delivered the opinion of the Court.
The present bill was filed by taxpayers of the city of Clarksville, in Montgomery county of this State, impeaching a subscription of $100,000 made by that city to the capital stock of the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, which afterwards, by an act of the legislature, had its corporate name changed to the Tennessee *704Central Railroad Company, and asking that tbe city of Clarksville be enjoined from issuing its bonds in payment of this subscription. Demurrers were interposed by tbe two defendants, challenging tbe legal sufficiency of all tbe grounds upon wbicb complainants asked relief. Upon tbe bearing of tbe cause on demurrer, a decree was pronounced by tbe chancellor dismissing tbe bill on tbe ground that chapter 276, p. 796, of tbe Session Acts of tbe Legislature of 1903, bad cured all tbe irregularities complained of therein. Upon appeal this decree was reversed by tbe court of chancery appeals, and tbe case is now before us for review.
It appears from tbe recitals of tbe original bill and tbe amendments thereto that 'the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, a corporation organized and existing under tbe laws of Tennessee, on tbe 21st day of June, 1901, addressed a written communication to tbe mayor of tbe city of Clarksville, in wbicb it was stated that this company proposed “to construct a standard-gauge steam railroad from a point within tbe corporate limits, connecting with tbe tracks of tbe Tennessee Central Railroad or those of tbe Nashville Terminal Company, and crossing tbe Cumberland river ... in a northwest direction, to a point in tbe county of Montgomery, Tennessee, at a line between tbe States of Tennessee and Kentucky,” and asking a subscription to its capital stock by tbe city of Clarksville in tbe sum of $100,000, upon certain conditions, of wbicb those material to this litigation may be summarized as follows:
*705First. That the construction of the line of railroad should be commenced at Nashville within six months, and completed to Clarksville within twenty-four months, from date of subscription.
Second. That' no part of the subscription should become due and payable until the railroad was constructed and put in operation within the period of time stipulated as above, and substantially on the line as shown on the plan or map attached to the communication, and when this was done the subscription should become due and payable.
Third. “ Payment for the stock subscription of the city to be made at the option of the city “in cash or in its twenty year coupon bonds, bearing interest at not less than four per cent, per annum,«payable semiannually.’’
A meeting of the board of mayor and aldermen of the city of Clarksville was held on the 5th day of July, 1901, at which this communication was- submitted, and thereupon a resolution was adopted declaring it to- be sense of the board “that an election should be held by the qualified voters of the city of Clarksville to determine whether or not the city, in its corporate capacity, shall make the subscription asked for by the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad, in the amount and upon the terms and conditions set forth in the application,” and fixing the 8th day of August, 1901, as the date of the election, which should “be held according to the laws of the State *706regarding elections, by the duly qualified election officers, who thereafter should make the returns, showing the votes cast for, and those against subscription.”
On the 6th of July, 1901, the commissioners of registration of Montgomery county gave the statutory notice that on the 8th day of August, 1901, an election would be held at two voting places named in the notice between the hours of 9 a. m. and 4 p. m., at which the qualified voters of the city of Clarksville should vote in order to determine whether or not the city of Clarksville should make a subscription to the capital stock of the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, upon the “terms and conditions of the application or proposition submitted by the railroad company to the municipal authorities, Avhich application ®r proposition was by the commissioners appended to the election notice.
The'election thus ordered was held on the day appointed, and in due time a return of the same was made by the commissioners of registration to the board of mayor and aldermen, of that city, in which they reported at this election held “in accordance with the law as found in chapter 3, p. 57, of the Acts of the Legislature of 1887, and by resolution of the board, there was cast a total of 904 votes of the qualified voters .of the city of Clarksville, of which total 681 votes were for, and 223 were against, the subscription.” They further reported that, in addition to this total 88 votes were cast which “were rejected and thrown out by the judges of the election as illegal.” .
*707On tbe 15th of August, 1901, at a meeting of the board of mayor and aldermen of that city, this report of the commissioners was submitted and was approved; and in consideration of the fact that it appeared to the board that the election was fair,' and that more than three-fourths of the votes cast were in favor of subscription, it was therefore resolved that the “mayor of Clarksville be, and he is hereby, authorized and directed, in the name and for and on behalf of the municipality, . . . to formally subscribe for one hundred thousand dollars of the capital stock of the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, upon the terms and conditions of the proposition submitted,” and hereinbefore set out.
This formal act of subscription was clone by the mayor on the 15th day of April, 1902.
The original hill and the amendments thereto charge various irregularities as of an invalidating character in the holding of this election. The principal grounds of assault are:
(1) That the termini of the railroad to be constructed were not sufficiently definite.
(2) That the line of the contemplated railroad was not located in the application with sufficient certainty.
(3) That the city of Clarksville lacks power to malee the subscription.
(4) That the election was- ordered by resolution, when it should have been by ordinance.
