Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/144/173/
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 08:22:01+00:00

Document:
Bonds were issued by the City of Brenham, in Texas, in July, 1879, payable to bearer, to the amount of $15,000, under the assumed authority of an Act of Texas, passed in 1873, incorporating the city and granting its council authority to borrow, for general purposes, not exceeding $15,000 on the credit of the city. Held that the city had no authority to issue negotiable bonds, and that therefore even a bona fide holder of them could not recover against the city on them or their coupons.
Power in a municipal corporation to borrow money not being nugatory although unaccompanied by the power to issue negotiable bonds therefor, it is easy for the legislature to confer upon the municipality the power to issue such bonds, and under the well settled rule that any doubt as to the existence of such power ought to be determined against its existence, it ought not to be held to exist in the present case.
The cases on this subject reviewed, and Ropers v. Burlington, 3 Wall. 654, and Mitchell v. Burlington, 4 Wall. 270, held to be overruled.
ordered which was had March 17. The case is stated in the opinion.
"State of Texas City of Brenham"
"Bonds for general purposes, $15,000"
from date hereof. This bond is authorized by an ordinance of the City of Brenham approved June 7th, A.D. 1879. In witness whereof the Mayor and Secretary of the City of Brenham hereunto set their hands and affix the seal of the City of Brenham this 31st day of July, A.D. 1879."
"[L.S.] M. P. KERR, Mayor"
"C. H. CARLISLE, City Secretary"
The original petition of the plaintiff alleged that the bonds and coupons were issued, executed, sold, and delivered and put in circulation under authority of the ordinance referred to.
authorized the issuing of the bonds payable twenty years after the date thereof, and to be redeemable at the option of the defendant at any time after five years from their date; that § 4 of article 11 of the constitution provided that no municipal corporation should become a subscriber to the capital stock of any private corporation or association, or make any appropriation or donation to the same, or in any wise loan its credit; that $3,000 of the $15,000 of the bonds were for the benefit of the fire department of the city, and the remaining $12,000 were in aid of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railroad Company, in providing for the purchase of the right of way over the streets of the city and the purchase of depot ground, to secure the construction of said railroad through the city; that $12,000 of the bonds were sold by the city, $5,000 to one Mensing, and $7,000 to two other persons, and Mensing also became the owner of those $7,000 of bonds, and he and the other two purchasers bought the bonds with actual knowledge of the purpose for which they were issued, as well as record notice of such illegal purpose, as disclosed by the public records and minutes of the city council, and that the plaintiff, if it became the owner of the bonds and coupons, purchased the coupons after their maturity, and with knowledge of all the facts attending their issue, well knowing that they were issued to raise money to enable the defendant to purchase the said right of way and depot ground for the said railroad company.
Afterwards the defendant put in the amended answer, amending its former demurrers and answer but not varying the material allegations of fact contained in its former answer.
purchasers of them before maturity, having paid a valuable consideration therefor, and that the defendant was estopped by the fact that it paid interest on the bonds without objection for three years after they were issued, and in 1884 published a statement of its financial condition, in which it included said $15,000 of bonds as part of its legal liabilities, all of which was made known to the plaintiff before it became the owner of the bonds.
The defendant then filed a supplemental answer demurring to the supplemental petition, and specially excepting to parts of it and raising an issue of fact as to its allegations.
The plea in abatement or to the jurisdiction of the court was tried by a jury, which found for the plaintiff, and afterwards the issues of fact on the pleadings were tried by a jury, which found a verdict for the plaintiff for $5,510.10, and the court entered a judgment overruling the general and special demurrers and exceptions of the defendant, and the general demurrer and exceptions of the plaintiff, and the special exceptions and demurrers of the defendant to the plaintiff's supplemental petition, and a judgment for the plaintiff was entered for $5,510.10, with interest and cost. To review this judgment the defendant has brought a writ of error.
