A general demurrer to the petition of the plaintiff was sustained by the district court for Madison county, and the plaintiff electing to stand upon her exception, a judgment of dismissal and for costs was rendered against her. The judgment is brought here for review by a petition in error. The claim of the plaintiff had its origin in an ordinance enacted by the mayor and council of the city of Norfolk, which, with the exception of dates, names and *332amounts, and perhaps some minor matters not material in this controversy, is admitted to be a literal copy of the ordinance set forth at large in the opinion of State v. Mayor and Council of Crete, 32 Nebr., 568. It is unnecessary to consume time or space in reproducing the document here. If the validity of this enactment was not supposed to have been conclusively established by a series of decisions by this court, beginning with that in the case just cited and ending with Lincoln Land Co. v. Village of Grant, 57 Nebr., 70, the writer would heartily agree with the opinion of Judge Sullivan in the latter named case, that the ordinance violates and ignores a multitude of statutory provisions expressly designed to limit and restrain municipal authorities within reasonable bounds and to guard and protect the taxpayers against the consequences of improvidence and fraud.
Assuming the validity of the ordinance, it becomes necessary to determine the legality of the instruments sued upon in this action. Section 12 of the Norfolk ordinance contains the following stipulation: “In the event that the grantee shall issue mortgage bonds secured by mortgage or deed of trust upon its water-works together with its lands, machinery, pipes, outfits, rights, privileges and franchises, a sufficiency of the hydrant rentals payable by the city of Norfolk under this ordinance to discharge the interest upon such bonds as it will mature from time to time to be paid by the city of Norfolk to the trustee or trustees of such bonds, to the extent of $3,000 per annum, when such hydrant rentals are earned by the grantee and are payable by the city, and such sums shall be paid while interest on such bonds remain due and unpaid, and the city clerk is hereby authorized and instructed to sign a certificate on the back of said bonds to that effect and to affix the seal of said city to such certificate and payment so made to trustee' or trustees shall be made exclusively to pay interest upon said bonds so long as the same remains due and payable, and the amount remaining after the interest on the bonds shall have been discharged shall be paid over to *333said grantee, and in the event that the city should elect to purchase the works as herein provided for, the payment of such bonds, if any there be, shall be assumed by said city and the face value of said bonds with accrued interest, if any, shall be deducted from the purchase price of said works.”
The petition alleges the acceptance in writing of the terms and conditions of the ordinance, by A. L. Strang, the grantee therein, and the execution by him of a bond as required by the ordinance, and that he commenced and completed the construction of a system of water-works which was in full compliance with the terms of the grant and which was duly approved and accepted by the mayor and council. Afterwards, Strang conveyed the works to the Norfolk Water-Works Company, a corporation, and, as alleged in the petition, the company, on the 15th day of January, 1890, “executed, as contemplated in sectiou 12 of said ordinance, its five negotiable mortgage bonds, numbered, respectively, 30,31,32,33 and 34, in the sum of $1,000 each, payable twenty-five years from the date thereof; with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent, per annum; the interest payable semi-annually as evidenced by the fifty coupon interest notes of $30 each attached to said' bonds, payable on the first days of January and July of each year until the maturity of said bonds.” The petition alleges that the plaintiff became the owner for value and before due of the coupons maturing during the years 1891 to 1895, both inclusive, and on January 1. 1896, which were attached to the above mentioned five bonds, and alleges that the coupons have become and remain overdue and unpaid, and prays judgment against the city for their amount and interest. The coupons are without indorsement and are in the following form:
“$30.00. “Exhibit A. — Coupon. No. 6.
“Norfolk Watkr-Works Company
Will pay to bearer thirty dollars on the first day of January, 1893, at the office of the Fanners Loan & Trust *334Company in the city of New York and state of New York, on the surrender of this coupon being the interest due at that date on bond.
“No. 31. A. L. Strang, President.”
On each of said bonds is an indorsement as follows:
“State of Nebraska, 1 Madison County, /
'
“I, the undersigned clerk of the said city of Norfolk, do hereby certify that the interest on the within bond, as it shall mature from time to time, will be paid by the said city of Norfolk, to the within named trustee, out of such hydrant rentals as shall be earned from and payable by the city of Norfolk pursuant to the ordinance granting the franchise for the building of the within named Norfolk Water-Works, and that such hydrant rentals pursuant to such ordinance are to be first applied to pay the interest on this and seventy-four other bonds of like tenure and effect as it shall become due or remain due and unpaid.
