St. Joseph Township v. Rogers

83 U.S. 644, 21 L. Ed. 328, 16 Wall. 644, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1191
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 83 U.S. 644 (St. Joseph Township v. Rogers) 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
St. Joseph Township v. Rogers, 83 U.S. 644, 21 L. Ed. 328, 16 Wall. 644, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1191 (1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Bonds, payable to bearer, issued by a municipal corporation to aid in the construction of a railroad, if issued in pursuance of a power conferred by the legislature, are valid commercial instruments; but if issued by such a corporation which possessed no power from the legislature to grant such aid, they are invalid, even in the hands of innocent holders.

Such a power is frequently conferred, to be exercised in a special manner, or subject to certain regulations, conditions, or qualifications, but if it appears that the bonds issued-show by their recitals that the power was exercised in the manner required by the legislature, and that the bonds were issued in conformity withthose regulations and pursuant to those conditions and qualifications, proof that any, or all, of those recitals are incorréct will not constitute a defence to the. corporation in a suit on the bonds or coupons, if it appears that it was the sole province of the municipal officers who executed the bonds to decide whether or not there had been an antecedent compliance with the regulation, condition, or qualification which it is alleged was not fulfilled.

On the 28th of February, 1867, the legislature amended ■the articles of association of the Dauvilie, Urbana, Bloomington and Pekin Railroad Company, and enacted that any incorporated town or township, in counties acting under the township organization law, along the route of said railroad, may subscribe to the capital stock of said company in any sum not exceeding $250,000. * No such subscription, however, it was enacted shall be made, until the question has been submitted to the legal voters of such town or township *660 in which the subscription is proposed to be made. Regulations are also enacted for taking the sense of the legal voters upon such a proposition, which provide that the clerk of the town or township, upon the presentation to him of a petition stating the amount proposed to be subscribed, signed by at least ten citizens who are legal voters and taxpayers therein, ■shall post up notices in at least three public places in the municipality, not less than thirty days before the day of holding such election, notifying the legal voters thereof to meet at the usual place of holding elections, or some other convenient place named in the notice, for the purpose of voting for or agaiust such subscription. Prior to the passage of that act, however, an election was .held in that.township to determine whether the municipality would subscribe $25,000 to the capital stock of that railroad company, and the proofs show that a majority of all the legal voters of the township voting at the election voted for the subscription— sixty-two votes being cast in favor of the subscription and seventeen against the proposition. Pursuant to the vote at that election the supervisor of the township subscribed, in the name of the municipality, $25,000 to the capital stock of that railroad company, and executed, in the name of the township, the bonds held by the plaintiff, bearing interest at ten per cent, per annum, payable in ten years from date, which bonds were signed by the party issuing the same as such supervisor, and were attested by the clerk of the township

Objection is made to the preliminary proceedings because the election approving the subscription was held before the act was passed giving such authority to such municipalities, but two answers are made to that objection, either of which is decisive:

1. By the act conferring that authority it. is provided that where elections may have already been held, and a majority of the legal voters of the township were in favor of a subscription to said railroad, then and in that case no other flection need be had, and the amount so voted for shall be *661 subscribed as in the act is provided; and the provision is that such elections are legal and valid as if the acj; had been in force at the time thereof, and that all the provisions had been fulfilled. *

2. Because the legislature passed a subsequent act declaring such subscriptions legal and obligatory. Some of the township officers, it seems, failed to keep a full and perfect-record of elections called and held to authorize such subT scriptions, and that the clerks of the townships failed in some instances to file the necessary certificate with the county clerk, as required by the fifteenth section of the prior act. Omissions and defects of the kind becoming known, the legislature, on the 25th of February, 1869, enacted that where such informalities and neglect may have occurred and bonds have been issued, or may hereafter be issued, to aid in the construction of said railroad, that no such neglect or omission shall in any way invalidate or impair the collection of said bonds, principal- or interest, as they may respectively fall due, and that all assessments that are now made for the paymeut of the principal or interest are hereby legalized, and the township collectors and county treasurers are hereby authorized and empowered to enforce the collection and payment of said tax as is now provided by law for the collection of all other taxes.

Bonds to the amount of the subscription were accordingly issued, bearing dale October 1st, 1867, signed by the supervisor and countersigned by the clerk, and each bond contains the recital that it is issued under and by virtue of the aforesaid law of the State, entitled an act to amend the articles of association of the said railroad company, and to extend the powers of and confer a charter upon the same, and in accordance with the vote of the electors of said township at the special election held August 14th, 1866, pursuant to said act, and pledges the faith of the township for the payment of the said principal sum and interest as stipulated in the instrument.

*662 Evidence was introduced by the defendants showing that there is no record of the supposed election, when it is alleged that the question of the proposed subscription was submitted to the legal voters of the township, and that no such certificate as that required by the act conferring the authority to subscribe for the stock of the said company is on file in the office of the count/ clerk, but the plaintiff proved that the alleged meeting was notified,, called, and held, and that sixty-two .votes were given in favor of the subscription and seventeen against it, as announced at the election.

Two instructions were given by the court to the jury, to which the defendants excepted: (1.) That the' election held as described in the evidence was validated by the act of the 28th of February, 1867, so as to authorize the defendants to subscribe for the stock of the railroad company and to issue the bonds in question, and that the bonds having been issued for the stock subscribed, are binding on the defendants in the hands of a bond fide holder. (2.) That the recitals in the bonds estop the defendants from denying the fact of a valid election as against a bond fide holder of the bonds or coupons thereto annexed.

Under the instructions of the court the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff’, and the court rendered judgment on the verdict.

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Bluebook (online)
83 U.S. 644, 21 L. Ed. 328, 16 Wall. 644, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-joseph-township-v-rogers-scotus-1873.