(dissenting). — I regret that I am not able to agree with the majority of the court in the conclusions reached in this important ease. Failing in this, however, I do not feel at liberty to content myself with a mere dissent, without assigning any reasons therefor. I shall not attempt, however, to enter into any elaborate discussion of the questions involved. Waiving all questions growing out of the pleadings, I shall confine myself to a mere statement of my views as to the principal questions involved and decided. While this case was argued and submitted at the last term of the court, a conclusion was not reached by the majority until the meeting of the present term. In the preparation of the following dissenting opinion, therefore, I have been able to avail myself of a few hours only which could be spared from the current work of the term. I offer this as an apology for the somewhat desultory form in which my views are presented.
As I understand it, the doctrine held by a majority of the court may be stated substantially as follows: (1) Where it appears that the legislature of the territory has authorized the municipal authorities of a town or county to issue evidences of indebtedness on conditions prescribed in the act, there being no constitutional limitation, and the authorities have issued such evidences of debt, reciting on the face of such instruments all the facts constituting a compliance with the terms of the enabling act, then an innocent purchaser for value of such obligations is entitled to recover the full amount, without regard to the question as to whether any or all of the conditions imposed by the legislature have been complied with. (2) That the purchaser of such bonds has only to take them in the one hand, and the enabling act in the other, and, reading them side by side, if the former on their face appear to have been issued in conformity with the latter, he need go no further in his investigations. (3) That if the legislature should authorize the officers composing the municipal authorities of the county to issue evidences of debt on certain conditions prescribed, as, for example, in pursuance of an election held for that purpose, wherein it should appear that three fourths of the qualified voters had voted in favor of such issue, and such officers should afterward issue bonds purporting on their face that they were issued in pursuance of the act of the legislature, and in pursuance of an election held under and by virtue of said act wherein three fourths of the qualified voters had voted in favor of such issue, that such pretended bonds would be valid against the county in the hands of an innocent purchaser without notice, although, as a matter of fact, no such election had ever been held, and the said board of officers had never been authorized to issue such pretended bonds, and although the bonds had been issued without either the consent or knowledge of a single qualified voter or taxpayer of the county. (4) That, to constitute a dealer in municipal bonds an innocent purchaser without notice, he has nothing to do but to see that the recitals on the bond agree with the recitals in the enabling act; that he is not affected with any infirmity, no matter what the character or extent of the infirmity may be; that, if he finds that the officers of the municipality were authorized to act under any circumstances, he has a right to assume that they acted within the scope of their authority; and that no amount or extent of abuse of that authority will affect the validity of the securities in his hands. (5) That, while absolute want of authority may be pleaded as a defense in such cases, abuse of authority can not be relied upon, unless such abuse appears on the face of the pretended bond itself. (6) That a municipal bond issued in direct violation of the law is just as valid in the hands of an innocent holder- for value as a bond issued in pursuance of law, provided, always, that the fraudulent bond appears on its face to have been issued in pursuance of lawful authority. (7) That the purchaser of a municipal bond is not bound to take notice of the existence or nonexistence of any fact affecting the validity of the bond, unless such fact appears on the face of the bond or in the body of the enabling act, although such fact may exist in the form of a public record, accessible to the general public. (8) That an act of the legislature authorizing the issuance of bonds in the aggregate amount of five per cent of the taxable property of the county, provided three fourths of the qualified voters at an election held for that purpose vote in favor thereof will validate the issue of bonds aggregating in amount ten, fifty, or one hundred per cent of the taxable property, the only requirement being that the bond recite on its face that it is issued in pursuance of the act of the legislature. (9) That in such cases the purchaser is not bound to take notice of the fact that the bond belongs to a series, the aggregate of which implies a confiscation of every dollar of property belonging to the people of the county, although such fact might have been ascertained by an examination of the public records of the county. (10) That such a bond would be good in the hands of an innocent purchaser without notice of the “infirmity,” although as a matter of fact no such election had in fact been held, and although as a matter of fact it had been issued without the knowledge of a single taxpayer of the county. (11) In a suit on such fraudulent bond it is no defense to show that the purchaser thereof by proper diligence might have advised himself of its fraudulent character; that nothing short of actual notice can be shown.
I do not believe that these propositions are sound, although there are many decisions of the courts which seem to give color to them. These decisions have been collated in the able opinion concurred in by a majority of the court. Some of them, I admit, go to the full extent of supporting this doctrine; but those have been, in effect, overruled by the later and better considered cases. I shall not attempt an elaborate discussion of these questions, or to review all of the authorities cited by the majority of the court in , support of them. The leading case relied on to sustain this view is that of Knox Co. v. Aspinwall, 21 How. 544. This decision was rested upon two propositions, substantially as follows: (1) That if proper public officers, acting within the scope of their official power, issue evidences of debt, such securities are entitled to the weight of a conclusive presumption that the officers issuing them have acted in the discharge of their duty; and in the hands of an innocent purchaser for value such securities.are good against the county, although they may not have been issued with authority of law. (2) That if the legislature authorizes the board of the county or other municipal officers to issue evidences of debt on the occurring of a contingency, such as the casting of a popular vote therefor, and empowers such officers, or creates a board of officers, to determine the happening of such contingency or. the result of such election, then the decision of such board, unless attacked in a direct proceeding, is final and binding upon the public. “The purchaser of bonds,” say the court, “had a right to assume that the vote of the county which was made a precedent condition to the-grant of the power had been obtained from the fact of subscription. * * * The bonds on their face import a compliance with the law. * *' * The purchaser was not required to look further,” etc. This decision has never in terms been overruled, but until a comparatively recent period was followed as a precedent. I say that it has never in terms been overruled, but it has been worn away by the attrition of popular judicial discontent, until there remains now not a vestige of the first proposition. Let us see if this latter statement is not only substantially, but literally, correct. Suppose a board of rascally county commissioners should get together, and without any authority whatever issue county bonds, reciting merely on such bonds that they were issued by virtue of lawful authority, etc., there is not a respectable court anywhere that would hold that the county might not defend in a suit brought to collect such bonds, by showing that the commissioners were not authorized by law to issue such bonds; and yet that is precisely what the supreme court in the Aspinwall case said could not be done. I speak reverently, and with great respect, when I say that this case is an illustration of the rule that no man can rise above error, and of the danger of accepting any proposition literally as a precedent.. A long line of decisions follow this as a precedent. It was long the custom to refer to the Aspinwall as a well considered case, and yet it was left for Justice Miller, in his masterly dissenting opinion in the case of Humboldt Tp. v. Long et al., 92 U. S. 646, to bring prominently into notice for the first time the fact that Justice Nelson in the Aspinwall case supported his opinion by an erroneous conception of the doctrine laid down in the-case of Royal British. Bank v. Turquand, 6 El. & Bl. 327.
