*246 By the Court,
E. Darwin Smith, J.This is an action in equity. The complaint invokes the equitable powers of this court to restrain by a perpetual injunction the imposition of a tax which will be a lien upon the plaintiffs' lands and a cloud upon their title thereto. An injunction is the peculiar process of a court of equity, and it can only issue where a party to an action is entitled to equitable relief. Section 219 of the code provides that “when it shall appear by the complaint that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded, and such relief or any part thereof consists in restraining the commission or continuance of some act, the commission or continuance of which during the litigation would produce injury to the plaintiff, or when during the litigation it shall appear that the defendant is doing, or threatens, or is about to do or procure some act to be done in violation of the plaintiff's rights respecting the subject of the action, and tending to render the judgment ineffectual, a temporary injunction may be granted to stay such act." The first inquiry that meets us in the examination of the case is whether the plaintiffs make out a case where they would be entitled to equitable relief; for the relief intended by this section of the. code, means such relief, such as pertains to a court of equity, and is exclusively given by such courts. The plaintiffs do not question the validity of the resolutions passed by the board of supervisors on the 3d of August, and on the 2d day of September, set ont in their complaint; nor do they deny the legality of the proceedings of the special town meeting held in the town of Groveland on the 23d of September, also mentioned in the complaint; and if they did, it is very clear that we can not in this suit review those proceedings. It is well settled, and has been ever since the decision in the court for the correction of errors in the case of The Mayor &c. of Brooklyn v. Meserole, (26 Wend. 132,) that a court of equity has no such jurisdiction. Chancellor Kent, in Mogers v. Smedly, (6 John. Ch. R. 31,) said, “I *247can not find by any statute or precedent or practice, that it belongs to the jurisdiction of chancery, as a court of equity, to review or control the determination of the supervisors, but that the review and correction of all errors, mistakes and abuses in the exercise of the powers of subordinate public jurisdictions, and in the official acts of public officers, belongs to the supreme court, and has always been a matter of legal and not of equitable . cognizance.” The same doctrine has been repeatedly asserted, since, in Wiggin v. The Mayor of New York, (9 Paige, 16, 388,) Heywood v. The City of Buffalo, (4 Kernan, 534,) and in Susquehannah Bank v. The Supervisors of Broome Co. (25 N. Y. Rep. 314.)
But the case of Heywood v. The City of Buffalo, which was a very carefully considered case, and the last in the court of appeals where the question was distinctly raised, makes three exceptions to the general rule as follows : “First, where the proceedings in .the subordinate tribunal will necessarily lead to a multiplicity of actions. Second, where they lead to the commission of irreparable injury to the freehold. Third, where the claim of the adverse party to the land is valid upon the face of the instrument, or the proceedings sought to be set aside, and extrinsic facts are necessary to be proved to establish the invalidity or illegality.” The plaintiffs in this complaint and in the argument of their counsel present two of the above mentioned grounds of jurisdiction, the first and the third. Actions to prevent litigation and a multiplicity of suits are not ordinarily entertained till the plaintiff has established his right at law, and is nevertheless in danger of further suits by parties who controvert such right, or where the parties who controvert his right at law are so numerous as to render an issue under the directions of the court indispensable to embrace all the parties concerned, and to save a multiplicity of suits. (Eldridge v. Hill, 2 John. Ch. 281.)
In some cases the courts of equity having acquired jurisdiction upon other grounds, have retained it for the purpose of relief, to prevent a multiplicity of suits. (1 Story Eg. 64, and *248Fonblanque’s Eq. B. 1, chapter 1.) The plaintiffs here were not subject to any peril of litigation from adverse parties. Ho person has sued them, or threatened to do so, in respect to the tax in question ; and if the tax were levied and collected, a single action commenced by either of them would settle the controversy, so far as we can see.
