Walker v. State

12 S.C. 200
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 29, 1879
DocketCASE No. 760
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 S.C. 200 (Walker v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. State, 12 S.C. 200 (S.C. 1879).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

McIver, A. J.

For a proper understanding of the questions raised by this appeal, as well as to show how it is that these actions are brought against the state in one of her own tribunals, [264]*264it will be necessary to make a brief statement of the legislation which gave rise to the cases.

On the 8tb of June, 1877, (16 Stat. 318), the general assembly adopted a joint resolution, which, after reciting that “ great uncertainty” existed in the minds of the taxpayers as to the real amount of the valid indebtedness of the state, provided for the appointment of a commission, consisting of three members of the senate and four members of the house of representatives, whose duty, in general terms, it should be to investigate and report upon such indebtedness. This commission, which, for convenience, will be called, as it is usually designated, the bond commission, were, amongst other things, specially directed to inquire and report: First What was the entire amount of consolidated bonds and certificates of stock which had been issued under the provisions of an act entitled “ An act to reduce the volume of the public debt and provide for the payment of the same,” approved December 22d, 1873, (15 Stat 518), which act will be called throughout this opinion the consolidation act. Second. “Whether there is, in the state treasurer’s office, on file as vouchers, canceled bonds, coupons and certificates of stocks of the issues described, issued in accordance with law and authorized to be consolidated by the act above recited, to the amount required by said act.” These duties involved, therefore, the institution of four inquiries: First What was the entire amount of consolidation bonds and stocks issued? Second. Whether there were vouchers in the treasurer’s office in the shape of canceled bonds, coupons and certificates of stock for which the consolidation bonds and stocks were issued, to the amount required by’the terms of the consolidation act ? Third. Whether such vouchers — canceled bonds, coupons and certificates of stock — had been issued in accordance with law? Fourth. Whether such canceled bonds, <fec., were amongst those which were authorized to be consolidated by the terms of the consolidation act? For, it will be remembered, that the bonds, coupons and certificates of stock authorized to be consolidated are specifically mentioned in that act, while others are not mentioned at all; and others again, a very large proportion — nearly all, in fact — of the conversion bonds, are specially [265]*265excepted from the operation of the act, because they were issued “ without any authority of law.”

In due time the bond commission submitted an elaborate report, accompanied with various schedules — that called No. 6 being intended to represent the consolidation bonds and certificates “affected by vouchers which, in the judgment of the bond commission, were not issued in accordance with law and authorized to be consolidated under the act to reduce the volume of the public debt and provide for the payment of the same.” Thereupon the general assembly, without either affirming or disaffirming the conclusions of the bond commission, so far as the validity of the bonds and stocks mentioned in Schedule No. 6 were concerned, passed a “joint resolution providing a mode of ascertaining the debt of the state and of liquidating and settling the same.” -March 22d, 1878, 16 Stat. 669. That resolution, in its first section, provides for the establishment of a Court of Claims, which “ shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine any case or cases made up or brought to test the validity of any of the consolidated bonds, coupons and certificates of stock, or of any of the various classes of them, mentioned in the said report of the bond commission as resting on vouchers not issued in accordance with law and authorized to be consolidated by the act of the general assembly, approved December 22d, 1873, entitled ‘An act to reduce the volume of the public debt and provide for the payment of the same,’ and, also, as not issued in accordance with law, and further designated and described in Schedule 6 of said report. In Section 9 it is provided “ that the attorney-general and his said associates, with the consent of the creditors of this state, or so many of them as shall be necessary, may make up a case or cases to be heard and determined in said court, in which, if practicable, the state shall be defendant, to test the validity of the said consolidated bonds and coupons and certificates of stock mentioned in said Schedule 6, bringing before the court the various classes of vouchers which, it is alleged in the report of the said commission, impair the validity of the said consolidated bonds, coupons and certificates of stock, or any of them.” The tenth section directs “ that there shall be levied for the current fiscal year a tax sufficient to pay the coupons and interest orders [266]*266maturing on the outstanding consolidation bonds and certificates ■of stock during the said fiscal year.” The eleventh directs the payment of such interest on those consolidation bonds and certificates of stock mentioned in Schedule 5 as are subject to no valid •objection, and then Section 12 provides for the payment of the interest for that and the preceding fiscal year on the several classes of consolidation bonds and certificates of stock mentioned in Schedule 6, “whenever there shall be & final adjudication as to the validity of the several classes of bonds and certificates of stock in the manner hereinbefore 'provided, and none other” In pursuance of the provisions of this resolution, the cases which we are now called upon to determine, being actions on coupons of the various classes of bonds mentioned in said Schedule 6, were brought before the Court of Claims, and the majority of that court have rendered their judgment in favor of the state, from which these appeals have been, taken to this court, as provided for in the second Section of the said joint resolution.

The judgment of the Court of Claims is based upon a construction of the provisions of the joint resolution constituting it, by which they hold that their jurisdiction is limited to the inquiry, “ Were the vouchers — that is, the canceled bonds, coupons and certificates of stock — issued in accordance with law and authorized to be consolidated by the act of the general assembly, approved December 22d, 1873 ?” But they carefully avoid the inquiry, as not, in their judgment, within the scope of their jurisdiction, whether, assuming this to be so, the bonds and certificates of stock issued under the provisions of the consolidation act, are, nevertheless, valid or invalid; or, to use their language, whether “the consolidation bonds issued under the act of 1873 are valid or invalid in other respects.” It is very clear, from the grounds upon which that court base their conclusions, that they use the words “not in accordance with law,” not in the sense that there was no act of the general assembly authorizing the issue of the bonds in question, but that the various provisions of the acts authorizing their issue were not complied with, and for that reason they were not issued “ in accordance with law.” But, as we shall see, the real question in these cases is, whether there were any acts authorizing the issue, and that [267]*267whether the bonds were issued in accordance with the various provisions of sucb acts, is a question comparatively unimportant.

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

Related

Board of Trustees v. State
718 S.E.2d 210 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2011)
Re Gislason
19 N.W.2d 447 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 S.C. 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-state-sc-1879.