Speaking on this point, Justice Miller said: “The original case on which this ruling [that county bonds, though issued without authority of law, may still be collected] is based is" Knox Co. v. Aspinwall, 21 How. 539. It has, I admit', been frequently cited and followed in this court since then, but the reasoning on which it was founded has never been examined or defended until now (1875); it has simply been followed. The case of Town of Coloma v. Eaves, super, 484, decided a few days ago, is the first attempt to defend it on principle that has been made. How far that has been successful I will not undertake to say. Of one thing I feel very sure, that if the English judges who decided the case of Royal British Bank v. Turquand, on the authority of which Knox Co. v. Aspinwall was based, were here to-day, they would be filled with astonishment at this result of their decision. The bank in that case was not a corporation. It was a joint stock company in the nature of a partnership. The action was against the manager as such, and the question concerned his power to borrow mouey. This power depended, in this particular case, on a resolution of the company. The charter or deed of settlement gave the power, and when it was exercised the court held that the lender was not bound to examine the records of the company to see if thp resolution had been legally sufficient. That was a private partnership. Its papers and records were not open to public inspection. The manager and directors were not officers of the law, whose powers were defined by statute, nor was the existence of the condition on which the power depended to be ascertained by the inspection of public and official records, made and kept by officers of the law for that very purpose. In all these material circumstances, that case differed widely from those now before us.”
It occurs to me that much of the confusion and many of the contradictions that have grown out of the construction given to the power of municipal officers to bind the people by recitals on bonds issued by such officers have grown out of a failure to discriminate between those facts the existence of which must be ascertained by such officers and those facts the existence of which is, or may be, known to all men. When such officers are authorized to issue bonds on certain-conditions, as, for example, on the application of a given number of taxpayers, or on a certain result of an election, the power to determine when the condition exists, or the event has occurred, or the contingency has “happened,” must be lodged in some officer or board of officers; and the determination of such officers or board, unless attacked by a proper proceeding, must be accepted as conclusive evidence of such fact; it is a final determination of the matter properly submitted, and can not be questioned collaterally. A different rule controls, however, in the ascertainment of a preexistent or coexistent fact; a fact that exists independently of any action; a fact that does not depend upon a contingency; one that does not depend upon the “happening” of an event such as the result of an election. When, therefore, the act authorizing the issuance of bonds limits the amount issued to a certain per cent of the taxable property, it seems to me that the limitation is an element of the authority to act, and that a disregard of this limitation vitiates the action of the board. The reason given, why the recitals on the bond that the conditions necessary to its validity have been kept is conclusive of that fact, is that these conditions, or the result of these contingencies, or the happening of these events, are peculiarly within the knowledge of the party or parties authorized to make the recital. “The persons appointed to decide whether the necessary prerequisites to their issue had been completed have decided, and certified their decision. They have declared the contingency to have happened, on the occurrence of which the authority to issue the bonds was complete. Their recitals are such a decision, and beyond those a bona fide purchaser is not required to look for evidence of the existence of things in pais. He is bound to know the law conferring upon the municipality power to give the bonds on the happening of a contingency; but whether that has happened or not is a question of fact, the decision of which is by law confided to others, — to those most competent to decide it, — and which the purchaser is, in general, in no condition to decide for himself.” Town of Coloma v. Eaves, 92 U. S. 490.
But the amount of taxable property within a county is not “an event” or a “contingency.” It is an independent fact, the ascertainment of which is within the reach of every one. It is a fact disclosed by record, open to the inspection of all. In the ease under consideration, the appellant offered to show that the issue of bonds in controversy was in excess of the amount authorized by the act of the legislature, but he was not allowed to make that proof. Under the well recognized rule of pleading, this is an admission of the fact that the issue of the bonds was excessive. Various objections were made at the trial to the introduction of evidence to show that the issue of bonds was excessive. Everything in the shape of record was offered and rejected. The appellant then proposed to show by taxpayers themselves that the issue was excessive; so that it was not the character of the proof offered, but the character of the thing to be proven, that was objected to. The ruling of the court below, as appears by the record, was to the effect that the amount of taxable property in the county was an immaterial matter, and could not, therefore, be shown by any character of proof. It is said, however, that this is no longer an open question; that the supreme court of the United States has held that an overissue of bonds can not be shown by the county as a defense against recovery, unless such overissue is in violation of a constitutional limitation; and, as there is no such authority in this territory as a constitution (unless the enabling act may be termed a constitution), that, therefore, county and •municipal corporations are not subject to the control ■of any higher power in this regard. 'I admit the force ■of this contention. It is something more than ingenious ; it is plausible; but to my mind it is unsatisfactory. It is unsatisfactory, because it involves the ■corollary that a municipal corporation created by the legislature, drawing all its powers from that body, may do, not only what it is not authorized to do, but that which it was absolutely forbidden to do.
