract with’the company, and the issue of -the bonds of the city, in terms provided that the' company should “ guarantee the said bonds and assume the payment’ of the principal thereof at maturity.” Their delivery to the company was. made dependent upon this condition; 'but as the provision mentioned that the company was to assume payment of thé principal, after specifying that it was to guarantee the bonds, it is ai-gued that the- guaranty of the principal' only, was- intended. This is not, however,' a just inference from the language.- The guaranty of the bonds embraced both the principal-and the■ interest. The payment-, of bonds, without other designation, always implies á payment ■of the principal sum and its incident; and a guaranty in similar.terms covers both. The ordinance contemplated two undertakings by the company,' — one to the bondholder, and- one to the.city.- The guáranty was to be for the.security of the' bond-, holder; it was to be an undertaking to answer for-the city’s liability, and to be collateral to it.' The. other.undertaking was’ to be for the security of the city; by placing the company under obligation to provide for the payment of. the. principal óf- the bonds, at their maturity, an obligation which otherwise would not have'existed. - ;

The contract embraced the stipulations contained in the ordi *652 nance, and the. indorsement of the• guaranty of the company by its president on the bonds was- a substantial, compliance with. both. The language used, guaranteeing “ the payment of the principal and interest,” only declared in terms what would have been implied from a simple guaranty of the bonds. It is not denied that the president was the proper officer to execute whatever guaranty was authorized.

2. The invalidity of the bonds'was asserted,, as already stated, 'on two grounds: first, that they were issued in aid of a private corporation ; and, second, that the-city .of Carrollton, in issuing them, created a debt, without providing in the same ordinance the means of paying its principal. The first of these grounds is not one -which affects the validity of the bonds. A private corporation, as well.as individuals, may be employed by a city .in the construction of works needed for the health, comfort, and convenience of its citizens ;• and, though such works may be used by the corporation for its own. gain, yet, as they advance the public good, the corporation -may be properly aided in their construction by the city; and for that purpose its obligations may be issued, unless some constitutional or legislative provision. stands in the way, t The bonds here- were not given to the company as a gratuity, but for a valuable consideration; and if the company failed to. pay them at maturity, and their payment was madé by the city, the gas-works were to become the property of the city.

The second of these grounds is not without force. An aet of the legislature of Louisiana, passed in March, 1855, had declared that the Constituted authorities of incorporated towns and -cities in the State should not thereafter “ have power to contract any-debt or pecuniary liability, without fully providing in the ordinance creating the debt the means of pacing the principal and interest of .the debt or contract,” This enactment imposed a restriction upon' the creation of liabilities by municipal bodies, which could.not bé disregarded. It was intended to keep their expenditures, within their means; and its efficacy in that respect would be entirely dissipated, if debts contracted in violation .of it were, held legally binding upon the municipalities.

Assuming, then, that the' bonds were-invalid for the omission *653 stated, they still represented an equitable claim. against the city. They were issued for work done in its interest, of a nature which the city reqiiired for the convenience of its citizens,. and which its charter authorized. It was, therefore; competent for: the legislature to interfere and impose the payment' of thé claim upon the city. The books are'full 'of cases where claims, just in themselves, but which, from some irregularity ;or omission in the proceedings by which they were created, could •not bfe enforced in the courts of law, have been thus recognized and!their payment securéd. ' The power of "th§ legislature to' require the payment of' a cláim'for which an equivalent- has been-received, and from the payment.of which the city can only escape on technical grounds, would seem-to'be-clear. Instances will readily occur'to every one, where great wrong and injustice would .be done if provision cohld. not be made for claims of this character. For example, services' of th'e highest importance and'benefit, to a city may be rendered/in defending-it,’pex’haps, against, illegal and extortionate demands; or moneys may ¡be advanced in unexpected emergencies to meet,-possibly,-the interest, on its securities when its means have been suddenly' cut off, without' the previous, legislative or municipal sanction required to give the parties rendering the, services or advancing the moneys a legal claim against the city. .There would be a great.

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Bluebook (online)
95 U.S. 644, 24 L. Ed. 521, 5 Otto 644, 1877 U.S. LEXIS 2216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-orleans-v-clark-scotus-1877.