delivered the opinion op the court.
The appellant Board on May 1, 1886, ordered an election by the qualified voters of the city of Augusta, to be held on May 15th thereafter, for the purpose of ascertaining the will of the people in regard to the issual of the bonds of the city for the sum of four thousand dollars, in aid. of procuring the right-of-way for the appellee company in constructing its railroad.
The ordinance provides that the bonds shall not be issued or delivered to the company “until the Maysville & Big Sandy Railroad is completed as a standard gauge road, and is equipped with rolling stock of locomotives, coaches, etc., *148and a train lias passed over the road from Ashland, Boyd county, Kentucky, through Augusta, Kentucky, to Covington, Kenton county, Kentucky.”
And further, that the company would “cause to be issued to the city certificates of stock in said Maysville and Big Sandy Railroad to the amount of four thousand dollars in ■shares as the railroad charter specifies,” etc.
And moreover, “that if the vote of the city is in favor of the issue of-said bonds, it will be of no binding force upon the city, if the railway is not constructed and equipped within two years from the date the vote is taken, excepting such time as may be lost by cause of floods.”
In pursuance of the provisions of the ordinance the election was held under the supervision of the officers appointed by the board, the vote resulting largely in favor of the issual of the bonds. Thereupon, the road was completed and equipped as required by the terms of the ordinance, and on or about January 1,1889, ran its first regular trains from Ashland to Covington.
Upon the refusal of the board to issue the bonds for the reason as alleged at the time that the road had not been completed in the stipulated time, this action was brought by the company for the use of certain citizens who had guaranteed a fund for the payment of the rights-of-way over the line proposed, and who were therefore the real parties in interest in the suit, to compel the issual of the bonds as provided in the ordinance. Various defenses were interposed to prevent recovery.
The act of the General Assembly upon the authority of which the vote was taken, and the subscription made, was entitled,"An act to amend the charterof thecityof Augusta, in Bracken county,” and it provided for an issual of thebonds of the city to the extent of $25,000, as subscription to the *149capital stock of the Cincinnati & Southeastern Railway-Company, which subscription had been approved by a prior vote of the electors of the city, and the third section of which is as follows: “In the event the said Cincinnati & Southeastern Railway Company fail to build their road, the city council may, at any time in the future, issue bonds of the city to the amount of $25,000, * ® in aid of any railway company that will construct a railroad through said city: Provided, a majority of the legal voters voting of said city shall vote in favor thereof at an election called and held for that purpose.”
It is conceded by the appellants that long prior to the adoption of the ordinance of May 1, 1886, the enterprise of ■the Cincinnati & Southeastern Railway Company had fallen through, and that the conditions existed upon which the vote might be taken on the proposition to subscribe to the capital stock of any road proposing to run through the city of Augusta, but it is urged by demurrer to the petition and by plea that the act of the General Assembly authorizing the issual of the bonds upon the vote of the people therefor is unconstitutional in that its title is not expressive of the subject matter embraced'in it; that the petition does not aver that any notice was given of the time for holding the election; that there was in fact no contract of ■subscription, the allegations of the petition stopping at the point where the vote merely is alleged to have been taken, and that vote, they say, does not amount to a contract of subscription, or control the discretion lodged in the mayor and councilmen to issue or not issue the bonds in question; that the private citizens who guaranteed the rights-of-way over the proposed route,and thus became entitled to the subscription, 'did so before the vote of the city was taken, and hence, their action was not induced by the vote, and the road was *150not built on the'pledge of this subscription to the road; that the present constitution took effect before the rendition of the judgment below, and the city is prohibited from taking stock in railroads; that the road was not completed within the time prescribed in the ordinance, and the delay was not caused by floods.
All the grounds relied on were deemed insufficient by the court below, and- judgment resulted for the plaintiffs.
It is only necessary to refer without elaboration to the long line of decisions of this court construing section 37,' art. 2 of the old constitution on the subject of valid titles to acts of the General Assembly, to dispose of the appellant’s objection on that behalf.
The act in question affected the powers and duties of the governing body of the city, and pertained to the legitimate exercise of its functions. (See Phillips v. Covington & Cincinnati Bridge Company, 2 Met., 219; Swift v. City of Newport, 7 Bush, 37; City of Covington v. Voskotter, 80 Ky., 219; McArthur v. Nelson, 81 Ky., 67.)
It is also well settled that .when the law fixes the time for holding an election, the notice otherwise required to be given may be dispensed with.. (Toney v. Harris, 85 Ky., 475; Berry v. McCollough, 94 Ky., 247; Doores v. Varnon, 94 Ky., 507.)
The contention that a subsequent subscription depending on the discretion of the board was necessary before a liability to issue the bonds existed is not tenable. The duty of issuing the bonds was rendered imperative by the enabling act, and the vote taken in pursuance of it. By the very terms of the ordinance directing the vote, the adoption of which was an exercise of discretion, it is manifest that upon the vote being cast for the issual of the bonds the company became entitled to them upon the happening of certain *151events. The conditions were carefully prescribed upon which the company was not to have them. They were not to be issued or delivered until the road was completed as a standard gauge, and a train was passed thereover from Ash-land to Covington, or until a favorable vote was had, or unless the construction was finished within two years.
The necessary conclusion is that when these conditions and requirements were fulfilled the company became entitled to the bonds. Such is the natural meaning of the language of the act of the legislature and the ordinance of the city under which the vote was taken. The act of issuing the bonds was merely ministerial after the conditions upon which they were to issue had been complied with.
If the object of the vote -was simply to empower the board to issue the bonds in their discretion, the authorities relied on by the appellants would be in point.
We do not, however, so construe the enabling act and the ordinance of the board. The act empowered the board not to subscribe, but to issue, bonds upon a vote resulting favorably on the question.
It would be singular if after a favorable vote under an ordinance providing that the bonds were not to issue until the road was built, that when the road was built the city was under no legal obligation to issue them. As said by counsel: “It would be a rare city council that would subscribe stock or issue bonds to a railroad already constructed, unless in obedience to some legal obligation incurred when the interest of the city required it.”
It is true the words “may issue bonds” are used in the act, but this permissive language does not leave compliance optional. The provisions are to be deemed compulsory because it is the only rational construction to be given the words when looking to the intent and purposes of the enact*152ment, and the conduct of the parties.
Mr. Endlich in his work on Interpretation of Statutes, after a full discussion of this subject, says: “The result seems to be, that, when a public power for the public benefit is conferred in enabling terms, a duty is impliedly imposed to exercise it whenever the occasion arises.” (Sec 312.)
As to the delay in completing the road, the proof is abundant that high water caused it. It is true as contended by counsel that there were no such floods during the period of construction as devastated the Ohio valley in 1847, or in 1883 and 1884, but the testimony is that for many months the water was more than fifty feet over some parts of the work, and for all practicable purposes prevented any progress as completely as if the noted flood of 1847 had revisited the valley.
The judgment is affirmed.