In view of the great reliance placed upon the ■ doctrine that the county is, by the action of the board of commissioners and the recital on its bonds, estopped from setting up the defense of overissue, it is interesting, if not instructive, to inquire how this doctrine found its way into our decisions. The first decision of the supreme court, so far as I can ascertain, which undertakes to give a reason why an overissue does not invalidate the bonds, is that of Humboldt Township v. Long et al., 92 U. S., and the reasoning is found at the bottom of page 645. Omitting the reasons given, the court cites Marcy v. Township Oswego, 637, of the same book, as authority for the rule. Now, if we turn to the case last cited, we shall find that the question of overissue was the only matter before the court. It was admitted that the bonds were issued in strict ■compliance with the act of the legislature, unless they were voted and issued in excess of the amount authorized by the act. It was shown that the recitals on the bonds were to the effect that they were issued in accordance with the act; that the bonds were registered, etc. Justice Steong, after reciting the facts in the case, said: “In view of these facts, and of the ■decisions heretofore made by this court, the first question certified to us can not be considered an open one. We have recently reviewed the subject in Town of Coloma v. Eaves, supra, page 484, and reassert what had been decided before, ’ ’ etc. Here it will be observed that the court refers to decisions “heretofore made by this court,” and particularly to the case of Town of Coloma v. Eaves, supra, 484. Turning, now, to the case last cited, as authority for this proposition, we find that the question of overissue was not even remotely involved. The only question involved was as to the validity of the election, which was attacked on the .ground of a want of legal and proper notice. The syllabus in that case is taken from the body of the opinion, ■and is in the exact words of Justice Steong, who delivered the opinion of the court. I shall presently give this syllabus in full, and that for the important consideration that it is a very carefully prepared statement of the rule as laid down by Justice Steong himself. On page 491 of the book, after reciting the rule laid down by Judge Dillon, and criticising it as a “very cautious statement of the doctrine,” he states the rule as follows: “Where the legislative authority has been given to a municipality or to its officers to subscribe for the stock of a railroad company, and to issue municipal bonds in payment, but only on some precedent condition, such as a popular vote favoring the subscription, and where it may be gathered from the legislative ■enactment that the officers of the municipality were invested with power to decide whether the condition precedent had been complied with, their recital that it has been made in the bonds issued by them, and held by a bona fide purchaser, is conclusive of the fact, and binding upon the municipality, for the recital is itself a decision of the fact by the appointed tribunal.”
Now, with great respect, I submit that this rule fails to sustain the doctrine that an overissue can not be shown as a defense. In the case under consideration the amount authorized to be issued was limited to five per cent of the taxable property. In what sense, “may it be gathered from the legislative enactment that the officers of the municipality were invested with the power to decide” as to the amount of taxable property in the county, so that their decision should become “conclusive of the fact, and binding upon the municipality?” In what possible sense is the amount of taxable property a “contingency” or an “event,” the “happening” of which is to be certified to, or a condition precedent “that has been complied with?” I submit, therefore, that this pernicious doctrine that, under authority of an act of the legislature authorizing them to issue bonds to the extent of five per cent of the taxable property of the county, the board of county commissioners may bind the county in an unlimited issue, — may bankrupt and ruin the county by an over-issue, — is, like the kindred doctrine laid down in the Aspinwall case, that the recital of the officers themselves that the bonds were issued in accordance with the law was binding upon the county in the absence of lawful authority, a parasite that has grown out of the misconstruction of the rule laid down in Town of Coloma v. Eaves, 92 U. S. 492, just as the Aspinwall case was the result of the misconstruction of the English case of Royal British Bank v. Turquand, 6 El. & Bl. 327.
The doctrine of estoppel by recitals had its origin and owes its existence to the consideration that the recitals are made by the parties who are by law vested with the means to determine, and the authority to announce, the performance of the condition or the happening of the contingency upon which the authority for the issuance of the bonds is made to depend, “and this is more emphatically true when the fact is peculiarly within the knowledge of the. persons to whom the power to issue the bonds has been conditionally granted.” Marcy v. Township Oswego, 92 U. S. 639. If an unlimited overissue will not in any event, except in the case of constitutional limitations, affect the validity of the transaction, then these county officers are invested with the power of confiscation, and this power is given by construction merely, — a construction drawn from the case of Marcy v. Oswego Township, which was itself a construction of a former decision, which rested the doctrine on a still earlier case, wherein the question did not arise.
I assert with great respect that this extraordinary doctrine that a board of county commissioners supposed to be the creatures of the law and servants of the people may, under authority of a law authorizing them to issue bonds to the amount of five per cent, bind the people to the payment of fifty per cent, has never been upheld by the supreme court, as a matter of first impression. I have already adverted to the doctrine that recitals, to be regarded as estoppels, should be confined strictly to the matters intrusted solely to the officers whose recitals are relied upon. In view of the extraordinary results reached by the attempted application of the doctrine of estoppel by recitals, the views of the supreme court as laid down in Northern Bank v. Porter Tp., 110 U. S. 614, et seq., are instructive. I quote: “It is, however, contended that by the settled doctrines of this court the township is estopped, by the recitals of the bonds in suit, to make its present defense. The bonds, upon their face, purport to have been issued ‘in pursuance of the provisions of the several acts of the general assembly of the state of Ohio, and of a vote of the qualified electors in said township of Porter, taken in pursuance thereof.’. These recitals, counsel argue, import a compliance, in all respects, with the law; and therefore the township will not be allowed, against á. bona fide holder for value, to say that the circumstances did not exist which authorized it to issue the bonds. It is not to be denied that there are general expressions in some former opinions which, apart from' their special facts, would seem to afford support to this proposition-in the general terms in which it is presented. But this court said in Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 399, and again in Carroll v. Lessee, 16 How. 287, that it was ‘a maxim not to be disregarded that general expressions in every opinion áre to be taken in connection with the case in which those expressions are used. If they go beyond the case, they may be respected, but ought not to control the judgment in a subsequent suit, when the very point is presented for decision.’1 ‘An examination of the cases in which those general expressions are found will show that the court has-never intended to adjudge that mere recitals by the-officers of a municipal corporation in bonds issued in aid of a railroad corporation preclude an inquiry, even-where the rights of a bona fide holder were involved, as to the existence of legislative authority to issue them.’ A reference to a few of the adjudged eases will serve to illustrate the rule which has controlled the cases involving the validity of municipal bonds. In Knox Co. v. Aspinwall, 21 How. 542, 62 U. S. XVI. 209, power was given to county commissioners to subscribe stock to be paid for by county bonds, in aid of' a railroad corporation, the power to be exercised if the electors, at an election duly called, should approve the subscription. It was adjudged that, as the power existed, and since the statute committed to the board of commissioners authority to decide whether the election was properly held, and whether the subscription was-approved by a majority of the electors, the recital in bonds executed by those commissioners, that they were-issued in pursuance of the statute giving the power,. estopped the county from alleging or proving, to the’ prejudice of a bona fide holder, that requisite notices of' the election had not been given. In Bissell v. Jeffersonville, 24 How. 299, the court found that there was power to issue the bonds, and that after they were issued and delivered to the railroad company it was too-late, as against a bona fide holder, to call in question' the determination of the facts which the law prescribed1 as the basis of the exercise of the power granted, and-which the city authorities were authorized and required1 to determine before bonds were issued. Probably the fullest statement of the settled doctrine of this court is' found in Coloma v. Eaves, 92 U. S. 491. In that case-' the authority to make the subscription was made by the statute to depend upon the result of the submission1 of the question to a popular vote, and its approval by1 a majority of the legal votes cast. But whether the statute in these particulars was complied with was left to the decision of certain persons who held official rela-' tions with the municipality in whose behalf the proposed subscription was to be made. It was in reference to such a case that the court said: ‘When legisla-1 tive authority has been given to a municipality or to1 its officers to subscribe to the stock of a railroad com-' pany, and to issue municipal bonds in payment, bub only on some precedent condition, such as a popular vote favoring the subscription, and where it may be gathered from the legislative enactment that the offi--' cers of the municipality were invested with power to' decide whether the condition precedent has been complied with, their recital that it has been made in the bonds issued by them, and held by a bona fide purchaser, is conclusive of the fact, and binding upon the municipality; for the recital is itself a decision of the fact by the appointed tribunal.’ This doctrine was reaffirmed in Buchanan v. Litchfield, 102 U. S. 290, and in other cases, and we perceive no just ground to doubt its correctness, or to regard it as now open to question in this court. But we are of opinion that the rule as thus stated does not support the position which counsel for plaintiff in error take in the present case. The adjudged cases, examined in the light of their special circumstances, show that the facts which a municipal corporation, issuing bonds in aid of the construction of a railroad, was not permitted, against a bona fide holder, to question, in face of a recital in the bonds of their existence, were those connected with or growing out of the discharge of the ordinary duties of such of its officers as were invested with authority to execute them, and which the statute conferring the power made it their duty to ascertain and determine before the bonds were issued; not merely for themselves, as the ground of their own action in issuing the bonds, but equally, as authentic and final evidence of their existence, for the information and action of all others dealing with them in reference to it.”
