Post v. Supervisors

105 U.S. 667, 26 L. Ed. 1204, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2175
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1882
Docket249
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 105 U.S. 667 (Post v. Supervisors) 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
Post v. Supervisors, 105 U.S. 667, 26 L. Ed. 1204, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2175 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gray

delivered the opinion of the court.

These actions are brought upon municipal bonds, purporting to have been issued under an act of the General Assembly of Illinois of Feb. 18, 1857. The facts of the cases do not substantially differ from those which appeared when one of the cases was before this court,at October Term, 1876, and the principles then affirmed must control the present decision. See Town of South Ottawa v. Perkins and Supervisors of Kendall County v. Post, 94 U. S. 260. Those principles may be summed up as follows: —

First, By the law of the State of Illinois, as often declared by the Supreme Court of that State, before as well as after the execution of the bonds in suit, the provisions of the Constitution of 1848, requiring each house of the legislature to. keep and publish a journal of its proceedings, and, on the final passage of all bills, to take the-vote by ayes and noes, and ordaining that no bill shall become a law without thé. concurrence of a majority of all' the members elect of. each' house,' are not merely directory; but if the journals, being produced or proved, fail to' show that an act has -been passed in. the mode prescribed by the Constitution, the presumption of its validity, arising from the signatures of the presiding officers and of- the executive, is overthrown, and' the act is void.

Second, Whether a seeming-act of the. legislature is or is not a law is a judicial question to be determined by the court,' and not a question of fact to be tried by a jury.

*669 Third, The construction uniformly given to the Constitution of a State by its highest court is binding on the courts of the United States as a rule of decision.

Fourth, An act of the legislature of a State, which has been held by its highest court not to be a statute of the State, because never passed as its Constitution requires, cannot be held by the courts of the United States, upon the' same evidence, to be- a law of the State.

. Fifth, That which is not a law can give no validity to bonds purporting to .be issued under it, even in the hands of those who take them for value and in the belief that they have been lawfully issued.

It was accordingly held that the act of the General Assembly of Illinois of Feb. 18, 1857, under which the bonds in suit were issued, having been adjudged by the Supreme Court of that State in 1870 in the cases of Ryan v. Lynch (68 Ill. 160) and Miller v. Goodwin (70 id. 659), upon proof that the journals did not show it to have been enacted in conformity with the requirements of the Constitution, to have never become a law, and to have conferred no power, although referred to in later statutes as an existing law, those decisions-must" govern the action of the courts of the United States.

The weight of those decisions as authoritative expositions of the Constitution of the State is not affected by the fact that' these plaintiffs were not parties to the suits in which they were delivered. Township of Elmwood v. Marcy, 92 U. S. 289; Township of East Oakland v. Skinner, 94 id. 255.

Nor is it of any importance that the act of 1857 had been assumed to be an existing law in Dunnovan v. Green (57 Ill. 68), and in Force v. Batavia (61 id. 99); for in each of those cases the validity of the statute was not controverted, and' by the established practice of that court no evidence of the contents of the journals could be considered on appeal, which had not been produced and made part of the case in the court below. Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Wren, 48 Ill. 77; Bedard v. Hall, 44 id. 91; Grob v. Cushman, 45 id. 119. See also People v. Dewolf, 62 id. 253, 256; Binz v. Weber, 81 id. 288, 291.

The copies of the journals, certified by the secretary of state, and the printed journals, published in obedience to law, *670 are both competent evidence of the proceedings in tbe legislature.

By virtue of the statute of Illinois of Feb. 12, 1849, 1 the copies of the original daily journals kept by the clerks of the two houses, made by persons contracted with or employed for the purpose as authorized and directed by that act (though not sworn public officers), in well-bound books furnished by the secretary of state, pursuant to the duty thereby imposed upon him, and afterwards deposited and kept in his office, are official records in his custody, copies of which certified by him are admissible upon settled rules of evidence, as well as by the decision of the Supreme Court of Illinois in Miller v. Goodwin, above cited; and' neither the competency nor the effect of such copies is impaired by the loss or destruction of the daily journals or minutes.

The remark of the judge delivering the opinion in Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Wren (43 Ill. 79), “We are not aware of any law which makes the printed journal evidence of the contents of the original,” was but obiter dictum (for the case was decided upon the ground that no copy whatever of the journal had been made part of the case before the court), and is in conflict with the general current of decision in that court and in this. People v. Campbell, 8 id. 466; Prescott v. Trustees of Illinois & Michigan Canal, 19 id. 324; Happel v. Brethauer, 70 *671 id. 166; Watkins v. Holman, 16 Pet. 25, 55, 56; Bryan v. Forsyth, 19 How. 334; Gregg v. Forsyth, 24 id. 179.

For these reasons, tlie act of Feb. 18, 1857, under which all .the bonds in suit purport to have been, issued, must be held to be of no force or effect, and the plaintiffs can maintain no action on the bonds. ‘Upon the attempt made at the argument to support their validity in the first case under the statute of Nov. -6, 1849, and in the second case under the statute of March. 6, 1867, it is enough to say that there is nothing in the record to show that either of those statutes was ever complied with by the defendant in issuing the bonds, or relied on by the plaintiff in purchasing .them.

Judgments affirmed,.

1

By the Constitution of Illinois of 1848, art. 3, sect.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Herzog v. Colpoys
143 F.2d 137 (D.C. Circuit, 1944)
United States v. Aluminum Co. of America
1 F.R.D. 71 (S.D. New York, 1939)
Ohio Fuel Supply Co. v. Paxton
1 F.2d 662 (S.D. Ohio, 1924)
Town of Narrows v. Board of Supervisors
105 S.E. 82 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1920)
Chesapeake & Delaware Canal Co. v. United States
250 U.S. 123 (Supreme Court, 1919)
State v. Bowman
118 S.W. 711 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1909)
Portland Gold Mining Co. v. Duke
164 F. 180 (Eighth Circuit, 1908)
Federal Lead Co. v. Swyers
161 F. 687 (Eighth Circuit, 1908)
Stickney v. Kelsey
209 U.S. 419 (Supreme Court, 1908)
United States v. Andem
158 F. 996 (D. New Jersey, 1908)
Rio Grande Sampling Co. v. Catlin
40 Colo. 450 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1907)
Board of Com'rs v. Tome
153 F. 81 (Fourth Circuit, 1907)
School Dist. No. 11 v. Chapman
152 F. 887 (Eighth Circuit, 1907)
L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Central Stock Yards Co.
97 S.W. 778 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1906)
Great Southern Fire Proof Hotel Co. v. Jones
193 U.S. 532 (Supreme Court, 1904)
Wilkes County v. Coler
180 U.S. 506 (Supreme Court, 1901)
Thompson v. McConnell
107 F. 33 (Fifth Circuit, 1901)
Cumberland Building & Loan Ass'n v. Sparks
106 F. 101 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Arkansas, 1900)
Louisville & N. R. v. Lansford
102 F. 62 (Fifth Circuit, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 U.S. 667, 26 L. Ed. 1204, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/post-v-supervisors-scotus-1882.