“Witness my hand and the seal of said city, this 28th day of January, A. D. 1890.
[seal.] “W. Gerecke, City Cleric.”
The petition also contains the following allegation:
“After the completion of the water-works aforesaid, and in the year 1889, and annually thereafter, the said city levied and collected a tax upon the taxable property therein for the purpose of paying the interest on said bonds as provided in the said ordinance until February, 1894, when the city became the purchaser of the waterworks and all the property, real and personal, and franchise belonging thereto, from the Shickle-Harrison & Howard Iron Company, the then owners of the same; and in order to protect itself in the payment of said bonds, the city exacted and required of said Shickle-Harrison & Howard Iron Company; the following bond and undertaking, which was given, to-wit:
“ 'Whereas, The Shickle-Harrison & Howard Iron Company, has sold to the city of Norfolk, Madison county, Ne*335braska, the property, real and personal, and all rights, privileges and franchises formerly belonging to the Norfolk Water-Works Company, a corporation; and whereas, the said city granted certain franchises to said Norfolk Water-Works Company mentioned in ordinance number 69 of said city; and whereas, by certain provisions of said ordinance, said city, should it acquire title to said waterworks property in the manner provided therein agreed to assume any outside standing bonds of said company; and whereas, said Shickle-Harrison & Howard Iron Company acquired title to said property by foreclosure of the bonds mentioned in said ordinance:
“ ‘Now, therefore, the Shickle-Harrison & Howard Iron Company agree to hold the said city harmless to the extent of $15,000 by reason of any liability under said ordinance incurred by said city in the purchase of said water-works property from Shickle-Harrison & Howard Iron Company.
“ ‘Dated February 16, 1894..
[seal.] “ ‘Shickle-Harrison & Howard Iron Co.,
“ ‘By Thomas Howard, President.
“ ‘Attest: Thomas E. Gallagher, ¡Secretary.’ ”
The clerk’s indorsement is recited in the petition and is a part thereof. Even if it must be assumed, which, notwithstanding the authorities above cited, I still hesitate to believe, that the city authorities may, in the indirect way contemplated by this ordinance, create a bonded municipal debt without a popular vote in direct contravention of the very section of the statute under the assumed authority of which the ordinance was adopted, it is still to be established that the city clerk is empowered to obligate the city in the absence, or in excess, of authority conferred upon him either by statute or by ordinance. The clerk’s certificate is not- negotiable in form or otherwise; it purports to have been executed pursuant to a specified ordinance and assumes to bind the city for the amount of the annual payments of interest by way of hydrant rentals to the amount of $4,500, while the ordinance mentioned *336limits the amount of such payments to $3,000 a year. Whatever, therefore, may be said about the ordinance, the clerk’s certificate is, as respects any contractual character it may have been intended to have, absolutely void. The case is analogous to the familiar instance of the issuance of municipal bonds in excess of a specified percentage of the assessed valuation of the city as disclosed by a public record. The law has been too long and too well settled to require the citation of authorities to the effect that such bonds are, as to their entire issue, utterly void. If the principle that public officers are agents with limited powers and that persons dealing with them must see to it, at their peril, that they do not exceed their authority, the same conclusion must be reached with reference to this certificate, which, by its own terms, directs attention to the ordinance from which alone it could derive any validity.