This action, therefore, can not be sustained upon the ground that it will prevent a multiplicity of suits. The plaintiffs have no grievance to complain of on this head, and none which calls for any preventive remedy from a court of equity. If the proceedings to levy and impose the taxes in question are illegal and invalid upon the face of the record, a single action at the suit of the people upon common law certiorari, after the proceedings of the supervisors are completed and consummated, to lay and levy such tax, would undoubtedly bring up the whole proceedings for review, when they could be reversed and set aside or quashed, and the plaintiffs could also easily defend themselves in a suit at law against them, and they would constitute no apparent cloud upon their title.
The other ground for the equitable interference of this court suggested is, that the proceedings to impose such tax are, or appear to be, fair and valid upon their face, and that extrinsic facts are necessary to be proved in order to establish the invalidity of the bonds issued to the supervisor of Grove-land, which can not be brought before the court on writ of certiorari, to wit, the proceedings of the board of enrollment set out and detailed in the same complaint. It is true that a common law certiorari only reviews the record; but it is quite a question in many cases, what constitutes the record. There has been much contrariety of opinion on the question, what is to be deemed embraced within the record, and returned as part of it in these cases.
I apprehend that as the certiorari goes to review a judicial act—a consummated judicial decision—a proper return to such writ will bring up as part of the record, whatever entered *249into, or was necessarily passed upon, in the decision of the question sought to he reviewed. In Mullins v. The People, (24 N. Y. Rep. 399,) this question was discussed by Judge Selden, and the court held that in the case of a summary conviction the evidence must he returned, (See also the People v. Goodwin, 1 Seld. 568.) But assuming that the plaintiffs are right upon this question, and that upon certiorari the proceedings upon the enrollment can not he brought before the court, I will consider the question whether these proceedings as they appear before us, present any matter for equitable relief to the plaintiffs within the exceptions to the rule, as stated by Judge Johnson in Haywood v. The City of Buffalo, (supra.)
Assuming that the resolutions of the hoard of supervisors of the 3d of August and 3d of September, and the proceedings of the special town meeting of G-roveland, were valid, and I think there can be no doubt of their validity, then the supervisor of Groveland was duly empowered to receive from the county treasurer the bonds of the county, such bonds, or the proceeds thereof, to be used in paying bounties to volunteers to fill the quota of said town, unless the intervention of the draft on the 16th of September rendered such use or appropriation of said bonds, or the proceeds thereof, unlawful, or, in other words, had filled the quota of said town so that no volunteers were thereafter legally called for, or could be.required from said town. This is the argument and claim of the plaintiffs and their counsel.
The 22d section of the act of 1864, (ch. 8, p. 25 of Session Laws,) expressly authorized the board of supervisors, at any meeting of said board duly called, to adopt resolutions to provide for raising money upon the credit of their respective counties for the use of said county, or upon the credit of any city or town thereof for the sole use of said city or town; or to impose a tax upon the taxable property of their respective counties, for the use of said county, or upon any town or city for the purpose of paying volunteers into the military or *250naval service of the United States during the war, &c. The money to be raised under this act was to be expended in paying bounties to volunteers. It could not be lawfully used for any other purpose, except as provided in said act, in furnishing temporary relief to the families of volunteers, and paying the incidental expenses of such volunteering and of raising such moneys. ■
The supervisor of the town of Groveland, in his affidavit, states that soon after the special town meeting held in that town, he commenced recruiting for .volunteers to fill the quota of said town; that he recruited twenty-eight men, and one was credited said town from an excess on the former quota; that he received the bonds of the county from the treasurer, pursuant .to the resolutions of the board of the 3d-of August and 2d of September; that he paid all the proceeds of such bonds, $23,350, in filling the quota of said town, and that no 'part or portion of said bonds, or the proceeds thereof, was used for any other purpose, except in the payment of, or in procuring money for the payment of volunteers to fill said quota. That the twenty-eight men recruited by him were duly mustered into the service of the United States as soldiers and volunteers, and each and every one of them was received and credited upon the quota of the said town of Groveland as a volunteer, and received the bounty paid by the United States government to volunteers, as he is informed and believes, and that no one of said twenty-eight men was mustered as a substitute for any person.
