People ex rel. Springfield & Illinois Southeastern Railway Co. v. County Board of Cass County

77 Ill. 438
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 77 Ill. 438 (People ex rel. Springfield & Illinois Southeastern Railway Co. v. County Board of Cass County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Springfield & Illinois Southeastern Railway Co. v. County Board of Cass County, 77 Ill. 438 (Ill. 1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Unless it appears the board of county commissioners were under legal obligation to issue and'deliver to the relator the $50,000 of county bonds, it must be conceded the judgment will have to be affirmed.

If such legal obligation exists, it is by reason of the vote of the 15th of February, 1870, in favor of the subscription, for, since that vote, neither the county court, nor the'board of county commissioners, its legal successor, has made any subscription to the capital stock of the relator, or entered into any contract with it, professing to bind the county to make such subscription.

By the tenth section of the charter of the Pana, Springfield and Northwestern Railroad Company (Private Laws of 1855, vol. 2, p. 196), it is provided, “cities and counties shall be entitled to subscribe for stock in said company, in like manner and with like effect” as is provided in the “act to provide for a general system of railroad incorporations,” approved November 5, 1849, and acts amendatory thereof. The election at which the vote in favor of the subscription was given, was held under and by virtue of this authority. This court held, in People ex rel. P. and O. R. R. Co. v. The County of Tazewell et al. 22 Ill. 147, where a vote had been given in favor of subscription to the capital stock of a railroad company, under the provisions of the same law, the authorities representing, the county have a discretion either to make or withhold the subscription, as the interests of the county shall seem to be best subserved, and that they can not be compelled, by mandamus, to make the subscription.

In a more recent case, The People ex rel. v. Logan County, 63 Ill. 377, where the language of the charter, under'which there was an election and a majority vote in favor of subscription, was peremptory, and left no discretion in the county authorities in regard to making the subscription, it was held mandamus would lie to enforce the making of the subscription.

There is no conflict between these cases, the latter being solelv governed by the peculiar language of the charter, and, therefore, wholly inapplicable to the present case. The Tazewell county case was incidentally referred to, with approval, in People v. Dutcher, 56 Ill. 145; and, having carefully reexamined the reasoning by which it is sustained, we see no cause to depart from its conclusions, or to modify or qualify the language of the opinion.

A distinction is attempted to be taken between that case and the present, in this: the subscription there authorized was absolute, while here it is conditional; there, nothing was done upon the faith of the vote, while here, the relator, relying upon the vote as a proposition presented to it by the county, borrowed money and constructed a number of miles of its road, upon the faith of it.

Without the vote, the board of county commissioners would have had no power whatever, as this court has frequently held, to make any contract binding the county in regard to such subscription. The vote, then, merely invests the board with the requisite power to contract; and if it is subject to conditions. the power conferred, instead of being general, is special, and limited by the conditions. In the Tazewell county case, it was said: “ The company was no party to this vote, and has no more right to insist upon the execution of the power thus delegated than it would in case an individual were to authorize an agent to subscribe for stock in the road, and who should refuse to exercise the power for his principal.” Extending the illustration to the present case, could it make anv difference whether the agent’s authority was general or special? If the agent is limited by his authority to subscribe for'ten shares of stock in a railroad, upon condition of its line being located at a designated place, for which payment is to be made when it shall have been constructed on such location, would this, of itself, make a contract between the principal and the railroad company, notwithstanding the agent should refuse to exercise his power by making the subscription? Surely not. Why, then, shall a vote, merely conferring authority upon a county board to make a subscription subject to conditions, be held a contract?

The only difference we perceive, material to this question, between a general and conditional authority, is, that the one allows to the board more discretion than the other. But because the board have less discretion, where the vote by which they are empowered to act imposes conditions, than where it does not, it does not follow they have no discretion, and may not, if in their opinion the interests of the county require it, refuse to act. What may be said in favor of their right to refuse to act in the one case,.must apply in the other.

An oiler can not be held out, upon the faith of which another, by acting, may acquire aright to have it performed, save by those who have the legal right to contract. A county, except when so specially authorized by statute, can not contract through the electors of the county alone, either by the assistance of the ballot-box, or otherwise. In counties under township organization, the board of supervisors,, and in counties not under township organization, the board of countv commissioners, are, alone, the agencies by and through which the law has provided counties shall contract in respect to subscribing to the capital stock of railroad companies. The board of county commissioners of Cass county, never having subscribed for the capital stock of the relator, nor entered into any contract binding the county to do so, it follows no offer was held out to the relator upon the faith of which it was authorized to act. In relying upon the vote at the election, it trusted to a mere naked power, and nothing more.

We do not consider the fact that, by the terms of the condition upon which the subscription was authorized to be made, no subscription could be made until the road was permanently located through the towns of Ashland and Virginia to Beardstown. as at all important. If the relator was not willing to wait until this was done, and take the chances of getting the subscription, it should have obtained a contract binding the county that the subscription would then be made. Its action has been purely voluntary, and if it trusted unwisely, it must suffer the consequences.

But it is argued, even if the county authorities had a discretion, it was exercised in favor of the relator by a pledge made before the election was called.

How the county could be bound by the acts of those who then had no authority to act-, is not explained: but, waiving this, we think the position is not sustained by the evidence.

The pledge to make the subscription, claimed to have been given before the election was called, upon which relator relies, is in the nature of a stipulation, made and filed in a suit pending in this court, in reference to a subscription of $75,000, claimed to have been made by the county-to the capital stock of the Rockford, Rock Island and St. Louis Railroad Company, and, omitting the caption and signatures, is in these words :

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Related

People v. County of Tazewell
22 Ill. 147 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1859)

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Bluebook (online)
77 Ill. 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-springfield-illinois-southeastern-railway-co-v-county-ill-1875.