On the 4th February, 1873, an act was passed by the Legislature of Texas, (Special Laws of Texas of 1873, c. 2, p. 2), incorporating the City of Brenham. By article 3, § 2, of that act (p. 14), it is provided as follows: "Sec. 2. That the city council shall have the power and authority to borrow for general purposes not exceeding ($15,000) fifteen thousand dollars on the credit of said city;" also by article 7, § 1, (p. 23), as follows: "Sec. 1. Bonds of the corporation of the City of Brenham shall not be subject to tax under this act."
At the date of the incorporation of the city and of the passage of the ordinance in question, the city had a population of over 4,000 and less than 10,000 inhabitants.
the city council of the city, and assessed against Dwyer, including as a part thereof one-eighth of one percent to pay interest and provide a sinking fund on the bonds of the city, the bonds so referred to being the identical bonds which are involved in this suit. That case went to the Supreme Court of Texas, and is reported as Dwyer v. Hackworth, 57 Tex. 245.
Various points are taken by the defendant as assignments of error, but we consider it necessary to discuss only one of them, the decision of which will dispose of the case.
The court charged the jury, among other things, 35 F. 185, that the power in the city to borrow money carried with it the authority to issue the bonds, and that the defendant had capacity to issue the bonds in question as commercial paper and bind itself to pay them and the coupons. The defendant, by its demurrer to the plaintiff's petition, stated as ground of demurrer that it did not appear from the petition that the defendant was authorized by the Constitution and laws of Texas to issue the bonds and coupons. The court overruled such demurrer, and by a bill of exceptions it appears that the defendant excepted to such ruling. The defendant demurred also to the plaintiff's supplemental petition on the ground that that petition failed to show any authority in the defendant to issue the bonds and coupons. This demurrer was overruled, and it appears by a bill of exceptions that the defendant excepted to the ruling. It also appears by a bill of exceptions that the defendant to excepted to the charge that the power of the city to borrow money carried with it authority to issue the bonds, and that the city had the capacity to issue the bonds as commercial paper, the ground of the exception being stated to be that under the Constitution of Texas, the expense of carrying out the general governmental purposes of the defendant was to be defrayed by the levying of a tax, and not by issuing bonds, and that the bonds issued were not authorized to be clothed with the incidents of commercial paper.
The principal contention of the part of the defendant is that it was without authority to issue the bonds, and that they were void for all purposes and in the hands of all persons.
This point is presented with reference to the charter of 1873, considered apart from the provisions of the constitution of 1876, and also with reference to the effect which the constitution had upon the power claimed under the charter.
"SEC. 3. No county, city, or other municipal corporation shall hereafter become a subscriber to the capital of any private corporation or association, or make any appropriation or donation to the same, or in anywise loan its credit, but this shall not be construed to in any way affect any obligation heretofore undertaken pursuant to law."
"SEC. 4. Cities and towns having a population of ten thousand inhabitants or less may be chartered alone by general law. They may levy, assess, and collect an annual tax to defray the current expenses of their local government, but such tax shall never exceed for anyone year one-fourth of one percent, and shall be collectible only in current money. And all license and occupation tax levied, and all fines, forfeitures, penalties, and other dues accruing to cities and towns, shall be collectible only in current money."
"SEC. 5. Cities having more than ten thousand inhabitants may have their charters granted or amended by special act of the legislature, and may levy, assess, and collect such taxes as may be authorized by law, but no tax for any purpose shall ever be lawful for any one year which shall exceed two and one-half percent of the taxable property of such city, and no debt shall ever be created by any city unless at the same time provision be made to assess and collect annually a sufficient sum to pay the interest thereon and create a sinking fund of at least two percent thereon."
and shall when levied specify in the act of levying the purpose therefor, and such taxes may be paid in the coupons, bonds, or other indebtedness for the payment of which such tax may have been levied."