I do not see why this is not a complete compliance with the statute, and the resolutions of the board of supervisors and of the town meeting of Groveland. The supervisor has, according to his statement, faithfully performed his duty, and faithfully disbursed the public money according to the express provisions of the law; and I can not see why the bonds he received and used for this purpose, in the manner stated by him, were not properly received, lawfully negotiated, and the proceeds honestly applied. But it is said that *251while this is apparently so, yet that these moneys were really expended to procure substitutes for the men drafted on the 16th of September to fill the quota of said town, and that after. such draft volunteers could not be lawfully received in discharge of such drafted men, except as substitutes, and that the money received from these bonds could not be lawfully paid for substitutes. The supervisor .says that not one of the twenty-eight men recruited by him was received or mustered as a substitute for any other person;. that no portion of the bonds or money received from them was used to” procure substitutes. While this is or may be so, it is impossible not to see that the volunteers recruited by him did serve the purpose, as a whole, of supplying the place of the twenty-eight drafted men from said town, and saved any of such drafted men from the necessity of going into the military service of the country. The supervisor means, undoubtedly, that not one of the twenty-eight men was recruited, received or mustered into service specifically for any other particular man, or for any one individual of the drafted men. But I have no doubt -that the spirit and intent of the statute, and of the resolutions of the board of supervisors and of the town meetings of Qroveland, was entirely fulfilled and complied with in the manner in which the supervisor procured volunteers to fill the quota of said town. Call the twenty-eight recruits volunteers or substitutes for drafted men at large, and the law is not violated, and the resolutions aforesaid are fully carried out and executed according to their true intent and spirit. The town of Groveland has had its quota filled without taking a single drafted man from the town. This was the object which the town really had in view in its resolution, and desired to secure. This was wÉat the resolution of the board of supervisors and the act of the legislature in question were passed to accomplish. The purpose of the legislature and the supervisors, and of the inhabitants of drove-land, so far as pertains to the action of their town, was to secure for the military service of the country soldiers who *252should freely enlist and voluntarily enter the army of the United States, instead of being compelled to resort to a compulsory draft. This act and all the acts referred to were passed, and all the resolutions and acts in the execution of said statute were in furtherance of this policy, and of these purposes. I can not see why a man who freely enlists in the place of another, and becomes his substitute of his own free will and accord, is not a volunteer within the spirit and intent of the act of the legislature, as much as any other man who enlists under any other. circumstances. The draft is used by the government because men are required, but it obviously prefers volunteers to drafted men, and the draft serves to stimulate volunteering.
I can not see why this is not entirely proper. A substitute, I think, is a volunteer according to the spirit and intent of the statute, and I can not see how it can be held otherwise. The town of Groveland and the county has had the benefit of this doctrine in the practice of the government, and has no reason to complain of any injustice in this particular ; and I think the law has in no respect been violated in the manner in which the town was relieved from the duty to send twenty-eight of its citizens against their will into the military service of the country. If I am right in this view, the extrinsic fact arising out of this enrollment and the questions connected with it present no basis for the equitable interference of this court, or basis of jurisdiction in this action, within the rule stated in Haywood v. The City of Buffalo.
But the plaintiffs present another ground for equitable relief in this suit. They claim that the proceedings of the town of Groveland, and of the other towns of the county of Livingston, under the resolutions of the 3d of August and 2d of September, create the right on the part of the several towns to be taxed only for the amount of the bonds issued to the supervisors of the respective towns, and allege that the board of supervisors are proceeding to treat all such bonds as *253a county charge, and to impose and levy upon the taxable property of the county at large a tax sufficient to pay the same as they mature, and have already, by a vote of the board, imposed and assessed about the sum of $200,000 on the taxable property of said county, which will impose an increased tax on the said town of Q-roveland of about $16,000, over and above the $23,350. for which the town would be liable if the bonds issued to the supervisor of said town should be held valid and separately chargeable.
