Schuerman v. Arizona

184 U.S. 342, 22 S. Ct. 406, 46 L. Ed. 580, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 2277
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 3, 1902
Docket151
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 184 U.S. 342 (Schuerman v. Arizona) 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
Schuerman v. Arizona, 184 U.S. 342, 22 S. Ct. 406, 46 L. Ed. 580, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 2277 (1902).

Opinion

Me. Justice Pegkham,

after stating the above facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

It is claimed on the part of the defendants below that the railroad bonds for which the territorial bonds were given were invalid when issued, and it is only by reason of the passage of the act of June 6, 1896, 29 Stat. 262, that any action could be sustained to enforce their payment. That act has been held to be within the power of Congress to pass, and that by it the bonds therein described were made valid. Utter v. Franklin, 172 U. S. 416.

Three grounds are now urged why the judgments of the lower courts should be reversed. They are:

(1) That the railroad bonds were illegally funded, without any demand having been made by the board of supervisors of Yavapai County upon the territorial loan commission for such funding.
(2) That said bonds were funded after January 1, 1897, and at a time when the board of loan commissioners were by the terms of the statute without power to fund them.
(3) That the bonds were improperly and illegally funded at a meeting of the board of loan commissioners of the Territory of Arizona, at which only two members of the said board were present, the third member being absent from the Territory and not in any manner consulted with reference to such funding.
■ (1) In regard to the first ground, the Supreme Court of the Territory has held that it was not necessary that a demand should be made by the municipal authorities, but that the *346 holders of the bonds could themselves make it by virtue of section 7 of the territorial funding act of Arizona, approved March 19, 1891. Act No. 79, p. 120. The seventh section of that act reads as follows:
“ Sec. 7. Any person holding bonds, warrants or other evidence of indebtedness of the Territory, or any county, municipality or school district within the Territory, existing and outstanding on the 31st day of December, 1890, may exchange the same for the bonds issued under the provisions of this act at not less than their face or par value, and the accrued interest at the time of exchange ; but no indebtedness shall be redeemed at more than its face value and any interest that may be due thereon.”

Where a holder of bonds bad made tbe demand it was held sufficient under that section. Bravin v. Mayor, 56 Pac. Rep. 719; Yavapai County v. McCord, 59 Pac. Rep. 99.

This construction of the territorial act by the Supreme Court of Arizona we think was correct, and that it was not necessary in order to obtain a refunding of the bonds that the demand for the same must be made by the municipal authorities.

(2) It appears from the records that the bonds were funded after January 1, 1897, and it is objected that there was no power on tbe part of the board of loan commissioners to fund such bonds after that date.

The act of Congress under which this question arises was approved June 6, 1896, 29 Stat. 262, chap. 339, and is set forth in the margin. 1

*347 The Supreme Court of Arizona has decided this contention against the defendants upon the authority of its previous decisions in Gage v. Mc Cord, 51 Pac. Rep. 977, decided in 1898, which was approved in Yavapai County v. McCord, 59 Pac. Rep. 99, decided in November, 1899. In the first mentioned case the following is that portion of the opinion which discusses this particular objection:

“ Stress is put upon the clause ‘ until January first, eighteen hundred and ninety-seven,’ found in section 1 of the act, as bearing out the view that the purpose and intent of Congress was to limit the time within which the loan commissioners might act, and to require the completion of the work of funding, by the sale and disposition of bonds and the liquidation of the indebtedness allowed by this and prior acts to be funded, *348 by January 1, 1897. Even were we restricted to the more literal meaning of the words used in construing remedial statutes of this kind, the narrow and circumscribed view thus taken of the statute can hardly be justified if regard be had to the whole of the statute, including the plain purpose of the act as expressed in its title. In the latter, it is clearly stated to be an amendment of previous statutes, and the extension and enlargement of their provisions. Again, an analysis of the body of the act bears out the view that, instead of the purpose being to limit or restrict the exercise of any powers, rights or privileges previously granted, the legislative will was to add to, extend and enlarge these. The first section contains two general provisions — one authorizing the amendment and extension of the Congressional acts approved, respectively, June 25, 1890, and August 3,1894, so as to include in their provisions ‘all outstanding obligations’ of the Territory; the other directing the funding of all outstanding' bonds, warrants and other evidences of indebtedness of the Territory, as well as of the counties, municipalities and school districts thereof, which had been authorized by legislative enactments, and which bore a higher rate of interest than is authorized by the funding law, and which had been sold or exchanged in good faith. The second section likewise has reference to two classes of indebtedness, both of which are recognized obviously so as to confirm, approve, validate and effectually fix their status as binding obligations upon the Territory.
“ The acts of June 25, 1890, and August 3, 1894, being referred to, we must therefore consider the act of June 6, 1896, in pari materia with the former. The former act confirmed and approved, with amendments, chapter 1, tit. 31, Rev. Stat., passed by the territorial legislature March 10, 1887. These -amendments had reference to the rate of interest, the time bonds issued for funding purposes should run, and as to what indebtedness might be funded ; the act being amended in this particular so as to include county, municipal and school indebtedness. Congress added to the legislative enactment a provision that in effect validated a class of obligations otherwise invalid, because incurred in violation of the organic law of the Terri *349 tory, as found in the ‘ Harrison Act,’ and provided for the funding of all the then existing and outstanding indebtedness, and that which might thereafter be evidenced by warrants issued for the necessary and current expenses of carrying on territorial, county municipal and school government for the the year ending December 31,1890, and added to the foregoing the declaration that thereafter no warrants, certificates or other evidences of indebtedness should be allowed to issue or be legal when the same is in excess of the limit prescribed by the Harrison Act. The act of August 3, 1894, provided

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 U.S. 342, 22 S. Ct. 406, 46 L. Ed. 580, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 2277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuerman-v-arizona-scotus-1902.