"SEC. 7. All counties and cities bordering on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico are hereby authorized, upon a vote of two-thirds of the tax payers therein, to be ascertained as may be provided by law, to levy and collect such tax for construction of sea-walls, breakwaters, or sanitary purposes as may be authorized by law, and may create a debt for such works and issue bonds in evidence thereof. But no debt for any purpose shall ever be incurred in any manner by any city or county unless provision is made at the time of creating the same for levying and collecting a sufficient tax to pay the interest thereon and provide at least two percent as a sinking fund, and the condemnation of the right of way for the erection of such works shall be fully provided for."
the city of the same price, it thus receiving only $11,400 for $12,000 of the bonds, and suffering a discount on them of $600. The city thus agreed to pay $12,000, and interest thereon, for $11,400 borrowed. This shows the evil working of the issue of bonds for more than the amount of money borrowed.
It appears by the record that the depot grounds in, and the right of way through, the City of Brenham were bought for the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railroad Company with money realized from the sale of bonds issued under the ordinance of June 7, 1879, and that $3,000 of such bonds were used by the city for fire department purposes.
The power to borrow the $11,400 would not have been nugatory unaccompanied by the power to issue negotiable bonds therefor. Merrill v. Monticello, 138 U. S. 673, 138 U. S. 687; Williams v. Davidson, 43 Tex. 1, 33-34; City of Cleburne v. Railroad Company, 66 Tex. 461; 1 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 4th ed. § 89, and notes; § 91, note 2; § 126, note 1; §§ 507, 507a.
The confining of the power in the present case to a borrowing of money for general purposes on the credit of the city limits it to the power to borrow money for ordinary governmental purposes, such as are generally carried out with revenues derived from taxation, and the presumption is that the grant of the power was intended to confer the right to borrow money in anticipation of the receipt of revenue taxes, and not to plunge the municipal corporation into a debt on which interest must be paid at the rate of ten percentum per annum, semi-annually, for at least ten years. It is easy for the legislature to confer upon a municipality, when it is constitutional to do so, the power to issue negotiable bonds, and under the well settled rule that any doubt as to the existence of such power ought to be determined against its existence, it ought not to be held to exist in the present case.
A review of the cases on this subject in this Court will be useful.
"Common experience shows that the issuing of bonds by a municipal corporation as material aid in the construction of a railroad is merely a customary and convenient mode of borrowing money to accomplish the object, and it cannot make any difference, so far as respects the present question, whether the bonds, as issued by the defendants, were sold in the market by their officers or were first delivered to the company and were by their agents sold for the same purpose."
Chief Justice Chase and Justices Grier, Miller, and FIELD dissented. JUSTICE FIELD delivered a dissenting opinion, in which his three associates concurred, and which stated, as to the authority of the city to issue the bonds, that there was no such authority, either in the charter of the city or in any other legislation of the state; that the authority conferred was to borrow money; that no money was borrowed, but the bonds of the city were loaned, and that "borrowing money" and "loaning credit" were not convertible terms.
In Mitchell v. Burlington, 4 Wall. 270, the case of Rogers v. Burlington, supra, was affirmed.
remaining, it was held that the trustees or representative officers of a parish, county, or other local jurisdiction, invested with the usual powers of administration in specific matters and the powers of levying taxes to defray the necessary expenditures of the jurisdiction, have no implied authority to issue negotiable securities, payable in future, of such a character as to be unimpeachable in the hands of bona fide holders, for the purpose of raising money or funding a previous indebtedness. In the opinion of the Court, delivered by Mr. Justice Bradley, it is stated that the police jury of the parish of Tensas, Louisiana, which issued the negotiable bonds in question in that case, had no express authority to issue them; that the power could not be implied from the ordinary powers of local administration and police which were conferred upon the boards and trustees of political districts; that it was one thing for county and parish trustees to have the power to incur obligations for work actually done in behalf of the county or parish, and to give proper vouchers therefor, and a totally different thing to have the power of issuing unimpeachable paper obligations, which might be multiplied to an indefinite extent, and that, although the authority for such bodies to issue negotiable paper might be implied in some cases from other and express powers granted, those implications should not be extended beyond the fair inferences to be gathered from the circumstances of each case.
party cited as authority the case of Rogers v. Burlington, 3 Wall. 654.