(5) That, in giving the public notice calling the elec*708tion, the commissioners styled themselves “commissioners of election.”
(6) That the election was void because held at only two voting precincts, when'there were ten wards in the city.
(7) That there were 88 ballots cast which the officers of the election rejected without giving any reason therefor,
(8). That the ballots were not in proper form.
(9) That certain persons (naming them, 15 in number) voted in the election, “For Subscription,” about one-half of whom were disqualified by reason of their conviction of infamous crimes, and the remainder had been bribed by the railroad company to vote for subscription.
In addition, it is charged that the railroad had not been completed within the period of time fixed in the application or proposition, and that chapter 276, p. 796, of the Acts of 1903, ratifying and approving the subscription, was unconstitutional and void.
An examination of the record satisfies us that the first three of these grounds are without merit, and they are thus disposed of without discussion. This is equally true so far as the fifth ground is concerned, as it is apparent that the use of the word “election” instead of “registration” by the commissioners of registration in their public notice advertising the election was a clerical error, which was not misleading. As to the sixth ground, we do not understand the original bill to affirm that *709there were ten voting places in Clarksville — one in each ward — and that the election was held only in two of these wards, and therefore was invalid, hut rather that the city was divided into ten wards, and the election was held at two voting precincts; one being the police station, and the other the courthouse. Certainly the pleader did not understand himself so to allege, for in one of the amendments to the bill it is distinctly averred that there were three voting places in the city, and the polls were opened at only two of these. But it is nowhere alleged that any voter was deprived of his right of suffrage by such omission, or that detriment was worked to any one thereby. With regard to this irregularity, and those other irregularities embraced in the fourth, seventh, and eighth grounds set out above, we are satisfied that if chapter 276, p. 796, of the Acts of 1903, is constitutional, they have been condoned by the legislature, and cannot now be the basis of complaint. For it is well settled that under our constitution there may be special legislation as to municipal communities, from which it necessarily follows that the legislature, as to such communities, may ratify and approve what has been irregularly done by them, if it could have authorized in the beginning the thing to have been done at all.
But speaking to the ninth ground, we are not prepared to hold that an election carried by a corrupt use of money, or by the votes of person rendered infamous by judgments of courts of competent jurisdiction, would be any more validated by a subsequent act of the legisla*710ture than sucb use and sucb yotes could be authorized by prior legislative action. While it is true the theory as to the power of legislature is that it is unlimited, save by the State and federal- constitutions, yet we think it would hardly be maintained it could by a valid act sanction or authorize bribery, or the casting of ballots by persons who- had not been relieved from judgments of infamy pronounced against them,, in an election to be thereafter held in any municipality. The terms of our State constitution, making it the duty of the general assembly to pass laws “to secure freedom of elections; and the purity of the ballot box,” repel the implication of such power. It seems to us no argument is required to sustain this proposition. Its inherent soundness is found in its statément.
This being so, it becomes necessary to examine the pleadings in the cause, to ascertain whether complainants, in the face of the demurrer of defendants, have made such averments as will authorize the court to- investigate the election in question, so as to determine whether it was carried by the votes of electors corrupted by the use of money, or of persons disqualified by judgments of infamy pronounced against them by courts having jurisdiction. Before doing this, however, it is proper to bear in mind certain rules which control the courts in the investigation of fraud.
It is well settled that a mere general aveiment of fraud, without setting out the facts upon which the charge is predicated, is not sufficient. Wher&ver fraud *711is claimed as a basis of relief, it is held to be essential that the facts which constitute it shall be set out “clearly, concisely, and with sufficient particularity to apprise the defendant or the adversary party of what he is called upon to answer.” Fort v. Orndoff, 7 Heisk., 167; Winham v. Crutcher, 2 Tenn. Ch., 535; Raht v. Mining Co., 5 Lea, 1, and cases cited in note 1, p. 687, vol. 9, Ency. Pl. & Pr.
This is especially true where, as in the present case, extraordinary relief by injunction is required. “In such a case,” as is said by Chancellor Gibson in his work on Suits in Equity, section 785, “the bill is not only a pleading setting forth a cause of action, but it is also an affidavit showing reasons why the complainant is entitled to relief. ... If any averments are based on information at all, the source of the information should be stated, and the complainant aver his belief in its credibility. The bill should show definitely on its face what allegations are made on complainant’s own knowledge, and what on information and belief. The bill should be sworn to positively, and the affidavit should so show.”
The rule requiring specific allegations where fraud is averred as a ground for relief was rigidly applied in Crockett v. McLanahan, 109 Tenn., 517, 72 S. W., 950, 61 L. R. A., 914, where the legality of an election arose, because, as .was argued, a proposition such as we have in this case had not been carried by a constitutional majority of the qualified voters of Nashville. It was *712there held that the bill making suck an attack must give the names of the disqualified voters, so that an issue might be made as to their disqualification.