It is claimed that these facts or, some of them, are essential to present the questions upon a certiorari, and would be dehors the record. Upon a certiorari now directed to the supervisors, they would be required to return the assessment roll if it is complete, and the warrant annexed thereto, together with the resolutions of the 3d of August, the 2d of September, and of the 30th of Eovember; and all other resolutions and proceedings of said board, showing jurisdiction to impose said tax upon the county at large. But I have some doubt whether a writ of certiorari to the board of supervisors would bring up any of the proceedings of the towns respectively, had under the resolutions of the 3d of August and 2d of September. These proceedings would not appear on the face of the record of the board of supervisors, as in their determination to impose a tax upon the county at large, for all the bonds issued under these resolutions, the proceedings and actions of the respective towns of said county under said resolutions are practically ignored. In this view I do not see how we can avoid passing upon the question whether the board of supervisors are empowered or not to impose a tax upon the county at large for said bonds, as a county charge.
Section 22 of the act of 1864, empowers the board of supervisors of each county to provide for raising money to pay bounties to volunteers in two ways : One upon the credit of the county, and the other upon the credit of the town. They could raise money by borrowing on the credit of the county or of the respective towns, or by levying or imposing a tax *254•upon the taxable property of their respective counties, or upon the towns or cities of their counties for such purpose. The board of supervisors were entrusted with the whole subject of declaring the manner and mode of raising such moneys in their discretion.
The resolution of the board of supervisors, of the 3d of August, provides for the issue of county bonds to each supervisor who might call for the same, to pay a bounty of $300 to each recruit that should be mustered into the service of the United States to the credit of their respective towns, for the term of three years, and not exceeding $200 to each recruit mustered for one year, and $25 premium or expense money for each recruit furnished for one year. This I think is a provision to issue these bonds upon the credit of the county, and the bonds issued under it are a county charge. The money is to be paid to recruits credited to the respective towns, but it is not borrowed or advanced on the credit of the towns. The money paid is raised on these bonds for the county; when raised it was county money. The respective towns can not, I think, be lawfully charged for such money, or taxed for it individually. The resolution did not provide for the creation of town debts, or for the issue of town bonds.
The supervisors, in form and in legal effect, provided in and by such resolutions to raise money upon the credit of their county for the use of said county. They did not provide under the act “to raise money upon the credit of the towns of this county or of any towns thereof.” They propose to raise money and allow the respective towns to draw an equal amount thereof pro rata to pay bounties to volunteers who should be recruited in the respective towns, or for such towns, and be received on its quota in lieu of drafted men as volunteers into the military service of the country. There are not in this resolution any apt or appopriate terms, or words, or phraseology adapted to create a town debt or raise money on the credit of the respective towns of said county. I entirely concur, on this point, with the views expressed in *255the opinion of my brother J. C. Smith, in his opinion upon the application to dissolve the injunction issued in the case of the town of Ossian, arising under the act and resolution in this same county,(a) that the bonds authorized and issued under the resolution in question, are county bonds issued on the credit of the county solely and are, as such, binding on the whole county.
*256The resolution- of the 3d of September does not militate against this view, but to my mind strengthens it. That resolution allowed the town to increase the bounty to $1000. This treated the towns all alike. It left them at liberty to pay bounties to a common amount of $1000 and no more. If the supervisors had contemplated the creation of town *257debts, why restrain the towns in the amount they should respectively pay for the bounties P This resolution implies upon its face that the towns are to draw from a common fund, the funds of the county, to pay the bounties, and therefore, they are to be treated equally, and each limited to a given sum for the amount, so to be drawn or received from the treasurer. *258I am very clear in the opinion that no town debt was created under their resolution for any of the bonds issued to the respective supervisors of said county. The bonds being issued under the authority of the hoard' of supervisors upon the credit of the county, are valid bonds of the county, and it is the right and duty of the board of supervisors of that county *259to provide accordingly for their payment as legitimate public debts of the county. It is urged that as the towns are each sub-military districts from which respectively the quota recruits was called, or. in or from which the draft was to be made, the money raised by these bonds could not legally he raised from the county at large, because the money can not *260be claimed or termed raised for “the use of the county,” since no volunteers or recruits are called from the county as such. The legislature has settled this question.
