Supervisors v. Galbraith

99 U.S. 214, 25 L. Ed. 410, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1531
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 14, 1879
Docket197
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 99 U.S. 214 (Supervisors v. Galbraith) 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
Supervisors v. Galbraith, 99 U.S. 214, 25 L. Ed. 410, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1531 (1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swayne

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question presented for our determination in this case is as to the validity of certain bonds issued and delivered by the board of supervisors of Calhoun County, in the State of Mississippi, in payment for stock of the Grenada, Houston, and Eastern Railroad Company, for which the supervisors subscribed in behalf of the county. In the court below they filed numerous pleas, presenting the points of defence upon which they relied. The pleas were all demurred to, the demurrers were sustained, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. Here the assignments of error are not numerous. We shall respond as far as we deem necessary without formally restating them.

,The act of Feb. 10,1860, authorized the subscription, pro *217 vided a majority of the voters of the county signified' their approval. That sanction was given, and the stock was subscribed. The amendatory act of March 25,. 1871, declared that when bonds were issued in payment for such stock they should be “ signed-by the president of the board of supervisors-issuing the same, and be made payable to the president and directors of the Grenada, Houston, and Eastern Railroad Company, and their successors and assigns, and may be assigned, sold, and conveyed with or without guarantee of payment by said president and directors, or may be mortgaged in- like manner, at their discretion, as they may deem best for the company.” The bonds here-in question bore date Sept. 1, 1871, and were pay-' able to ‘‘ the Grenada, Houston, and Eastern Railroad Company, or bearer, at the agency of said company in the city of New York, two years from date.” Each bond was for $500, with interest coupons attached, which matured half-yearly. On their face is this recital: —

“ This bond is one of a series of bonds issued and delivered t.o the Grenada, Houston, and Eastern Railroad Company by Calhoun County, to meet and pay off the amount subscribed by said county to the capital stock of the railroad company aforesaid in pursuance of an act of the legislature of the State of Mississippi, entitled ‘ An Act to aid in the construction of the Grenada, Houston, and Eastern railroad,’ approved Feb. 10,1860, and of an act amendatory thereof passed March 25, 1871, and in obedience to a vote of the people of said county at an election held in accordance with the provisions of said acts.”

An objection is made to the form of the bonds. It is said they should have been made payable to the railroad company and “ their successors and assigns,” and not to the company “or bearer,” and it is insisted that this divergence from the .prescribed formula is a fatal defect.

To this there are several answers. The statutory requirement in this particular is only directory. Indianapolis Railroad Co. v. Hurst, 98 U. S. 29; Township of Rock Creek v. Strong, 96 id. 271. The defect is one of form and not of substance. . The irregularity was committed by the servants of the county, and the county is estopped to take advantage of it. Bargate v. Shortridge, 5 Clark, H. L. 297. The recital in the *218 bonds of conformity to the" statutes is also conclusive. A buyer was not bound to look further. Bigelow, Estoppel, 266 ; Commissioners of Knox County v. Aspinwall, 21 How. 539; Mora v. The Commissioners, 2 Black, 722. No place of payment of the bonds being designated by the statute, it was competent for the supervisors, to make them payable in New York. Meyer v. Muscatine, 1 Wall. 384. The law of the place of performance governed the construction and effect of the contract. Brabston v. Gibson, 9 How. 263 ; Cook v. Moffat, 5 id. 295. By the law of New York such bonds may be assigned in blank, and any holder can fill the blank with his own name or otherwise. In.the mean time, after such assignment in blank, they pass by delivery from hand to hand, and have all the properties of commercial paper. Hubbard v. The New York & Harlem Railroad Co., 36 Barb. (N. Y.) 286. The result is, therefore, the same that it would have been if they had been drawn in literal conformity to the statute.

The requirement of the statute in this particular,is evidently the result of inadvertence. It applies to the securities spoken of the language necessary in a deed intended to vest in a corporation a fee-simple title to real estate. They were obviously intended to be made negotiable instruments. Mayor of Vicksburg v . Lombard, 51 Miss. 111.

It appears by the record that the proposition for subscription was twice submitted to the voters. The first time it was rejected ; the second, it was approved by a majority. It is contended that the first submission exhausted the power to submit, and that the second was a nullity. We cannot concur in this view.

The first section of the act of 1860 gave ample power to the proper officers (then the board of police, afterwards the board of supervisors) to subscribe, upon conditions thus expressed: —

Provided, however, that an election shall be hold in the county for and on account of which stock is proposed to be subscribed by the qualified electors thereof, at the regular precincts of said county, twenty days’ notice of the time of holding such election, and of the amount proposed to be subscribed, and in what number of instalments, being first given by the board of police; and if, at said election, a majority of the qualified electors voting shall be in favor of *219 such subscription, then said board shall make "such subscription for and in behalf of the county, for the amount specified, by the president of said board of police, subscribing the amount so specified, to the capital stock of said company, but if a majority of those voting shall be opposed to such subscription, the same shall not be made.”

The remaining sections provide for the collection of the amount'subscribed, by taxation, the mode of collection, &e., if the subscription should be made.

There- is no limitation as to the time when, or the number of times, the voters might be called upon to decide the question of subscription. We cannot recognize any restriction as to the latter, in this respect, without adding to the statute • what it does not contain. Our duty is to execute the law, not to make it. Such an interpolation would involve the “ judge-made law ” which Bentham so earnestly denounces. If authority be needed. in support of our construction of the clause, it will be found in The Society, &c. v. New London, 29 Conn. 174.

The present Constitution of the State of Mississippi, ratified Dec. 1, 1869, declares: —

“ Sect. 14.

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Bluebook (online)
99 U.S. 214, 25 L. Ed. 410, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supervisors-v-galbraith-scotus-1879.