In Concord v. Robinson, 121 U. S. 165, it was held that a grant to a municipal corporation of power to appropriate moneys in aid of the construction of a railroad, accompanied by a provision directing the levy and collection of taxes to meet such appropriation and prescribing no other mode of payment, did not authorize the issuing of negotiable bonds in payment of such appropriation. The opinion of this Court was delivered by MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, and the case of Claiborne County v. Brooks, 111 U. S. 400, was cited and approved.
In Kelley v. Milan, 127 U. S. 139, and Norton v. Dyersburg, 127 U. S. 160, it was held that the power granted to a municipal corporation to become a stockholder in a railroad company did not carry with it the power to issue negotiable bonds in payment of the subscription unless the latter power was expressly or by reasonable implication conferred by statute. In the opinion in the case of Norton v. Dyersburg, the case of Claiborne County v. Brooks, 111 U. S. 400, was cited with approval.
In Young v. Clarendon Township, 132 U. S. 340, it was held to be settled law that a municipality has no power to issue its bond in aid of a railroad, except by legislative permission, and in the opinion of the Court, delivered by MR. JUSTICE LAMAR, the cases of Claiborne County v. Brooks and of Kelley v. Milan were cited and approved.
"The inability of municipal corporations to issue negotiable paper for their indebtedness, however incurred, unless authority for that purpose is expressly given or necessarily implied for the execution of other express powers, has been affirmed in repeated decisions of this Court,"
Claiborne County v. Brooks, Kelley v. Milan, and Young v. Clarendon Township were cited with approval.
"It is admitted that the power to borrow money or to incur indebtedness carries with it the power to issue the usual evidences of indebtedness by the corporation to the lender or other creditor. Such evidences may be in the form of promissory notes, warrants, and, perhaps, most generally, in that of a bond. But there is a marked legal difference between the power to give a note to a lender for the amount of money borrowed, or to a creditor for the amount due, and the power to issue for sale, in open market, a bond, as a commercial security, with immunity, in the hands of a bona fide holder for value, from equitable defenses. The plaintiff in error contends that there is no legal or substantial difference between the two; that the issuing and disposal of bonds in market, though in common parlance, and sometimes in legislative enactment, called a sale, is not so in fact, and that the so-called purchaser who takes the bond and advances his money for it is actually a lender, as much so as a person who takes a bond payable to him in his own name."
"It does not follow that because the Town of Monticello had the right to contract a loan, it had therefore the right to issue negotiable bonds and put them on the market as evidences of such loan. To borrow money and to give a bond or obligation therefor which may circulate in the market as a negotiable security, freed from any equities that may be set up by the maker of it, are, in their nature and in their legal effect, essentially different transactions. In the present case, all that can be contended for is that the town had the power to contract a loan, under certain specified restrictions and limitations. Nowhere in the statute is there any express power given to issue negotiable bonds as evidence of such loan. Nor can such power be implied, because the existence of it is not necessary to carry out any of the purposes of the municipality. It is true that there is a considerable number of cases, many of which are cited in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error, which hold a contrary doctrine. But the view taken by this Court in the cases above cited and others seems to us more in keeping with the well recognized and settled principles of the law of municipal corporations."
We therefore must regard the cases of Rogers v. Burlington and Mitchell v. Burlington as overruled, in the particular referred to, by later cases in this Court. See 1 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 4th ed., §§ 507, 507a.
of $15,000." This expression is urged by the plaintiff as recognizing the lawfulness of the issue of the bonds, but the court, while reversing the judgment below, said that it could not enjoin the collection of the taxes on the ground of the invalidity of the bonds without making the holders of those bonds parties to the suit, citing Board v. Railway Co., 46 Tex. 316. There was therefore no adjudication in that case as to the validity of the bonds, and the remark of the court that the city borrowed money by selling its bonds to the amount of $15,000 is of no force on the question of the validity of the bonds. Lewis v City of Shreveport, 108 U. S. 282, 108 U. S. 287.