It treats in the act the counties as they are, distinct political organizations of the state, and authorizes the supervisors thereof to provide to pay bounties for volunteers from the limits of such counties. It has thus declared, in legal effect, that money raised by any county under the authority of the board of supervisors of such county to pay bounties to volunteers received and mustered into the service of the government from any town of such county, is money raised and applied to the use of such county.
If these views are correct, no ground for the interference of this court arises from the fact that the board of supervisors propose to tax the county at large for these bonds issued under their authority. But this action can not be sustained, for other reasons. The plaintiffs have no common interest in the subject in controversy, to entitle them to join in the action. They are freeholders and taxpayers of Groveland. A tax would be a lien upon their respective lands, but not upon any common ¡iroperty owned by them. Parties so situated can not join in a suit in equity. (Bouton v. The City of Brooklyn, 15 Barb. 375.) But the plaintiffs, if otherwise entitled to maintain the action, could have no effectual relief *261in this suit. The action is against the individual supervisors, not against the board of supervisors. When a county is to be sued, the action must be against the board of supervisors and not against the individual members. (10 Wend. 383. 19 id. 102. 5 Denio, 517. 9 How. 316.)
[Monroe General Term, December 23, 1864.The plaintiffs ask a perpetual injunction. Such injunction would only stay the defendants, not their successors in the next board of supervisors, or bind the county. The injunction I think should be dissolved with costs.
J. G. Smith, Welles and X Darwin Smith, Justices.]
The case referred to is the followiug:
James Faulkner and others vs. Chauncey Metcalf, Treasurer of the county of Livingston.
Motion to vacate an injunction order, granted by the county judge of Livingston, restraining the defendant from issuing to the supervisor of the town of Ossian, in that county, certain bonds of said county for the purpose of paying bounties to volunteers under the late call of the president of the United States for 500,000 men.
The papers presented on the motion, consisting of the complaint which is verified, and affidavits on each side, establish«the following facts: The board of supervisors of Livingston county, at a special meeting held on the 3d day of August, 1864, adopted the following resolution :
“Whereas the president of the United States did, on the 18th of July, 1864, call for 500,000 volunteers; therefore, resolved, that the treasurer of the county of Livingston be authorized to issue the bonds of said county, bearing annual interest, to each supervisor who may call for the same, and borrow money on such bonds for such supervisors as may call for money, to pay a bounty, not exceeding §300, to each recruit that shall be mustered into the service of the United States, to the credit of their respective towns for the term of three years ; and not exceeding §200 to each recruit mustered for one year under said call; and §25 premium, or expense money, for each recruit furnished for one or three years.”
At another special meeting, held on the 2d of September, 1864, the said board adopted the following resolution:
“ Resolved, That each town in the county of Livingston be authorized to increase its bounty to a sum not sxceeding §1000, and that the treasurer of this county be authorized to issue county bonds as each supervisor may call for them, subject to the same regulations as prescribed by the resolution of this board passed August 3, 1864.”
„ At a special meeting of the electors of the town of Ossian, held on the 22d of August, 1864, resolutions were passed by a majority of the electors present and voting, authorizing said town (1.) to pay a bounty of §300 for recruits for one year, in addition to the bounties therefor authorized by the board of supervisors, the money to be borrowed on town bonds; *256(2.) to pay all bounties to any person furnishing an accepted substitute credited on the quota of the town; (3.) to pay said bounties to each drafted man entering the service; and (4.) authorizing the supervisor to use $100 extra bounty, if necessary, to fill the quota of the town; the money to he raised in the same manner as the money to pay the $300 town bounty.
At another special town meeting of the electors of said town, held on the 14th of September, 1864, it was voted by a majority of 27 votes out of 133, that no money should be raised upon the credit of the town for the purposes aforesaid.
