Mahomet v. Quackenbush/Opinion of the Court

Mahomet v. Quackenbush
Opinion of the Court by Morrison Waite
796692Mahomet v. Quackenbush — Opinion of the CourtMorrison Waite

United States Supreme Court

117 U.S. 508

Mahomet  v.  Quackenbush

 Argued: April 5, 1886. ---


The facts of this case are identical with those of Anderson v. Santa Anna, 116 U.S. 356, ante, 413, except that here the bonds were issued by one township on the line of the Danville, Urbana, Bloomington & Pekin Railroad, and there, by another. The bonds in the two cases are the same in form, and the statutory authority for their issue the same. All questions actually decided in the other case are concluded in this; but one point is made now that was not presented then, and it arises on these facts:

Artice 3, § 23, of the Illinois constitution of 1848, which was in force when the statutes on which the case depends were passed, contained this provision: 'And no private or local law which may be passed by the general assembly shall embrace more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title.' The act of 1867, under which the bonds were issued, was a private or local law, with the following title: 'An act to amend the articles of association of the Danville, Urbana, Bloomington & Pekin Railroad Company, and to extend the powers of, and confer a charter upon, the same.'

The parts of the act pertinent to the present inquiry are sections 1, 12, and 13. These are as follows:

'Section 1. Be it enacted by the people of the state of Illinois, represented in the general assembly, that the said corporation is hereby created a body politic and corporate under the name and style of the 'Danville, Urbana, Bloomington & Pekin Railroad Company,' etc.; and the said company is authorized and empowered to locate, construct, and complete a railroad, extending from the city of Pekin, in Tazewell county, Illinois, through, or as near as practicable, to the towns of Tremont, Mackinawtown, Concord, Bloomington, Leroy, Mount Pleasant, Mahomet, Champaign City, Urbana, and St. Joseph, to the east boundary of the state of Illinois,' etc.

'Sec. 12. To further aid in the construction of said road by said company, any incorporated town or township in counties acting under the township organization law, along the route of said road, may subscribe to the capital stock of said company in any sum not exceeding two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.

'Sec. 13. No such subscription shall be made until the question has been submitted to the legal voters of such incorporation, town, or township in which the subscription is proposed to be made; and the clerk of each of said towns or townships is hereby required, upon the presentation of a petition signed by at least ten citizens, who are legal voters and tax-payers of such town or township for which he is clerk, and in which petition the amount proposed to be subscribed shall be stated, to post up notices in at least three public places in each town or township; which notice shall be posted not less than thirty days before the day of holding of such election, notifying the legal voters of such town or township to meet at the usual place of holding elections in such town or township, or some other convenient place named in such notice, for the purpose of voting for or against such subscription: provided, that where elections may have already been held, and a majority of the legal voters of any township or incorporated town were in favor of a subscription to said railroad, then, and in that case, no other election need be had, and the amount so voted for shall be subscribed as in this act provided. And such elections are hereby declared to be legal and valid, as though this act had been in force at the time thereof, and all the provisions hereof had been complied with.'

The point now made is that the statute, so far as it undertakes to authorize municipalities to subscribe to the capital stock of the corporation, is unconstitutional, because it embraces two distinct subjects,-one the incorporation of the railroad company, and the other an enlargement of the corporate powers of municipal corporations,-the first of which alone is expressed in the title. This objection, it seems to us, is fully disposed of by the case of Supervisors of Schuyler Co. v. Rock Island & Alton R. Co., 25 Ill. 182, decided by the supreme court of Illinois in 1860. There the title was 'An act to incorporate the Rock Island & Alton Railroad Company,' and the act, besides incorporating the company, authorized counties to subscribe to the stock. As to this the court said, speaking through Chief Justice CATON: 'We think the title of this act sufficient to embrace the whole of the law, and that it is a compliance with the constitutional requirement. All the provisions of the act are appropriately designed to carry out the object of the corporation. If it was proper to authorize subscriptions to the stock, it was certainly proper to enable individuals or counties to subscribe and specify the terms and conditions on which they might subscribe, and the mode of making the subscription.'