If the plaintiff has any right of action against the city, it arises not upon this certificate or upon the coupons, but out of the ordinance itself, as a participant in the fund of $3,000 per year which the city thereby undertook to pay to the trustee or trustees for her benefit. We have not the trust mortgage before us, but it is probable that the right of action against the city for delinquency in this respect is vested in the trustee alone, but whether it so expressly stipulated or.not, payment of the interest to the trustee would discharge the liability of the city therefor. Whether such payment has or has not been made the petition does not show, but it is alleged that after the completion of the works and until February, 1894, when the city purchased the property, an annual tax of sufficient amount was levied and collected and it may reasonably be inferred that the same was devoted to the purpose intended. If not,.or if, as to subsequent years, the city is bound to continue the payment of hydrant rentals for the use of its own water system and has or has not continued so to do, and if, in any such case, a right of action has accrued to the holders of coupons, it still does not follow that the plaintiff is en*337titled to recover the full amount of the instruments sued upon. Her recovery could not, in any event, exceed two-thirds of that amount, because a recovery by her would not, in such case, discharge the equal liability of the city to the holders of coupons attached to the remaining seventy bonds. The plaintiff, in order to recover, must allege and prove at least the number of outstanding coupons and the years and extent of the city’s delinquency and the holders of other coupons must be permitted to intervene so that the court may be in position to determine the entire amount of the liability of the defendant, and, if necessary or expedient, appoint a trustee to take charge of and to distribute the funds so that upon payment of the amount adjudged against it its obligations will be finally and effectually discharged. In short, as has been already said, l:he plaintiff’s right of action, if she has any, which to my mind is extremely doubtful, is not upon the coupons or clerk’s certificate at all, but upon the contract created by the ordinance, and the petition falls far short of stating facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action upon the latter instrument. But there is, to my mind, a more vital objection to these instruments, considered as obligations of the city, which has as yet been but barely mentioned. The very section of the statute, under the assumed authority of which this ordinance was adopted and this contract entered into, contains a proviso to the effect that the city may borrow money and issue bonds for the purpose, and levy and collect a general tax in the same manner as other municipal taxes may be levied and collected, for the purchase of steam engines, and for the purchase, erection or construction and maintenance of such water-works, or to pay for water furnished such city or village under contract, to an amount not exceeding seven mills on the dollar in any one year on all the property within such city or village as shown and valued upon the assessment rolls of the assessor of the proper precinct or township, in addi1ion to the sum authorized to be levied under subdivision 1 of this section, and all taxes raised under this clause, *338shall be retained in a fund known as “Water Fund”; Pro-Added further, that no such money shall be borrowed or bonds issued, unless the same shall have been authorized by a vote of the majority of the-electors of such city or village to that effect. The bonds shall be bonds of the city called “Water Bonds,” to become due in twenty years from the date of issue, but payable any time after five years, drawing seven per cent, interest per annum, payable annually. No such vote is alleged to have been had in this instance, and yet the ordinance pretends to authorize the bonding of the works and the guaranteeing of the interest by the city to the extent of $3,000 per year and the assumption by the city of the obligation to pay the principal of the bonds in case of a purchase by it of the works. As a matter of fact, it seems that the Avorks were bonded for $75,000, and that within five years after they were constructed the city did buy, or attempt to buy them and, as it is contended, thereby assumed liability for the bonded debt. It is not stated Avhat the assessed valuation of the city is or at any time has been. If this transaction can be upheld, the statutory limitations upon the power of the city to borrow money and issue bonds and expend money for hydrant rentals are practically nullities. If such is the law, there is no reason why the construction of the works, their purchase by the city and the assumption of the bonded debt might not have been contemporaneous acts. Nor is there any reason why the amount of the bonded debt and of the hydrant rentals, -which are to be paid by way of meeting the semi-annual interest charge, might not have been as much larger as the cupidity of the grantee and the “discretion” of the mayor and council would have warranted. The bondholder is, indeed, a favored individual of his class, because he may not only, like other creditors of the city, resort for payment to the general fiscal resources of the municipality, but he has in addition thereto a specific lien upon the very property which the city incurred the liablity for the purpose of procuring.
A case is conceivable in Avhich the mortgage trustee *339would, by means of foreclosure and sale, deprive the city of the works for the satisfaction of a fraction of the mortgage debt and afterwards compel the taxpayers to discharge the residue out of the public revenues. In fact, it is indicated by the recitals of the above quoted bond of the Shickle-Harrison & Howard Iron Company, that precisely this state of affairs exists, and precisely this attempt is being made in the case at bar. In my opinion, the provisions of the ordinance with respect to guaranteeing the payment of interest by way of hydrant rentals, and with respect to the issuance by the water company of bonds and the assumption of liability therefor by the city in case of its purchase of the works, are absolutely void, as in violation,' not of the spirit only, but of the very letter of the statute. It is immaterial that the city has received a bond executed by a foreign corporation of limited powers and unknown responsibility, conditioned to partially indemnify it against liability upon these bonds, no such liability in fact existing. If the city shall not be compelled to pay obligations which it did not lawfully incur, it will not stand in need of indemnity.
The judgment of the district court should, in my opinion, be affirmed.
Düffie and Albert, CC., concur. By the Court:For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion the judgment of the district court is ■
Affirmed.