At a subsequent special meeting of the electors of said town, held on the 26th of September, 1864, the following resolution was adopted by a vote of 113 to 75:
“ Resolved, That the town of Ossian increase its bounty for volunteers to fill its quota of thirty under the call of July 18, 1864, for 500,000 men, not exceeding $900 for each recruit; and that the same sum paid to recruits he paid to persons volunteering as substitutes, or to the person procuring the same, provided that such substitute is counted on the quota of the town, and that the bonds for the same he issued payable in three yearly installments, commencing from the first of February next, first installment payable on the first of February next.” ’’
James O. Smith, J. The evidence before me is somewhat conflicting in respect to what took place at the meeting of the 26th of September, hut I consider the fact satisfactorily established, that the sense of the meeting was fairly and legally taken and declared upon the question whether the last resolution above transcribed should be adopted, and that the result of the vote was as above stated.
The plaintiffs allege in their complaint that they are taxpayers in the town of Ossian; that the defendant is the treasurer of the county of Livingston; and that the number of men required to be furnished by the town of Ossian under the call for volunteers is thirty.
They also allege in the complaint—and this is the gist of their action—r that the proceedings of the said several special town meetings are illegal and invalid, and do not authorize the county treasurer to issue the bonds of the county to the supervisor of said town; hut that, nevertheless, said supevisor is about to call upon the treasurer to deliver to him the bonds of said *257county to the amount of $900 for each man necessary to be furnished by said town, and the supervisor intends, when the bonds are delivered to him, to raise money thereon to pay bounties to volunteers or drafted men applying upon the quota of said town, “ making [such is the language of the complaint] the amount so paid a tax upon the property of said town.”
The injunction restrains the defendant from issuing to the supervisor of Ossian bonds of the county to a greater amount than nine thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; thus recognizing the right of the treasurer to issue to such supervisor, and of the latter to receive and use, in payment of bounties, county bonds to the amount of three hundred and twenty-five dollars for each man of the quota of said town, in pursuance of the resolution of the board of supervisors, adopted in August, but denying the right to issue or receive bonds for the payment of the increased bounties provided for by the resolution passed by the board in September.
I have examined the case thus presented, with the care due to the importance of the questions and interests involved in it, and I am of opinion that it does not justify the interference of a court of equity if that injunction should be dissolved. I will state briefly the reasons which lead me to this conclusion.
The plaintiffs, as taxpayers of the town of Ossian, ask the court to prevent the issuing of the .bonds in question to the supervisor of that town, for .the reason that if they shall be thus issued, and issued as proposed by such supervisor, a debt, illegal in reality but apparently legal, will thereby be created against said town, which the taxpayers thereof will be liable to pay.
The groundwork of this claim, as has been already stated, is that the proceedings of the electors of said town at the several special town meetings are illegal and invalid. In my judgment, the proceedings of those meetings are not material to the validity of the bonds, or the right of the defendant to issue them, or of the supervisor of Ossian to receive them.
Assuming, for the purpose of the argument, the invalidity of the action of ■ the several town meetings, it is difficult to perceive how the issuing of the county bonds to the supervisor of the town, in pursuance of the resolution of the board of supervisors, can create any actual or apparent liability against the town. The resolutions of the board of supervisors, authorizing the treasurer to issue said bonds, were adopted in pursuance of the provisions of section 22, chapter 8 of the laws of 1864, (Sess. Zaws, 1864, p. 24.) It will be *258seen by referring to that section that it authorizes the boards of supervisors of the several counties in this state to adopt resolutions to provide for raising money for the purpose of paying bounties to volunteers, and for certain other purposes therein specified, either (1.) by loan upon the credit or tax' upon the property of their respective counties, or (2.) by a loan upon the credit or tax upon the property of any city or town thereof. These two modes of procedure are separate and distinct each from the other. The hoard may raise money in the first mode by their own independent action; in the second mode their action is insufficient, without the concurrent vote of the town or city whose credit is pledged or property taxed.
