Philips, J.,
(after stating the facts as above.) The single question on the foregoing state of facts to be determined is whether or not the judgments against Cass county on account of the funding bonds issued by it to pay interest on the township bonds come within the purview of the contract between complainant and the county court. Each of the parties has taken depositions as to certain conversations had between them prior and up to the time of the execution of the contract, and other matters in pais, for the purpose of showing what their respective understandings were as to the scope.and extent of the contract. It appears that at the time the [719]*719contract was entered into ihe county justices did not know of the consideration of the bonds on which judgments had been taken 13 years before against the county. As there is no latent ambiguity in the terms of the contract, and the whole contract between the parties was reduced to writing and formally executed and delivered, it is presumed, as a matter of law, to contain the whole agreement between the parties. And I discover nothing whatever to take it out of the operation of the well-recognized rule of law that all anterior negotiations and understandings between the parlies are presumed to be merged in the written contract, and that nothing can bo taken from or added to its express terms, nor can they be varied or modified, by parol evidence. The answer is not framed so as to present any issue of fraud or mistake in the execution of the contract. The county court accepted and spread this contract on its records, as they were required by law to do. It is, therefore, a solemn written compact, and as such it must speak for itself. Looking at this contract in its entire scope and essence, its manifest purpose was to wipe out the old indebtedness of the townships, whether in the form of bonds with coupons, or judgments against them. It was the debts of the townships owing on account of the old bonds originally issued by tlie county on their behalf, and not for any debt of or claim against the county as such, which was and is the subject-matter of this contract. The specifications of the contract arc singularly striking in this respect. It is the “exchange of new bonds * * * for old bonds, coupons, and judgments on same, (said bonds, etc., being originally issued * * * for and on behalf of said township to aid in the construction of the Bt. Louis and Sanie Fe Bailrond.” Then again: “In old bonds, coupons and interest thereon, or judgments rendered against said township on said bonds or coupons, or both.” Then, in summing up as to what is the purpose of the contract, it is said: “'It is understood that the old bonds, coupons, and judgments heretofore mentioned, consist of the outstanding and unpaid bonds and coupons, and judgments on the same, issued by said county for and on behalf of said township to aid in the construction of” said railroad. And again, further on, it recites that “ said party of the first part agrees to release all judgments, either heretofore rendered, or that may hereafter be obtained, against said township on any of said bonds or coupons.” It winds up with a restatement of the true import of the contract. It is to protect and save harmless the township “against all of the old indebtedness, widen consists of bonds and coupons, and against all judgments thereon, and costs;” from which it is most manifest that the bonds to be taken care of by Parker are the old bonds of the townships, — no funded or new bonds; and the judgments to be satisfied by Parker are judgments upon said township bonds, and judgments against the townships, or such judgments as are enforceable, as such, against the townships. As was well known, presumably, to the contracting parties, judgments on township bonds, while they go against the county, are not county debts, and the judgment specifies that the same is to be collected by levies on the taxable property of the township, and it is not enforceable against the body of the county. [720]*720The judgment in question was rendered against the county-as such, and was declared to be a debt of the county, enforceable as such. It was not, therefore, a judgment against the township, or against the county for and on behalf of the township. The county has no judgment over against the township on account of this judgment against it; nor, indeed, could it-, if at all, obtain any judgment until it has paid and satisfied the judgment against it, on account of its assumption for the township. Indeed, I am unaware of any law which would enable the county to maintain an action against one of its township subdivisions on account of a debt voluntarily assumed and paid by the county for the township constituency. It was not only a voluntary payment of a debt not owing by it, without the solicitation of the debtor, but a payment of a debt for a subdivision of the county, where there was no agent or lawful representative of the subdivision to consent thereto, and no power lodged in any one to ratify the act on behalf of the quasi municipality. The county court is not authorized by statute to make a levy on the taxable property of the township for such a claim. It is only empowered by statute to make an assessment and levy for and on behalf of the township to pay interest and principal on its bonds issued in aid of railroads, or to enforce the payment of a judgment on such bonds and coupons, when such judgment is against the county for and on behalf of the township. It was the obligations, existing, vital, and enforceable, of the township which the complainant undertook to protect and satisfy, and not the voluntary and unauthorized assumption of obligátions of the township by the county. As to the latter the complainant has the right to appeal to his contract and