The majority of the court give great weight to what appears to be the bona fides of the several transactions out of. which this litigation has arisen. The appellee is represented as a bona fide purchaser without notice, etc., and the contention is that the bonds were issued in different series, so that it would be impossible for the purchaser to ascertain from the recital the amount issued, or the amount of taxable property of the county. And the further fact that these bonds were made payable to bearer is relied on to bring them within the rule applicable to ordinary commercial paper, to the extent that their possession implies the presence of all the conditions necessary to a recovery. This seemingly equitable view of the question is discussed in the case of Marsh v. Fulton Co., 10 Wall. 676. The facts in that case were substantially these: Under authority of the act of the legislature, the county had voted aid to the Mississippi & Wabash Railroad Company. The legislature afterward changed the charter of the company by dividing the road into three sections. Thereafter the board of supervisors, in pursuance of the power conferred upon the board by an election, proceeded to enter the subscription of stock on the books of the1 ‘Central Division of the Mississippi & Wabash Railroad Company,” and issued bonds payable to that company or bearer. Afterward, interest was paid on these bonds. County agents were appointed to attend at the meeting of stockholders, which agents voted for the officers of the company, and in various ways the county recognized the validity of the bonds. It would appear that if by any possibility the holder of a bond could acquire, by mere force of equity, a right to insist upon the payment of his bond, this case would afford an illustration of the rule. The legislature had authorized the county to issue the bonds; the line of road sought to be aided had been laid out; the road had been built; the bonds had been issued; the interest had been paid; county officers had been allowed to control in part the operations of the road. No other irregularity intervened, except that the road was divided into three divisions. In the case at bar the legislature had authorized the county to vote aid to any railroad, limiting the amount of aid to five per cent of the amount of taxable property. The bonds under consideration had been issued as the result of two elections held on the same day, or what was in reality one election, at which a proposition was agreed to extending county aid to a single railroad company. The manner of calling and holding this election, the division of the propositions so as to appear to keep within the limitations of the act, was a palpable evasion of the well known limitations imposed by the act, under which the county proposed to act, and the purchaser of the bonds' in question must have obtained them with a knowledge of this evasion. In the case, however, to which I have just referred, no such effort at evasion appears to have occurred, and yet the supreme court in the suit brought against the county on one of these bonds held that the plaintiff could not recover. The following is taken from the opinion of' the court: “But it is earnestly contended that the-plaintiff was an innocent purchaser of the bonds without notice of their invalidity. If such were the fact, we do not perceive how it could affect the liability of' the county of Fulton. This is not a case where the party executing the instruments possessed a general capacity,to contract, and where the instruments might, not for such reason be taken without special inquiry into their validity. It is a case where the power to contract néver existed, — where the instruments might, with equal authority, have been issued by any other-citizen of the county. It is a case, too, where the-holder was bound to look to the action of the officers-of the county, and ascertain whether the law hád been so far followed by them as to justify the issue of the-bonds. The authority to contract must exist before-any protection as an innocent purchaser can be claimed by the holder. This is the law, even as respects commercial paper, alleged to have been issued under a delegated authority, and is stated in the case of Floyd’s. Acceptances, ante. In speaking of notes and bills, issued or accepted by an agent, acting under a general or special power, the court says: ‘In each case the person dealing with the agent, knowing that he acts only by virtue of a delegated power, must, at his peril, see that the paper on which he relies comes within the-power under which the agent acts. And this applies to every person who takes the paper afterward; for it is to be kept in mind that the protection which commercial usage throws around negotiable paper can not be used to establish the authority by which it was originally issued.’ ”
It is insisted by the majority that great weight ought to be given to the presumption that the appellee was an innocént purchaser for value, without notice of any infirmity attending the issue of these bonds, and attention is directed to the fact that the bonds were issued in such series, and were so indefinite in their recitals, as to render it impossible for the purchaser upon inspection, to determine by such inspection that they were issued in violation of law. I am not able to agree with this conclusion. On the contrary, it appears to me that these very facts were suspicious circumstances that ought to have put the purchaser upon inquiry. The fact that two elections were held on the same day, at the same hour and the same place; that at these two elections were submitted two propositions, authorizing the issuance of two amounts of bonds to the same corporation, — is of itself a circumstance that ought to have put the purchaser upon inquiry. It has been repeatedly held that when an intended purchaser is put upon inquiry he must follow out that inquiry by all the means reasonably within his reach. He knew that these bonds were issued by public officers; that these officers were acting under a limited authority; he knew that they had no authority to bond the county beyond the sum of five per cent of the taxable property. He had access to the assessment rolls. He could have ascertained that the sum of the bonds proposed to be issued was largely in excess of the amount authorized; and this fact would have advised him of the fraudulent process by which the officers of the county sought to avoid the limitations imposed upon them by the legislature. In a long line of decisions sustaining the validity of illegally issued bonds, it was the avowed purpose of the court to maintain the public credit of municipalities, but, behind this bulwark erected by the supreme court for a purpose so admirable, the most flagrant schemes of public plunder sought shelter. The dishonest speculator in public securities had but to conspire with dishonest county officers to procure the issue of fraudulent county bonds, which should contain on their face the fatal “recital” that they were issued in pursuance of a certain statute, and the work of plunder, the gi'aeeless theft, was accomplished.
