This is an original action, and was brought to restrain the payment of certain county warrants, and also the collection of a tax levied for that purpose. The ground upon which the supposed right to this relief is based is that -the warrants were issued without lawful authority, and are void. No fraud on the part of any one in the issue or proposed payment of said warrants is charged, but eveiy *540step taken respecting them seems to be conceded to have been in the utmost good faith.
These warrants appear to have been issued in due form by the commissioners of said county, on the fourth day of June, 1873, and in payment to Henry T. Clark of the balance found to be due him on settlement for building a bridge across the Platte river, between the towns of Gibbon and Lowell. The grounds of their alleged invalidity are, first, that there was then no existing fund against which to draw them; second, that the contract with Clark for the building of the bridge was unauthorized; and, third, that the bonds were in excess of the amount actually due for the work under the contract.
The want of a fund is claimed chiefly on the ground that, for the year 1872, there was no levy of a road tax by the commissioners of Kearney county. It appears from the petition that, instead of taking upon themselves the making of a formal levy, the commissioners simply ordered the county clerk to transfer to his own books a formal levy which had been made by the commissioners of Adams county, to which Kearney county had been attached for election, revenue, and judicial purposes. From the averments of the petition, it appears quite clear that Kearney county was completely organized when the commissioners of Adams county assumed to make a levy for it.. This was done probably under the supposition that the organization of Kearney had not yet been fully perfected, and that it was their duty under the law to do it. At any rate there is nothing to show that it was not done in the utmost good faith. Under these circumstances we are of opinion that the action of the commissioners of Kearney, in the adoption of the work of the commissioners of Adams, made it their own, and that, although the desired result was reached somewhat informally, it was not at all different, at least when equitably considered, from what it would have been if made by the commissioners of Kearney independently, and after the *541ordinary method. We look upon this irregularity as of no consequence. And it is objected further to this levy that the larger portion of the land on which it was placed was not then subject to taxation, viz., about eight hundred and sixty quarter sections, which had been selected by railroad companies under grants from the United States, and, under the law, still untaxable. This point is urged as showing that there was'not only no fund provided for at the time the warrants were issued, from which they could ultimately be paid, but also that the contract with Clark for the building of the bridge was unauthorized for want of a fund on which to base it, as held in' The People v. The Commissioners of Buffalo county, 4 Neb., 150. But, even if the levy were illegal, this objection- comes too late to find favor with a court of equity. According to the showing made, the tax-payers of Kearney county were perfectly willing to have the bridge built by Clark, under the contract, and to have the use of it — in other words, to accept the benefits that were to flow to them from Clark’s performance of the agreement on his part — but unwilling to give anything in return. As to the building of the bridge, and the terms upon which it was being done, the people of that county were at the time fully advised, but without objection suffered the work to go forward to completion. So, too, they knew of the settlement between Clark and the commissioners respecting it, but took no appeal, nor at any time during the eight years intervening between that and the commencement of this suit sought to have rectified any mistake therein. Under such a state of facts it would ill become a court of equity, as it seems to us, to decree what is here sought. It would be inequitable rather than equitable. Brown v. Otoe county, 6 Neb., 111. Clark v. Dayton, Id., 192. That the tax-payers of Kearney county had a remedy at the time of the letting of the contract to Clark, if they were unwilling to incur the obligation of paying for the work, is clear. Normand v. Otoe *542County, 8 Id., 18. But, having chosen to waive it then, they cannot have it now. There being no cause for equitable relief shown, the temporary injunction must be vacated and the action dismissed at the costs of the plaintiff.
Judgment accordingly.