It is also to be remarked that the ordinance of June 7, 1879, provided that the city should have the right to redeem the bonds "at any time after five years from date," while each bond on its face states that it is redeemable by the city "after the expiration of ten years from date hereof." The officers of the city had no power to depart from the terms of the ordinance by varying the time limited for redemption.
We see nothing in the provisions of the Constitution of Texas of 1876, before cited, to aid the power of the city to issue these negotiable bonds.
We cannot regard the provision in the charter of the city that bonds of the corporation of the city "shall not be subject to tax under this act" as recognizing the validity of the bonds in question. Whatever that provision may mean, it cannot include bonds unlawfully issued.
As there was no authority to issue the bonds, even a bona fide holder of them cannot have a right to recover upon them or their coupons. Marsh v. Fulton County, 10 Wall. 676; East Oakland v. Skinner, 94 U. S. 255; Buchanan v. Litchfield, 102 U. S. 278; Hayes v. Holly Springs, 114 U. S. 120; Daviess County v. Dickinson, 117 U. S. 657; Hopper v. Covington, 118 U. S. 148, 118 U. S. 151; Merrill v. Monticello, 138 U. S. 673, 138 U. S. 681-682.
Reversed, and the case remanded to the circuit court with a direction to sustain the defendant's general demurrer and special demurrer and exceptions to the plaintiff's original petition and to sustain the special exceptions and demurrers of the defendant to the plaintiff's supplemental petition and to enter judgment thereon in favor of the defendant and dismissing both of said petitions, with a general judgment for the defendant.
"An ordinance to provide for the issue and sale of fifteen thousand dollars"
"in coupon bonds of the city, to borrow money for general purposes"
"Be it ordained by the City Council of the City of Brenham:"
"SEC. 1. That the mayor be, and is hereby, authorized and empowered to have printed coupon bonds of the City of Brenham to the amount of fifteen thousand dollars."
"SEC. 2. Said bonds shall be three (3) of the denomination of one thousand dollars, ($1,000.00), fourteen(14) of the denomination of five hundred ($500.00) dollars, twenty-five (25) of the denomination of one hundred ($100.00) dollars, and fifty of the denomination of fifty ($50.00) dollars."
"They shall be made payable to bearer twenty years after date at the office of the Treasurer of the City of Brenham, with interest from date until paid at the rate of ten percent per annum, payable semi-annually, on the first days of September and March at the office of the Treasurer of the City of Brenham, but the city shall have the right to redeem said bonds at any time after five years from date."
"SEC. 3. Said bonds shall be dated and interest begin to run on the first day of _______, A.D. 18__, provided that should any of said bonds be sold at a subsequent date the amount of interest then due shall be endorsed as a credit on the coupons first due."
"SEC. 4. Said bonds shall be signed by the mayor and countersigned by the city clerk, and the seal of the city shall be affixed, and they shall be numbered and registered as series 2, No. ___, giving the number of the bond issued, commencing with No. 1."
"SEC. 5. Coupons shall be attached to each of said bonds for each semi-annual installment of interest, which said coupon shall have printed thereto the signature of the mayor and the city clerk, and shall be received for general ad valorem taxes of the city."
"SEC. 6. Said bonds shall be negotiated and sold by the mayor and the finance committee of the city as the same may be required for general purposes, but in no case shall they be sold at a greater discount than five percent, and the proceeds thereof shall be placed in the treasury of the city to the credit of the general fund."