That.it may appear that this statement is correct, let the record speak. In the case of Comanche Co. v. Lewis, 133 U. S. 201, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 286, the county which it was sought to plunder was organized, as it was admitted of record, “solely for purposes of plunder, by a set of men intending to secure a de facto organization, and issue the bonds of said county, register and sell them to distant purchasers ignorant of the facts, and enrich the schemers, while plundering the future inhabitants and taxpayers of the counties; and upon the consummation of said scheme, in the spring or early summer of 1874, all of said schemers, together with those who were the said de facto officers of the said county, left said county, and never returned, and said county remained with said organization, totally abandoned, until in February, 1885, when said county was, upon memorial presented and census taken, organized as in cases of unorganized counties.” Here a large and uninhabited section of the state was, twelve years prior to its legal organization as a county, incumbered with a debt that its future' inhabitants must pay, fo.r the bonds were held to be valid. I can not but l’egard this decision as the greatest possible tribute paid by á great tribunal to the doctrine of stare decisis. The reasons and arguments adduced in support of the decision demand and receive our highest respect, because they emanate from that great tribunal, our supreme court, but I seriously doubt if any fairminded lawyer ever contemplated the result with entire satisfaction.
I shall conclude what I have to say on this branch of the ease by quotation from the dissenting opinion of Justice Miller in the case of Humboldt Tp. v. Long et al., already referred to: “The simplicity of the device by which this doctrine is upheld as to municipal bonds is worthy the admiration of all who wish to profit by the frauds of municipal officers. It is that, wherever a condition or limitation is imposed upon the power of those officers in issuing bonds, they are the sole and final judges of the extent of those powers. If they decide to issue them, the law presumes that the conditions on which their powers depended existed,, or that the limitation upon the exercise of the power has been complied with; and especially and particularly if they make a false recital of the fact on which the power depends in the paper they issue, this false recital has the effect of creating a power which had no existence without it.” With great deference, and with some hesitation, I have ventured the foregoing discussion of this question, and have indulged in comment upon the decisions of the supreme court of the United States. I am not to be reminded that the decisions of that court are binding upon this, nor that it would be a palpable violation of every element of good taste and proper decorum for a member of this court, or for the court itself, to question the authority of these decisions. Such is not my purpose. I propose to demonstrate, if I can, the proposition that the conclusion I have reached in the case under consideration is in harmony with the later decisions of the supreme court.
Before proceeding, however, I desire to advert briefly to another feature of this case. It has been sought to bind the county, not only by the recitals on the bond, but by an agreement entered into between the attorneys for the appellant and those of the appellee, and offered and received in evidence in the court below. Much importance has been attached to this agreement, which may be found on page 76 of the record. I can not accept the construction given to it by the majority of the court. It is an admission as to matters of fact made by the attorneys for the appellant. If at the time this admission was made it was intended to have the effect contended for by the appellee, and agreed to by a majority of the court, then it was a fraud practiced upon the people of this county by the attorneys for the appellant, and ought not to be allowed to stand. Under this pretended agreement, the appellee was allowed to take a judgment for a large amount, confessedly not due at the date of the institution of the suit. I shall not enter into a discussion of the question as to how far a client is bound by the admissions of his attorney. It seems to me that in this case a proper distinction has not been observed between the authority of an attorney representing a municipal corporation and one representing a private corporation or individual. In this as in other branches of this case the majority have not given due consideration to the fact that the only real parties interested are the complainant on the one side and the taxpayers on the other. The men who employed these attorneys who made these admissions of record were themselves but the agents of the real parties in interest. It is too clear for argument that an attorney employed by the officers of a municipal corporation to protect the rights of the taxpayers of such municipality has no authority to go into court, and confess judgment against his clients. The county commissioners themselves had no authority to do anything or to take any steps that would validate these bonds. Ordinarily the principal is bound by the acts of his agent, if such agent act within the scope of his authority; but it must be borne in mind that these attorneys were themselves but the agents of agents. They were the servants of the commissioners, who were in turn the ■servants of the public. '“It -is not, in our opinion, competent for the authorities of a town to agree that its void bonds shall be made valid by putting that agreement in the form of a judicial decree”’ Kelly v. Town of Milan, 21 Fed. Rep. 869. In the same case it is further said: “In a case like that we are now considering, an agreement that would impose, without legislative authority, a tax upon the citizens of the municipality to pay bonds that were void, is itself a fraud, no matter how well intentioned, or how much the parties believed in their power to make it.” The opinion in this case was rendered by Judge Hammond, and concurred in fully by Associate Justice Matthews of the supreme court. I do not mean to impute to the attorneys in this case any fraudulent purpose. On the contrary, it was insisted by them in the court below that such was not a proper construction of the stipulation, and they earnestly protested against allowing the stipulation, with this construction, to go to the jury. Record, p. 59.
I have endeavored to give respectful consideration to the numerous decisions of the supreme court cited by the majority of the court in support of the propositions sought to be maintained. I have endeavored to show that one of the most dangerous features of this doctrine of “estoppel by recitals” found its way into an early decision of the court by inadvertence. The doctrine that a county officer can bind the people of the county by a mere recital, while it has never been overruled, is not now regarded as the law. I am now about to show that not only has this feature of the Aspinwall case been allowed to fall into disuse, but that other propositions contained in that decision, and supported by such an array of authorities as has been presented by the majority of the court in this case, have, in effect, been overruled by later decisions of the supreme court. I say, in effect, for they, I admit, have not been overruled in express terms; but the doctrine laid down by that court in the case of Dixon County v. Field, to which I shall presently advert, is so absolutely -inconsistent with the doctrine of the case of Knox County v. Aspinwall, as to render it as thoroughly impossible that both should be the law as that daylight and darkness should exist at the same hour and the same place.
