Town of Aroma v. Auditor of State

15 F. 843, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2088
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 2, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 15 F. 843 (Town of Aroma v. Auditor of State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Aroma v. Auditor of State, 15 F. 843, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2088 (N.D. Ill. 1883).

Opinion

Drummond, J.

This is a bill filed .by the town to declare certain bonds which were issued in favor of the Kankakee & Indiana Bail-road Company, in 1870, void, on the ground that the election authorized to be held under the act of April 19,1869, was not called by the [844]*844proper authorities, in this: that it was called by the clerk of the town ■instead of the clerk of the county, and because the bonds were signed by the supervisor of the town instead of by the supervisor of the county. Another objection was made that the bonds were issued •after the constitution of 1870 took effect. This last objection cannot be maintained if the bonds in other respects are valid, because the law under which the subscription was made, was passed and the vote taken before the constitution took effect; and the right was reserved to1 the town in the constitution to execute bonds which had been previously authorized under existing laws by a vote of any municipal corporation. The principal objection seems to be that the bonds were signed by the supervisor of the town instead of the county clerk, as it is claimed they should have been. The town clerk called the election, and it is not controverted but that at an election of the town of Aroma- a majority of all the legal voters of the town voting at the election were in favor of the subscription.

. Section 16 of the act of 1869 declared that any incorporated town, or any township, under the township organization system, along the route of said road, might subscribe to the capital stock of the company. Section 17 declares: “If it shall appear that a majority of all the legal voters of such town, township, or village voting at such election have voted for subscription, it shall be the duty of the supervisor- of such town, 6r the chief executive officer of such incorporated town1, and the county clerk, for and in behalf of such township or village, to subscribe to the capital stock of said railroad company.” The section further provides that he shall execute to the railroad company bonds which shall be signed “by such chief executive officer, supervisor, or county clerk, and attested by the town clerk, where there is one.”

There does not appear in these sections to be observed throughout the distinction which is claimed to exist between an incorporated town—that is to say, one incorporated independent of the law as to township organization—and a town incorporated under that law; because it will be observed, from the language already quoted from section 17, that it speaks of the supervisor of the town, and the chief executive officer of an incorporated town, and of the county clerk for and in behalf of the township. The corporate name of a town, under the law of township organization, is the name of the town as a town and not as a township, (chapter 139, § 38, itev. St.,) and the only legal distinction between the two is where a town is incorporated under a general law or by.special statute, or where one is incor[845]*845porated under the statute relating to township organization. In each instance they are called towns. The bonds in this case, issued by tbe town oí Aroma, were signed by the town clerk and by the supervisor of the town, and recited that they were issued by virtue of the law of April 19, 1869, and that a special election was held in the town on April 28, 1870, at which election a majority of the legal voters participating at the same voted for the subscription, and that the special election was, by the proper authority, then and there duly declared carried for subscription; and that all the other requirements of the law in relation to such special election were duly complied with.

It is admitted that the defends,nts are bona ficle holders for value of certain bonds, issued as stated; and it is further admitted that, under special laws of the state applicable to such case, taxes were levied for several years upon the property of the town to pay the interest on the bonds—one year’s interest having been paid by the county authorities and the other year’s by the state authorities. And the question in the ease is whether the bonds in the hands of the defendants, under the facts stated, are valid as against the town, and whether it is competent for the town to have them declared void on account of the objections made.

It is insisted that the county clerk should have subscribed the bonds, instead of, the supervisor of the town of Aroma, because section 17 declares that the county clerk, for and in behalf of such township or village, is to subscribe for the capital stock, and he shall execute the bonds to the railroad company; but then the language which precedes, that is, that shall he the duty of the supervisor of such town, or the chief executive officer of such incorporated town. Now, the corporation that was created under the law was not the township of Aroma, but it was the town of Aroma, and the language of the statute in respect to the supervisor of such town was quite as applicable to the supervisor of Aroma, as when it speaks of the county clerk, for and in behalf of such township; and it will ho seen that in the same clause the supervisor of the town and the chief executive officer of the incorporated town are both named; and therefore the supervisor of the town can have no meaning unless it is applicable to a town created under the statute relating to township organization.

There is another view which may be taken of the principal question involved in this case, and that is whether the word “town,” in the statute, means a township at all; and, vice versa, whether a township does not necessarily mean a territory according to the govern[846]*846ment survey. The statute relating to township organization (chapter 139, § 6, Bev. St.) declares: “After a majority of the legal voters of a county have decided in favor of township organization, that the commissioners appointed shall proceed to divide such counties into towns, making them conform to the townships according to the government surveys; and it would seem not to be an unreasonable inference, from the language of the sixteenth and seventeenth sections of the statute already referred to, that the law intended to authorize townships, which had not been formed into towns under the statute, to subscribe for the capital stock of the railroad company. The sixteenth section speaks of an incorporated town and a township as being authorized to subscribe for the capital stock of the company. The seventeenth section speaks of towns, townships, and villages, and it seems to me there is great force in the position, even admitting that it is somewhat difficult to reconcile the various parts of the two sections, that the word, “town” refers to a town created out of a township—a corporation under the statute; and, if that be so, then there can be no objection either to the signatures of the bonds or to the subscription to the stock of the railroad company or to the giving of notices of election.

It must be borne in mind that the parties sought to be prevented from enforcing their claims upon the bonds in this case have purchased and hold them in good faith for value, by virtue of the law under which they were issued, and the facts recited in the bonds. The plaintiff seeks to avoid liability upon the bonds on the ground that they are not/enforceable in law and under the facts of the case.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. 843, 1883 U.S. App. LEXIS 2088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-aroma-v-auditor-of-state-ilnd-1883.