"SEC. 7. That there be, and is hereby, appropriated out of the general ad valorem tax of the city one-eighth of one percent, or so much thereof as may be necessary, on the assessed value of the taxable property of the city, as a special interest and sinking fund with which to pay the interest on said bonds and liquidate the same, and said fund shall be kept separate from the other funds of the city, and shall be used for no other purpose."
"SEC. 8. That this ordinance go into effect and have force from and after its passage."
"Approved June 7, 1879 M. P. KERR, Mayor"
"Attest: C. H. CARLISIE, Secretary"
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE BREWER and MR. JUSTICE BROWN, dissenting.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, MR. JUSTICE BROWN, and myself being unable to concur in the opinion just rendered, the grounds of our dissent will be stated.
The charter of the City of Brenham, granted in 1873, provided that "the city council shall have the power and authority to borrow, for general purposes, not exceeding fifteen thousand dollars, on the credit of said city;" also that the "bonds of the corporation of the City of Brenham shall not be subject to tax under this act." Special Laws of Texas, pp. 14, 23.
adjudications of this Court have in effect overruled those cases. We cannot give our assent to the doctrine announced in the present case. Nor, we submit with some confidence, is that doctrine sustained by any decision of this Court which has been cited.
"it may be said that the transaction, as between the company and the defendants, was, in form, a contract of lending; but as between the defendants and the persons who purchased the bonds in the market, it was undeniably a contract of borrowing money, and the same remark applies to the transaction in its practical and legal effect upon all subsequent holders of the securities who have since become such for value, and in the usual course of business."
"Here the authority conferred is to borrow money; yet no money was borrowed, but the bonds of the city were lent. 'Borrowing money' and 'lending credit' are not convertible terms. The two things which they indicate are essentially distinct and different."
in a separate dissenting opinion, called attention to the fact that the Supreme Court of Iowa had then recently held the bonds involved in that suit to be void upon the ground that the transaction "was a loan of credit, and not a borrowing of money." The principle announced in Rogers v. Burlington was applied in Mitchell v. Burlington, 4 Wall. 270.
The cases decided since Rogers v. Burlington which have been cited in the opinion of the Court as announcing the doctrine that an express power given to a municipal corporation to borrow money does not authorize the execution of negotiable instruments for the money so borrowed are Police Jury v. Britton, 15 Wall. 566, 82 U. S. 570-572; Claiborne County v. Brooks, 111 U. S. 400, 111 U. S. 406; Concord v. Robinson, 121 U. S. 165, 121 U. S. 167; Kelley v. Milan, 127 U. S. 139, 127 U. S. 150; Norton v. Dyersburg, 127 U. S. 160, 127 U. S. 175; Young v. Clarendon Township, 132 U. S. 340; Hill v. Memphis, 134 U. S. 198, 134 U. S. 203, and Merrill v. Monticello, 138 U. S. 673, 138 U. S. 686-687.
issue negotiable securities, payable in future, of such a character as to be unimpeachable in the hands of bona fide holders, for the purpose of raising money or funding a previous indebtedness."
"We do not mean to be understood that it requires in all cases express authority for such bodies to issue negotiable paper. The power has frequently been implied from other express powers granted. Thus it has been held that the power to borrow money implies the power to issue the ordinary securities for its repayment, whether in the form of notes or bonds payable in future."
It thus appears that Police Jury v. Britton distinctly declares that case not to be within the rule that an express power to borrow money carries with it authority to issue negotiable securities for the amount borrowed.
"Our opinion is that mere political bodies, constituted as counties are, for the purpose of local police and administration, and having the power of levying taxes to defray all public charges created, whether they are or are not formally invested with corporate capacity, have no power or authority to make and utter commercial paper of any kind unless such power is expressly conferred upon them by law or clearly implied from some other power expressly given, which cannot by fairly exercised without it,"
referring to the same clauses in the opinion in Police Jury v. Britton, above quoted, as embodying a distinct expression of the views or the Court.