In the case of Dixon County v. Field, 111 U. S. 83, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 315, the question was again before the supreme court of the United States. I shall offer no apology for quoting somewhat in extenso from the opinion of the court in this case. The facts upon which the opinion was rendered were substantially as follows, as found by the court: The party bringing the suit against the county was an innocent holder for value of coupons sued on, and of the bonds to which they belonged. The bonds were executed in proper form, under the seal of the county, and were issued as a donation to a railroad company. Each bond contained the recital that it was issued under and in pursuance of the order of the county commissioners of the county of Dixon, state of Nebraska, and that the issue was authorized by an election held in said county under and by virtue of a general statute of the said state of Nebraska, which statute was referred to and set out. On the back of each bond was the certificate of the county clerk, reciting that this issue of bonds was the only one ever made by the county; that the question of issuing them was submitted to the county by resolution of the county commissioners, etc. There was also indorsed on each bond the certificate of the secretary and auditor of the state of Nebraska, reciting that it was issued in pursuance of law, etc. Justice Matthews, in delivering the opinion of the court, wherein it was decided that the county was not chargeable, said: “Recurring, then, to a consideration of the recitals in the bonds, we assume, for the purpose of this argument, that they are, in legal effect, equivalent to a representation or warranty or certificate on the part of the county officers that everything necessary by law to be done has been done, and every fact necessary bylaw to have existed did exist, to make the bonds lawful and binding. Of course, this does not extend to or cover matters of law. All parties are equally bound to know the law, and a certificate reciting the actual facts, and that thereby the bonds were conformable to the law, when, judicially speaking, they are not, will not make them so, nor can it work an estoppel upon the county to claim the protection of the law. Otherwise, it would always be within the power of a municipal body to which power was denied to usurp the forbidden authority by declaring that its assumption was within the law. This would be the clear exercise of legislative power, and would suppose such corporate bodies to be superior to the law itself. And the estoppel does not arise except on matters of fact which the corporate officers had authority by law to determine and to certify. It is not necessary, it is true, that the recitals should enumerate each particular fact essential to the existence of the obligation. A general statement that the bonds had been issued in conformity with the law will suffice, so as to embrace every fact which the officers making the statement are authorized to determine and certify. A determination and statement as to the whole series, where more than one is involved, is a determination and certificate as to each essential particular. But it still remains that there must be authority vested in the officers by law as to each necessary fact, whether enumerated or nonenumerated, to ascertain and determine' its existence, and to guaranty to those dealing with them the truth and conclusiveness of their admissions. • In such a case, the meaning of the law granting power to issue bonds is that they may be issued, not upon the existence of certain facts, to be ascertained and determined whenever disputed, .but upon the ascertainment and determination of their existence by the officers or body designated by law to issue the bonds upon such a contingency.
This becomes very plain when we suppose the case on such a power granted to issue bonds, upon the existence of a state of facts to be ascertained and determined by some persons or tribunal other than those authorized to issue the bonds. In that case it would not be contended that a recital of the facts in the instrument itself, contrary to the finding of those charged by law with that duty, would have any legal effect. So, if a fact necessary to the existence of the authority was by law to be ascertained, not officially by the officers charged with the execution of the power, but by reference to some express and definite record of a public character, then the true meaning of the law would be that the authority to act at all depended upon the actual objective existence of the requisite fact as shown by the record, and not upon its ascertainment and determination by anyone; and the consequence would necessarily follow that all persons claiming under the exercise of such a power might be put to proof of the fact made a condition of its lawfulness, notwithstanding any recitals in the instrument. This principle is the essence of the rule declared upon this point by this court, in the well considered words of Mr. Justice Strong in Town of Coloma v. Eaves, 92 U. S. 484, where he states (page 491) that it is ‘where it may be gathered from the legislative enactment that the officers of the municipality were invested with the power to decide whether the condition precedent has been complied with’ that ‘their recital that it has been made in the bonds issued by them, and held by a bona fide purchaser, is conclusive of the fact, and binding upon the municipality; for the recital is itself a decision of the fact by the appointed tribunal.’ The converse is embraced in the proposition, and is equally true. If the officers authorized to issue bonds upon a condition are not the appointed tribunal to decide the fact which constitutes the condition, their recital will not be accepted as a substitute for proof. In other words, where the validity of the bonds depends upon an estoppel claimed to arise upon the recitals in the instrument, the question being as to the existence of power to issue them, it is necessary to establish that the officers executing the bonds had lawful authority to make the recitals and to make them conclusive. The very ground in the estoppel is that the recitals are the official statements of those to whom the law refers the public for authentic and final information on the subject. This is the rule which has been constantly applied by this court in the numerous cases in which it has been involved. The differences in the result of the judgments have depended upon the question whether in the particular case under consideration a fair construction of the law authorized the officers issuing the bonds to ascertain, determine, and certify the existence of the facts upon which the power, by the terms of the law, was made to depend; not including, of course, that class of eases in which the controversy is related, not to conditions precedent, on which the right to act at all depended, but upon conditions affecting only the mode of exercising a power admitted to have come into being. Marcy v. Oswego, 92 U. S. 637; Commissioners v. Bolles, 94 U. S. 104; Commissioners v. Clark, 94 U. S. 278; County of Warren v. Marcy, 97 U. S. 96; Pana v. Bowler, 107 U. S. 529, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 704. In the present case there was no power at all conferred to issue bonds in excess of an amount equal to ten per cent upon the assessed valuation of the taxable property in the county. In determining the limit of power, there were necessarily two factors — the amount of the whole bonds to be issued, and the amount, of the assessed value of the property for purposes of taxation. The amount of the bonds issued was known. It is stated in the recital itself. It was $87,000. The holder of each bond was apprised of that fact. The amount of the assessed value of the taxable property in the county is not stated; but ex vi termini it was ascertainable in one way only, and that was by reference to the assessment itself, a public record equally accessible to all intending purchasers of bonds, as well as to the county officers. This being known, the ratio between the two amounts was fixed by an arithmetical calculation. No recital involving the amount of the assessed taxable valuation of the property to be taxed for the payment of the bonds can take the place of the assessment itself, for it is the amount, as fixed by reference to that record, that is made by the constitution the standard for measuring the limit of the municipal power. Nothing in the way of inquiry, ascertainment, or determination as to that fact is submitted to the county officers. They are bound, it is true, to learn from the assessment what the limit upon their authority is, as a necessary preliminary in the exercise of their functions and the performance of their duties, but the information is for themselves alone. All the world besides must have it from the same source and for themselves. The fact, as it is recorded in the assessment itself, is extrinsic and proves itself by inspection, and concludes all determinations that contradict it.”