In states where constitutional provisions like that now under consideration have been decided to be mandatory, and not directory only, it has generally been held that the requirement is satisfied if the law has but one general object, and that is clearly expressed in the title. It is enough if the body of the act is germane to the title. This is certainly the well-establed rule in Illinois, where, as was said by Mr. Justice BREESE, dissenting in O'Leary v. County of Cook, 28 Ill. 543, decided in 1862, the 'court has leaned rather in favor of the validity of private acts, when the subjects of the acts are multifarious.' In that case a provision in a law entitled 'An act to amend an act entitled 'An act to incorporate the Northwestern University," which prohibited 'the sale of spirituous liquors within four miles of the university, under a special penalty to be recovered by the county of Cook,' was held by a majority of the court not to be repugnant to this provision of the constitution; and it was said, (page 538:) 'The object of the charter was to create an institution for the education of young men, and it was competent for the legislature to embrace within it every thing which was designed to facilitate that object. Every provision which was intended to promote the well being of the institution, or its students, was within the proper subject-matter of the law.' As early as 1853 it was decided in Belleville, etc., R. Co. v. Gregory, 15 Ill. 29, that in 'An act to incorporate the Belleville & Illinoistown Railroad Company' authority could be given the company 'to extend and unite with any other railroad in this state.' So, too, in Firemen's Benev. Ass'n v. Lounsbury, 21 Ill. 511, it was held, in 1859, that, in a law entitled 'An act to incorporate the Firemen's Benevolent Association, and for other purposes,' it was competent to provide that the agents of all foreign insurance companies doing business in Chicago should pay the association two dollars on every one hundred dollars of premiums received by them during a year, the court simply remarking on this branch of the case, (page 575:) 'We think the sixth section germane to the objects of the bill, and embraced properly in the same subject, the whole of which is sufficiently expressed in the title.' The same general principle has been fully recognized and enforced in Neifing v. Town of Pontiac, 56 Ill. 172; People v. Wright, 70 Ill. 396; People v. Brislin, 80 Ill. 423, where it was said, (page 433:) 'This court has gone very far to uphold statutes supposed to be within this objection;' 'the body of the act in question is germane to the title of the bill.' Guild v. City of Chicago, 82 Ill. 475; Fuller v. People, 92 Ill. 185. This court also decided to the same effect in Jonesboro City v. Cairo & St. L. R. Co., 110 U.S. 199, S.C.. 4. Sup. Ct. Rep. 67, as to a similar provision in the Illinois constitution of 1870.

It is further insisted, however, that if this law is good, so far as the general authority to subscribe is concerned, it is bad to the extent that it seeks to give effect to elections which were unauthorized at the time they were held; and we are referred to the cases of Village of Lockport v. Gaylord, 61 Ill. 276, and Middleport v. AEtna Life Ins. Co., 82 Ill. 562, in support of this position. In Lockport v. Gaylord it was decided that a provision legalizing certain appropriations theretofore made by the president and trustees of the village, and certain orders drawn by the clerk, was not germane to the title of 'An act to amend the charter of the village of Lockport,' passed February 12, 1853; and in Middleport v. Insurance Co. that authority to issue bonds in liquidation of appropriations voted under a prior act was not germane to the title of 'An act to legalize certain aids heretofore voted and granted to aid in the construction' of a proposed railroad. The first of these cases was decided in 1871 and the last in 1876. In the present case, however, the provision relates only to the terms and conditions on which subscription to the stock of the railroad company might be made, which it was said, in Supervisors of Schuyler Co. v. Rock Island & A. R. Co., was germane to the general subject of a bill to incorporate a railroad company. It is nothing more nor less than a requirement of a vote of the people as authority for the subscription, with a proviso that if the vote had already been taken it need not be taken over again.

This, as it seems to us, comes within both the letter and spirit of the earlier adjudications, and that these have not been overthrown by the later cases. We are aware that in Welch v. Post, 99 Ill. 474, decided in 1881, the court said that, 'on the authority of Middleport v. AEtna Ins. Co.,' it was 'inclined to hold' that power could not be given to municipal corporations to subscribe to the stock of a railroad company in an act entitled substantially like that now under consideration; but as neither in this case, nor in that of Middleport v. Ins. Co., nor in that of Lockport v. Gaylord, was any reference whatever made to the earlier decisions, which seem to be so decidedly the other way, we do not feel ourselves called upon to depart from the long-settled practice in the state by what has yet been done towards making a change. In fact, in Fuller v. People, before cited, which was decided eight years after the Lickport case, and three years after that of Middleport, the following quotation is made with approval from Cooley, Const. Lim. (1st Ed.) 144, § 2: 'The general purpose of these provisions is accomplished when a law has but one general object, which is fairly indicated by its title. To require every end and means necessary or convenient for the accomplishment of this general object to be provided for by a separate act relating to that alone would not only be unreasonable, but would actually render legislation impossible.' And again, from Sun M. Ins. Co. v. Mayor, etc., 8 N. Y. 253: 'There must be but one subject, but the mode in which the subject is treated, or the reasons which influenced the legislation, could not and need not be stated in the title, according to the letter and spirit of the constitution.' In Montclair v. Ramsdell, 107 U.S. 147; S.C.. 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 391; Otoe Co. v. Baldwin, 111 U.S. 16; S.C.. 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 265; and Ackley School-dist. v. Hall, 113 U.S. 135; S.C.. 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 371,-we had occasion to consider the same general question, with the same result, in connection with similar provisions in the constitutions of New Jersey, Nebraska, and Iowa, respectively.

Finding nothing in this case to distinguish it from Anderson v. Santa Anna, the judgment is affirmed on that authority.

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This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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