say, in hoc feedere non veni. It cannot be said with legal exactness that it is within the equity of the contract that Parker should save the' county of Cass from its liability on the judgments against it on account of its unauthorized assumption of part of the township obligation. For it must be kept in mind that the county of Cass, as such, was not contracting for itself and for its protection. It was acting for and on behalf of the townships, to enable them to get rid of their township debts springing from the subscription to the railroads, and judgments against the townships incident thereto. The contract was made subject to the ratification of the townships, as it was for their benefit and on their responsibility. Any equity, therefore, which could possibly be invoked would be in favor of the township and not the county; and as the county has no claim against the township which it can enforce, what equity has the township against Parker which the county, under this contract, has the right to interpose? The whole power of the county court to make such railroad subscription and issue such bonds on behalf of the township being conferred by the special act of the legislature, (Laws Mo. 1868, p. 92,) we must look to the special enabling act to ascertain the extent of the authority of the county court and the liabilities of the tow'nship connected with the making of such subscriptions and the issuing of bonds in payment thereof. No authority is to be found in the statute for the action of the county court in issuing the funding bonds to take up the interest coupons on the township bonds; and, inconsequence, [721]*721no provision is found by which the county can reimburse itself for such assumption. The quasi
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Philips, J.,
(after stating the facts as above.) The single question on the foregoing state of facts to be determined is whether or not the judgments against Cass county on account of the funding bonds issued by it to pay interest on the township bonds come within the purview of the contract between complainant and the county court. Each of the parties has taken depositions as to certain conversations had between them prior and up to the time of the execution of the contract, and other matters in pais, for the purpose of showing what their respective understandings were as to the scope.and extent of the contract. It appears that at the time the [719]*719contract was entered into ihe county justices did not know of the consideration of the bonds on which judgments had been taken 13 years before against the county. As there is no latent ambiguity in the terms of the contract, and the whole contract between the parties was reduced to writing and formally executed and delivered, it is presumed, as a matter of law, to contain the whole agreement between the parties. And I discover nothing whatever to take it out of the operation of the well-recognized rule of law that all anterior negotiations and understandings between the parlies are presumed to be merged in the written contract, and that nothing can bo taken from or added to its express terms, nor can they be varied or modified, by parol evidence. The answer is not framed so as to present any issue of fraud or mistake in the execution of the contract. The county court accepted and spread this contract on its records, as they were required by law to do. It is, therefore, a solemn written compact, and as such it must speak for itself. Looking at this contract in its entire scope and essence, its manifest purpose was to wipe out the old indebtedness of the townships, whether in the form of bonds with coupons, or judgments against them. It was the debts of the townships owing on account of the old bonds originally issued by tlie county on their behalf, and not for any debt of or claim against the county as such, which was and is the subject-matter of this contract. The specifications of the contract arc singularly striking in this respect. It is the “exchange of new bonds * * * for old bonds, coupons, and judgments on same, (said bonds, etc., being originally issued * * * for and on behalf of said township to aid in the construction of the Bt. Louis and Sanie Fe Bailrond.” Then again: “In old bonds, coupons and interest thereon, or judgments rendered against said township on said bonds or coupons, or both.” Then, in summing up as to what is the purpose of the contract, it is said: “'It is understood that the old bonds, coupons, and judgments heretofore mentioned, consist of the outstanding and unpaid bonds and coupons, and judgments on the same, issued by said county for and on behalf of said township to aid in the construction of” said railroad. And again, further on, it recites that “ said party of the first part agrees to release all judgments, either heretofore rendered, or that may hereafter be obtained, against said township on any of said bonds or coupons.” It winds up with a restatement of the true import of the contract. It is to protect and save harmless the township “against all of the old indebtedness, widen consists of bonds and coupons, and against all judgments thereon, and costs;” from which it is most manifest that the bonds to be taken care of by Parker are the old bonds of the townships, — no funded or new bonds; and the judgments to be satisfied by Parker are judgments upon said township bonds, and judgments against the townships, or such judgments as are enforceable, as such, against the townships. As was well known, presumably, to the contracting parties, judgments on township bonds, while they go against the county, are not county debts, and the judgment specifies that the same is to be collected by levies on the taxable property of the township, and it is not enforceable against the body of the county. [720]*720The