The doctrine laid down in this case was afterward adopted and approved in the case of Lake Co. v. Rollins, 130 U. S. 662, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 651; also in the case of Lake Co. v. Graham, 130 U. S. 674, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 654. I am aware that the distinction drawn by the court between the three cases last cited and the cases cited by the majority of the court, wherein the recitals have been held to operate as an estoppel on the county, is that the doctrine in the latter was applied to the cases of bonds issued in contravention of statutory restrictions, whereas in the former the restriction was constitutional. I admit that the distinction exists, but, whatever may be the force of its application, it can not destroy or impair the truth of the proposition settled in a long line of decisions reaffirmed in the Dixon county case, that the recital of the officer, in order to constitute it an estoppel, must be confined to such matter as is committed alone to his charge. It will be observed that the only, cases in which the supreme court has determined that the recitals contained in the bond are to be regarded as estoppels are those in which the people of the particular state have chosen to commit the whole question to the legislature, and have not undertaken to restrict the legislature by any constitutional enactment. The decisions proceeded upon the ground that, the legislature being thus unrestricted by any constitutional limitation, and having committed the authority to act in this regard to the board of county officers, the people are bound by such action. In the case at bar there is a distinction which in my mind relieves the court from the operation of this rule. In this case is involved the right of a municipality created by the territorial legislature to violate the terms imposed by an act of the legislature. Here we have no constitution, the enabling act being sometimes called a constitution. It serves many of the purposes of a constitution, but it is nevertheless not a constitution. A constitution is the highest form of organic power erected by the people, who are themselves the subjects of that power. On the contrary, the people of the territory had no voice or hand in the matter of creating the organic act. Whatever of sovereignty may reside in the people of the territory is represented by the legislature. It is the highest branch of organized local authority. If a corporation created by the legislature may violate the charter of its existence, there is no power on earth interested in its affairs which can control its operation. The people of this territory can not call a constitutional convention for the purpose of imposing limitations upon the power of the legislature, or the power of municipal corporations. It follows, therefore, that if the municipalities may openly violate acts of limitation passed by the legislature, there remains to the people but one escape from their absolute control, and that is by means of destroying them altogether. It is not my purpose to go into any elaborate discussion of the distinction between the powers of the territory and those of the state. “A territory, under the constitution and laws of the United States, is an inchoate state — a portion of the country not included within the limits of the United States, and not yet admitted as a state into the United States, but organized under the laws of congress, with a separate legislature, under a territorial governor and other officers, appointed by the president and senate of the United States.” Ex parte Morgan, 20 Fed. Rep. 305. “The territorial status is' one of pupilage, at best, and may include the mere child as well as the adolescent youth.” Nelson v. U. S., 30 Fed. Rep. 115. In the case of Clinton v. Engelbrecht, 13 Wall. 443, it was said: “The theory upon which the various governments for portions of the territory of the United States have been organized has ever been that of leaving to the inhabitants all the powers of self-government consistent with the supremacy and supervision of the United States.” So, also, in the case of Hornbuckle v. Toombs, 18 Wall. 655, it was said: “The powers thus exercised by the legislature are nearly as extensive as those exercised by state legislatures.” Thus it will be seen that, wherever reference is made to territorial governments by comparison they are represented as exercising prerogatives inferior to those conferred upon the state.
It may be said that the distinction drawn between the power of the territorial legislature and that of the state legislature is more technical than substantial; but I respectfully suggest that it is as substantial as that drawn by the supreme court of the United States in the ease of municipalities acting under legislative enactments in the presence of constitutional provisions on the one hand, and on the other that of similar corporations acting under the provisions of legislative enactments, in the absence of such restrictions. With Justice Beeweb, I am at loss to understand the real grounds for this distinction. • It has been formally established, however, by the supreme court, and is a part of the law of the land, and I can see nothing in reason or authority which forbids the application of a similar doctrine to the cases of municipal corporations of a territory acting under and by virtue of the authority of the territorial legislature. In the case of the state, the highest local authority is the constitution ; in the case of the territory, the highest organized local authority is that of the legislature. If a bond issued by the municipal authorities of a state, in violation of the highest organic law of the state, is void, I can not understand why it is that a bond issued by a municipal corporation of a territory, in violation of the highest expressed authority of the territory, is not also void.
But, in the view that I have taken of the law, we are not left to the somewhat uncertain rules of construction. The power of municipal corporations of a territory to issue bonds has been the subject of congressional legislation. By acts approved March 2, 1867, June 10, 1872 (Rev. Stat., sec. 1889), it was provided, “the legislative assemblies of the several territories shall not grant private charters or special privileges, but they may, by general incorporation act, permit persons to associate themselves together as bodies corporate for mining, manufacturing, and other industrial pursuits, or in the construction and operation of railroads,” etc. A question having arisen as to whether this act of congress did not take away entirely the power of the legislature to grant charters, congress passed an act, the substance of which, • or so much thereof as is applicable to the matter under considera^ tion, is as follows: “That the words ‘the legislative assemblies of the several territories shall not grant private charters or special privileges/ in section 1889, Rev. St., shall not be construed as prohibiting the legislative assemblies of the several territories of the United States from creating towns or other municipal corporations * * * and conferring on them * * * powers and privileges necessary to their local administration. * * * But nothing herein shall have the effect * * * to authorize any such corporation to incur hereafter any debt or obligation other than such as shall be necessary to the administration of its internal affairs.” Act June 8, 1878 (20 St. 101).