"the grant to a municipal corporation of power to appropriate moneys in aid of the construction of a railroad, accompanied by a provision directing the levy and collection of taxes to meet such appropriation, and prescribing no other mode of payment,"
"a municipal corporation, in order to exercise the power of becoming a stockholder in a railroad corporation, must have such power expressly conferred upon it by a grant from the legislature, and that even the power to subscribe for such stock does not carry with it the power to issue negotiable bonds in payment of the subscription unless the power to issue such bonds is expressly or by reasonable implication conferred by statute;"
"the mere authority given to a municipality to subscribe for stock in a railroad company did not carry with it the implied power to issue bonds therefor, especially where, as in the present case, special provisions were made for paying the subscription by taxation;"
"the inability of municipal corporations to issue negotiable paper for their indebtedness, however incurred, unless authority for that purpose is expressly given or necessarily implied for the execution of other express powers, has been approved in repeated decisions of this Court."
It thus appears that in no one of the above cases decided since Rogers v. Burlington was there any question as to negotiable securities' being issued under an express power to borrow money, and that some of them concede that such a power carries with it authority to give a negotiable paper for money borrowed.
"But this only brings us back to the question does the implied power to borrow money or contract a loan carry with it a further implication of power to issue funding negotiable bonds for that amount and sell them in open market?"
"It is admitted that the power to borrow money or to incur indebtedness carries with it the power to issue the usual evidences of indebtedness by the corporation to the lender or other creditor. Such evidences may be in the form of promissory notes, warrants, and, perhaps, most generally, in that of a bond."
And it is further shown by the fact that the opinion, referring to the clause in Police Jury v. Britton, above quoted, which states that authority in a municipal corporation to issue negotiable securities may be implied from an express power to borrow money, states that it has no application to the case then before the Court, in which the attempt was made to imply authority to issue negotiable bonds simply from an implied power to borrow money.
"was not advanced directly to the city, but, upon its assurance of repayment, to the railroad company is not a departure even from the letter of the law, much less from its meaning; nor does the fact that the money was advanced partly on the credit of the railroad company diminish the presumed reliance of the purchaser upon that of the city, with which it was joined. It is difficult to conceive of language more comprehensive than that employed to embrace every form of security in which the faith and credit of the city might be embodied, and that in such cases it is not important to the character of the transaction that the money is obtained in the first instance by the railroad company, upon the credit of the city, was directly ruled in Rogers v. Burlington, 3 Wall. 654, and affirmed in Town of Venice v. Murdock, 92 U. S. 494."
Of course, if the City of Savannah, having the power "to obtain money on loan," could guaranty negotiable bonds issued by the railroad company for the purpose of raising money to be contributed to works of internal improvement in which the city was interested, the city could have made the loan directly upon its own negotiable bonds.
"that a public or municipal corporation possesses the implied power to borrow money for its ordinary purposes, and as incidental thereto the power to issue commercial securities -- that is, paper which cuts defenses when it is in the hands of a holder for value acquired before it is due."
"Express power to borrow money, perhaps in all cases but especially if conferred to effect objects for which large or unusual sums are required, as for example subscriptions to aid railways and other public improvements, will ordinarily be taken, if there be nothing in the legislation to negative the inference, to include the power (the same as if conferred upon a corporation organized for pecuniary profit) to issue negotiable paper with all the incidents of negotiability."
1 Dillon's Mun.Corp. § 125, 4th ed. It is eminently just to apply that rule in the present case, because the act giving the City of Brenham authority to borrow not exceeding $15,000 for general purposes expressly provided that its bonds should not be subject to tax under that act. Such a provision could have had reference only to negotiable bonds, which would be put upon the market for the purpose of raising money.
enormous. A declaration by this Court that such notes and bonds are void because of the absence of express legislative authority to execute negotiable instruments for the money borrowed will, we fear, produce incalculable mischief. Believing the doctrine announced by the Court to be unsound upon principle and authority, we do not feel at liberty to withhold an expression of our dissent from the opinion.

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