Again, money raised in the first mode can only he devoted to the use of the county; money raised in the second mode must be appropriated to the sole use of the city or town upon whose credit or property it is raised. The board of supervisors of Livingston expressly provided, by each of the resolutions in question, that the moneys thereby voted should be raised by the issuing of county bonds, that is, upon the credit of the county. No other mode was provided. They did not propose a tax upon the several towns, or the issuing of town bonds. The resolution increasing the bounty to one thousand dollars, and providing for raising it upon the credit of the county, obviated all necessity for action by any town for the purpose of raising money upon its own credit, unless it proposed to pay more than one thousand dollars bounty to each man.
The conclusion is unavoidable, that as the board had power independently of town action, to fix the amount of bounties for the whole quota of the county, and to provide for raising the entire sum on the credit of the county, and as they fully and properly exercised that power by adopting the resolutions in question, it is not only the right but the duty of the treasurer to issue and deliver to the supervisor of Ossian the amount of bonds in controversy, as directed by the resolutions. No charge will he created thereby against the town, and the plaintiffs, as taxpayers of that town, have no cause of complaint.
In coming to this conclusion I have not overlooked the provisions of the resolution of September 2, authorizing each town in the county “ to increase its bounty to a sum not exceeding $1000;” nor have I failed to give attention to the opinion of .the learned judge who granted the injunction, to the effect that this clause 11 contemplated the action provided by the statute, and *259requires a vote of the town that the sum to be raised shall be a charge upon the property of the town.” The judge expressed serious doubt as to the correctness of this view, and evidently adopted it with reluctance.
Looking at the language of the two resolutions—and by their language alone can their meaning he judicially ascertained—I can not doubt that the only intention legally perceptible on the face of the resolutions is that which I have already stated, to wit, that the entire amount of bounty money, not exceeding one thousand dollars a man, should he raised on the credit of the county, and that it was not contemplated that the towns should take any action, except to indicate what sum, not exceeding that amount, they would respectively require to fill their quota. Even that action was not essential to the validity of the bonds; hut if it were, the resolution adopted by the electors of Ossian, at the special town meeting on the 26th of September, was unquestionably sufficient for that purpose.
It is not material, in this view of the case, to consider whether the resolution last referred to did or did not amount to a vote that the money to pay the increased bounties should be raised upon the credit or by a tax upon the property of the town. If it be conceded, as claimed by the plaintifis, that the electors merely voted that the bounty for volunteers credited to that town should not exceed nine hundred dollars, and did not vote to make it a town charge, that fact is a very clear indication that they understood the last resolution of the hoard to provide for raising the whole amount of bounty money on the credit of the county. That such was their understanding of the resolution seems to he further evinced by the fact that, after its adoption by the board, the electors voted that no bounty money should be raised on the credit of the town, although before its adoption they had voted to raise a bounty on the credit of the town, in addition to the county bounty provided for by the resolution of the 3d of August. It is also manifest, in this view of the case, that the proceedings of the special town meeting of September 26 are not open to the objection made by the plaintiffs, that the power of the electors over the subject matter of those proceedings had been exhausted at a previous meeting. They then, for the first time, took the action contemplated by the resolution of the hoard of September 2.
The views above expressed, dispose of the whole case. It may he well, however, to notice a point raised by the allegation in the complaint, that the supervisor of Ossian intends, with the money to he raised on the bonds, “ to *260pay bounties to volunteers or draftedxaea applying on the quota of said town.” It is enough to say that the bonds can not rightfully be used, except for the purpose authorized by the statute and the resolutions of the board; but for the accomplishment of that purpose the treasurer must be allowed to issue them in pursuance of the terms of the resolution. The court can not restrain the issuing of the bonds in the mode prescribed by the proper authorities upon a mere apprehension that the public officer who is designated to receive them will misapply their avails.
As the case is thus decided on its merits, it is unnecessary to consider the various questions of practice and pleading that were discussed on the argument.
The injunction is dissolved with ten dollars costs of the motion.
[Ontario Special Term, October 11,1864.]