The only remaining question to be determined is whether a county is a municipal corporation, within the meaning of this act. That a county is a corporation will be admitted; that it is not, within the strict sense of that term, a municipal corporation, is conceded. -I think, however, that an examination of the authorities will lead us to the conclusion that within the scope of the inhibition contained in the act of congress just referred to, counties may be regarded as municipal corporations. It is very true that Mr. Dillon, in his treatise of the Law of Municipal Corporations, has undertaken to distinguish between “political,” “public,” and “civil,” “municipal,” and quasi corporatious, wherein he holds that a “school district or county, properly speaking, is not, while the city is, a municipal corporation.” Volume 1, p. 22. The references do not sustain the text, while the latter part of the section shows that the learned author was engaged in drawing a distinction in the nature of a preface to the following pages of his work; for he continues by saying: “The phrase ‘municipal corporation,’ in the contemplation of this treatise, has reference to incorporated villages, towns, and cities, with powers of local administration, as distinguished from other public corporations, such as counties and quasi corporations.” If we examine the authorities, we shall find that the distinctions drawn as to different kinds of corporations have grown out of the particular function sought to be invoked, or the particular liability sought to be imposed; e. g., a county, unlike most of municipal corporations, is not responsible for the tort-feasance of its officers and agents, because such officers and agents are, in a large sense, the officers and agents of the state, — of the people, in their political capacity. Nevertheless a county is for many purposes a municipal corporation. The supreme court of Maryland, in the case of Talbot Co. Com’rs v. Commissioners of Queen Anne’s Co., gave utterance to the following: ‘ ‘A county is one of the public territorial divisions of the state, erected and organized for public political purposes connected with the administration of the state government, and especially charged with the superintendence and administration of the local affairs of the community, and being in its nature and objects a municipal organization,” etc. 50 Md. 246. The supreme court of Iowa treats the subject as follows: “The word ‘municipal,’ as originally used, in strictness applied to cities only. But the word has now a more extended meaning, and, when applied to corporations the words ‘political,’ ‘municipal,’ and ‘public’ are used interchangeably. A municipal corporation is defined to be ‘a public corporation,’ created by government for particular purposes, and having subordinate and local powers of legislation, e. g., a county, city, etc.” Curry v. District Tp. of Sioux City, 62 Iowa, 102; 17 N. W. Rep. 191, citing Bouv. Law Dict.; Winspear v. District Tp. of Holman, 37 Iowa, 542; Land Co. v. Carrol Co., 39 Iowa, 151. To show the diversity of understanding as to what constitutes a municipal corporation, I quote from a decision of the supreme court of Wisconsin to this effect: “Towns are often called, in common parlance, and sometimes unguardedly in statutes, ‘municipal corporations,’in connection with counties, cities, and villages.” Eaton v. Supervisors, 44 Wis. 493. The supreme court of Missouri, in defining a corporation for municipal purposes, says: “A corporation for municipal purposes is either a municipality such as a city or town, created especially for local self-government, with delegated legislative powers, or it may be a subdivision of the state for governmental purposes, such as a county, a school, or road districts,” etc. State v. Leffingwell, 54 Mo. 458. Mr. Bouvier gives the following definition of a “municipal corporation:” “A municipal corporation is a public corporation, created by government for political purposes, and having subordinate and local powers of legislation, e. g., a county, town, city.” Citing as authority for this definition 2 Kent, Comm. 275; Ang. & A. Corp. 929. There is another decision, however, that so far as the decision of a state court can be regarded as. authority, settles this question beyond controversy. I refer to the case of Dowlan v. County of Sibley, decided by the supreme court of Minnesota, and reported at page 430, 36 Minn., and page 517, 31 N. W. Rep. This was an appeal to the district court from the determination of county commissioners in proceedings for the establishment of a public ditch. Prom the judgment of the district court it was appealed to the supreme court of the state. Dickinson, J., in.rendering the opinion of the court, after quoting the provision of the state constitution as follows, “that the legislature may by general law or special act authorize municipal corporations to levy assessments for local improvements,” etc., said: “The question now presented is whether the words £ municipal corporations,’ as here employed, should be deemed to include counties. At the time of the adoption of this amendment, counties might, with propriety, be termed political corporations. The statute declared them to be such. Glen. St. 1866, chap. 8, sec. 75. They were not, however, in the proper and more general use of the term, municipal corporations; yet, for the purposes of general designation, it is not uncommon to use that term in a sense including such quasi corporations as counties and towns, and so sometimes to distinguish public or political corporations or functions from those which would be termed private. Thus, in our own decisions, may be found such language as this: £A municipal corporation, — a city, county, or town’ (Harrington v. Town of Plainview, 27 Minn. 224-229, 6 N. W. Rep. 777); £a county or other municipal corporation’ (County of Blue Earth v. Railroad Co., 28 Minn. 503-507, 11 N. W. Rep. 73). See, also, Winspear v. District Tp. of Holman, 37 Iowa, 542; Ex parte Selma & G. R. Co., 45 Ala. 696-732.” After referring to the case of State v. Leffingwell, 54 Mo. 458, to which I have already referred, the learned judge continues: “A late amendment to our constitution prohibits the enactment of special or private laws ‘granting to any individual, association, or corporation, except municipal, any special or exclusive privilege, immunity, or franchise whatever.’ We feel no doubt that here the exception of ‘municipal’ corporations has a meaning broad enough to include counties and towns,” etc. “Nor, again, is it apparent why the power of the legislature in the particular here involved should be unrestricted as respects incorporated municipalities, and wholly denied as to counties and towns. Our consideration of this question has led us to the conclusion that the words ‘municipal corporations’ in the proviso under consideration may reasonably be construed as having the broad, rather than the restricted, sense, and as including such quasi corporations as counties and towns.” In view of the foregoing, I think a proper definition of “counties” may be given as follows: A “county,” when it represents a subdivision of the state in the exercise of those functions of government common to all the people of the state, e. g., in the organization of courts and the administration of the law, may be regarded as a public corporation of a quasi political character. But when it deals with matters which relate alone to the internal policy of the community of a strictly municipal character, such as the issuance of commercial obligations upon which it may be sued as if it were a private individual, it is a municipal corporation.
If my construction of the act of June 8, 1878, is correct, it is conclusive of this controversy. This act was passed just twenty months before a combination composed of the officers of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company and the county officials of Santa Pe county attempted to fasten a debt of about $500,000 (for the principal and interest amounts to that sum) on a people two thirds of whom were unable to understand the language in which the pretended contract was written. The act of congress was passed to prevent the perpetration of such wrongs. It was no doubt intended to operate, and did operate, as a disapproval, and therefore as an abrogation, of the act of the legislature of this territory which authorized the issuance of bonds of this character. It is not the province of the courts to deal with the policy of congress, otherwise much might be said in commendation of this wise legislation. We have seen territories referred to as being in “ a state of pupilage.” This term is peculiarly applicable to this territory. In a very striking sense it is the pupil and ward of the nation. Pastoral in their habits, conservative in their aspirations, a very large portion of its population live in their mountain homes, and follow their flocks as did their fathers before them. It is the business of the courts to protect them, and to see that their homes and their property are not confiscated to satisfy the greed of corporations.