Shurtleff v. Inhabitants of Wiscasset

74 Me. 130, 1882 Me. LEXIS 117
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 19, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 74 Me. 130 (Shurtleff v. Inhabitants of Wiscasset) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shurtleff v. Inhabitants of Wiscasset, 74 Me. 130, 1882 Me. LEXIS 117 (Me. 1882).

Opinion

Baeeow'S, J.

A portion of the elaborate argument of defendants’ counsel is devoted to an attempt to show that the authority given by the legislature to the inhabitants of Wiscasset to aid in the construction of á railroad running through that town, from which great public benefits -were expected to flow, was not regularly exercised, or that this or that condition precedent to the issue of the bonds was not fulfilled : e. g. — The objection raised to the validity of the bonds of the first issue on the ground that there was no legal organization of the Knox and Lincoln railroad company, and no company authorized to receive the bonds or give a mortgage for them under § 5, c. 370, private and special laws of 1864, because in the original charter granted in 1849, private and special laws, c. 287, of the Penobscot, Lincoln and Kennebec railroad company (whose name wTas changed to Knox and Lincoln in the act of 1864) the capital stock was fixed at a million dollars and the case does not show that more than $370,000 [136]*136bad been subscribed; the objections that the certificate of the treasurer of the railroad company does not show that, at the time the bonds were delivered to the railroad company " at least §300,000 of the stock of the company had actually been subscribed, paid in and expended in the construction of the road,” but only that "$334, 528.25 had been collected from the subscribers to the stock” and "paid out in the construction of the road, bridges, timber, logs, &c. of said company;” that said treasurer’s certificate does not appear to have been sworn to until twelve,days after the date of the bonds and was not recorded' until nearly two months after; and that of the $370,000 subscription $275,000 was subscribed by the same cities and town to whom the mortgage was to be given, so that the subscription was rather an evasion than a compliance with the act, which required that "said bonds shall not be delivered to said railroad company until at least three hundred thousand dollars of the,stock of said.company has actually been subscribed, paid in and expended in the construction of said road, which fact shall be determined by the certificate of the treasurer of said corporation under oath, a copy of which certificate shall be recorded by the town or city clerk of each town or city issuing bonds by authority of this act.”

Now touching’ these and all objections of like character,— asicle from reasons which will readily suggest themselves to show that upon the obvious facts there is small merit in most of the objections individually, — it is sufficient to say that a broad distinction has long been recognized and adhered to by the courts, in suits of this description, between contracts which are void for want of any valid authority in the coloration to make them, and those where the authority exists and the question raised is whether it has been regularly exercised, or the conditions precedent to its exercise have been fulfilled. Touching all objections of the latter class it is well settled that purchasers of securities thus put out to the public for sale, " will not be required to look beyond the face of the proceedings or the recitals of the instruments under which they claimand the corporations issuing . them will be estopped to deny what their agents in the premises [137]*137have affirmed in order to place their securities on the market. Aspinwall v. Com’rs of Knox Co. 21 Howard, 539; Zabriskie v. R. R. Co. 23 Howard, 400; Augusta Bank v. Augusta, 49 Maine, 507; Deming v. Houlton, 64 Maine, 254, and cases there cited; Lane v. Embden, 72 Maine, 354, and cases there cited.

These decisions stand on the firm ground of equitable estoppel which has been recognized in the common law courts for centuries, and has its foundation in the immutable principles of natural justice. The bonds were signed as required by § 8 of the act, countersigned by the president of the railroad company, and the defendants through their municipal officers certified upon the face of each bond that their action was "in behalf of said town and in conformity with an act of the legislature of the state of Maine, approved March 21,1864, vesting in us authority to issue this bond for the benefit of the Knox and Lincoln railroad company.” Such recitals are conclusive against the defendants upon all that class of objections to which we have referred.

Another part of defendants’ argument attacks the authority by which the second and third issues of bonds wore made because the action of the town was in anticipation of the grant of authority from the legislature, and by the terms of the votes in each case the municipal officer's of the town were directed to deliver the bonds to the officials of the railroad company "as soon as practicable after this vote shall be legalized by an act of the legislature of this state.”

Hereupon it is strenuously contended by the defendants that the legislature had no power to do what they undertook to do by virtue of c. 511, private and special laws of Maine, 1871, and c. 1, private and special laws of 1872, which distinctly purport to ratify, confirm and make valid the acts and doings of the town of Wiscassot on October 15, 1870, and June 28, 1871, respectively, as well as the acts1 and doings of other towns and cities, respecting aid to the construction of the Knox and Lincoln railroad on the days and times* mentioned in said acts, and to give authority to this and the other towns and cities named therein, to issue bonds in pursuance of the votes passed at their respective meetings specified in the acts. The passage of legis[138]*138lative acts designed to impart validity to the doings of various municipal and other quasi corporations when they have not been in conformity with law and therefore are in fact without legal authority and without effect, is no new thing.

If marriages not celebrated according to the requirements of law or by those having- authority to perform such a ceremony can be made valid, or sales of lands defectively made or acknowledged and -in the absence of legislative ratification ineffectual, can be made effective to pass the title to real estate, there would seem to be little doubt that the legislature might confer the authority to issue these bonds which the town proposed and voted to issue when the necessai-y legislative authority could be obtained.

It is not an open question in this state whether the legislature is violating the constitution in authorizing by special act certain cities and towns to grant aid in the construction and equipment of railroads. It was determined in Augusta Bank v. Augusta, 49 Maine, 507, that such enactments were constitutional.

No good reason is perceived for holding that the legislature are precluded from authorizing a particular measure of this description which has assumed the shape of a definite proposition, when they can grant authority to do the same act in general ' terms without any knowledge of the precise nature of the action which may follow such grant of authority. Obviously there can be no better opportunity for the legislature to judge whether a measure will be conducive to the public welfare than when its precise terms are laid before them. If the question is whether an authority shall be granted it certainly tends to an intelligent decision to have it known precisely what use is to be made of it when granted. The sanction of the legislature is given to the particular transaction.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Me. 130, 1882 Me. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shurtleff-v-inhabitants-of-wiscasset-me-1882.