judgment in question was rendered against the county-as such, and was declared to be a debt of the county, enforceable as such. It was not, therefore, a judgment against the township, or against the county for and on behalf of the township. The county has no judgment over against the township on account of this judgment against it; nor, indeed, could it-, if at all, obtain any judgment until it has paid and satisfied the judgment against it, on account of its assumption for the township. Indeed, I am unaware of any law which would enable the county to maintain an action against one of its township subdivisions on account of a debt voluntarily assumed and paid by the county for the township constituency. It was not only a voluntary payment of a debt not owing by it, without the solicitation of the debtor, but a payment of a debt for a subdivision of the county, where there was no agent or lawful representative of the subdivision to consent thereto, and no power lodged in any one to ratify the act on behalf of the quasi municipality. The county court is not authorized by statute to make a levy on the taxable property of the township for such a claim. It is only empowered by statute to make an assessment and levy for and on behalf of the township to pay interest and principal on its bonds issued in aid of railroads, or to enforce the payment of a judgment on such bonds and coupons, when such judgment is against the county for and on behalf of the township. It was the obligations, existing, vital, and enforceable, of the township which the complainant undertook to protect and satisfy, and not the voluntary and unauthorized assumption of obligátions of the township by the county. As to the latter the complainant has the right to appeal to his contract and say, in hoc feedere non veni. It cannot be said with legal exactness that it is within the equity of the contract that Parker should save the' county of Cass from its liability on the judgments against it on account of its unauthorized assumption of part of the township obligation. For it must be kept in mind that the county of Cass, as such, was not contracting for itself and for its protection. It was acting for and on behalf of the townships, to enable them to get rid of their township debts springing from the subscription to the railroads, and judgments against the townships incident thereto. The contract was made subject to the ratification of the townships, as it was for their benefit and on their responsibility. Any equity, therefore, which could possibly be invoked would be in favor of the township and not the county; and as the county has no claim against the township which it can enforce, what equity has the township against Parker which the county, under this contract, has the right to interpose? The whole power of the county court to make such railroad subscription and issue such bonds on behalf of the township being conferred by the special act of the legislature, (Laws Mo. 1868, p. 92,) we must look to the special enabling act to ascertain the extent of the authority of the county court and the liabilities of the tow'nship connected with the making of such subscriptions and the issuing of bonds in payment thereof. No authority is to be found in the statute for the action of the county court in issuing the funding bonds to take up the interest coupons on the township bonds; and, inconsequence, [721]*721no provision is found by which the county can reimburse itself for such assumption. The quasi municipal subdivision of the county known as a township is precisely what the legislature in this respect has made it, possessed of no powers or facilities, an<l subject to no incidents or liabilities, other than those prescribed in the enabling act. It is not, therefore, perceivable how any court, whether ol‘ law or equity, can enforce a claim of the county against the township on account of the bonds voluntarily issued to fund the accrued interest on the townships debts, even should the county ever satisfy the judgment against it. The action of the county court in that transaction was violative of its trust, as the representative of the county; and, whatever may have boon or may be the rights of the constituency against the wrongful act of the justices of the court, a court of equity, no more than a court of law, can create out of their wrong a binding obligation against the township. A court of equity cannot make a contract for parties, and then make a law to enforce it. While the granting of a decree of specific performance is said to rest in the discretion of the chancellor, this is a sound judicial discretion, and not one to be arbitrarily exercised or arbitrarily refused. When it is ascertained that the contract is founded on a valuable consideration, its mutual enforcement practicable, and its enforcement in speck, as in this case, is necessary, owing to the impracticability, somewhat, of giving to the new bonds a true valuation in money, and lire contract is certain, unambiguous, and reasonable, then the remedy ripens into a right. “The remedy of specific performance is governed by the same general principles and rules which control other equitable-remedies. The right to it depends upon circumstances, conditions, and incidents, in addition to the existence of a valid contract, which equity regards as essentia] to the administration of its peculiar modes of relief. When all these circumstances, conditions, and incidents exist, the right is perfect in equity, and a specific performance is granted as a matter of course within the classes of agreements to which the jurisdiction'extends.” P.om. Spec. Perf. § 88. , It results that the complainant is entitled to have the contract enforced without regard to the existence of said judgments against Cass county. Decree accordingly.