Turning now to the pleadings, we find that the original bill charges that 88 ballots were cast which were rejected by the judges of the election; but it is nowhere alleged that these were the ballots of qualified voters, or that the judges violated any legal duty in rejecting them.
We think it evident no relief could be given on such an averment, for, in addition to its vagueness, it must be assumed, in the lack of specific charge, that in this there was no abuse of power on the part of the judges holding the election; that they discharged their duty in rejecting these ballots — -in other words, that they were thrown out because illegally cast, or for some other reason going to their integrity as ballots.
In the original bill, in a very general way, it was charged that the railroad company used a large amount of money with purchasable voters, and in that corrupt way secured a “number of votes” for the proposition, and that, had it not been for the use of money in corrupting the electors, the number of votes cast “for subscription” would have been greatly below the number returned by the judges of the election.
We do not understand the counsel of complainants to insist “that the expensive machinery of a court of equity is to be put in operation for the purpose of reviewing this election” on such loose.and untráversable-*713allegations of fraud. Marquez v. Frisbie, 101 U. S., 473, 25 L. Ed., 800.
In certain amendments made to this bill, complainants undertook to make more, specific these averments as to fraud. In these they allege that they are informed, and therefore charge, that “representatives and agents of the railroad company gave money to the following parties in consideration of their votes, to wit [naming seven persons]; that they paid the poll taxes of some of these parties, and paid them from two to seven dollars each for their votes; and that these parties voted for the proposition.” They further allege that they are “informed, and therefore charge, that the following parties, to wit (naming nine persons), had prior to said election been convicted of infamous crimes and rendered infamous, and yet they voted in said election and for the proposition.”
Passing the failure of complainants to aver that they believe that which they thus charge on information, and dealing first with the averment in regard to the voters who were disqualified because of their conviction of infamous crimes, it will be observed it is not alleged that these convictions were had in a court or courts of competent jurisdiction, nor are the courts where these parties were tried, if tried at all, or the terms of the court at which such trials were had, anywhere alleged. There is nothing in the bill or the amendments thereto to put the defendants on notice as to these essential particulars, and, lacking them, we think the defendants were *714not called upon to answer, and that their demurrer, founded on vagueness in allegation, meets and repels so much of the bill as embraces those persons alleged to have been so disqualified.
It will be observed, further, while it is Charged that those persons named as having been bribed cast their ballots “for the proposition” (meaning, no doubt “for the subscription”), it is not averred the judges counted them in favor of subscriptions. The votes of persons rendered infamous by a court of competent jurisdiction, and discharged from the rights of citizenship, and of those persons who had been bribed, were illegal, and should have been rejected altogether. In the absence of a specific allegation or the necessary implication from an averment, it would seem it must be assumed on demurrer that all such votes were rejected, and constitute a part of the 88 thrown out by the officers of election. Again, it is not averred that these votes were counted in making up the total of the 681 votes cast, as the judges reported, by qualified voters in favor of subscription. In order to impeach the return of the judges of the election, upon whom rested the duty of accepting the ballots of qualified voters, and rejecting all others, and of making an honest return of the result of the election, it must be shown not only that there were vote's cast by disqualified voters in favor of subscription, but that these votes helped to make up the three-fourths majority reported to and by the commissioners of registration. For, as is said in the argument of the counsel of defend*715ant, it makes no difference how many illegal votes were cast and counted or rejected, so none of these illegal votes form an essential part of the constitutional total cast in favor of subscription. We think, in the absence of a distinct averment to that effect, the demurrer to" so much of the bill as brought these matters forward should have been sustained..
It is further insisted by the complainants that the railroad was not completed within the time stipulated in the proposition, and for this reason the city of Clarks-ville was not bound to issue its bonds in payment of its subscription. The bill shows, as has already been stated, that the election was held on the 8th day of August, 1901, and the city council passed an ordinance making effective the vote cast at this election on the 15th day of August, and at the same time directing the mayor to subscribé for the stock in the name of and for the benefit of the city. But there is no averment that the city or its agent came in legal contact with the railroad company at that or any other date, though it is assumed by the counsel for both parties in argument, and stated as a fact in the act of 1903, hereinbefore referred to, that the subscription was made by the mayor on the 15th of April, 1902. The insistence, however, of complainants, is that by the resolution of the board approving the election return, and authorizing a subscription by the mayor to the capital stock to be made, the act of subscription was consummated on the day this resolu-act of 1852) was not suspended by the acts of 1867, and *716the two years within which the road was to be completed began then, while that of demurrants is that it was not concluded or binding until the 15th of April, 1902, which was the date of the beginning of this period. If complainants are right, their argument implies that the condition as to the finishing and operation of the road within two years from the date of subscription was not met. If, however, that of demurrants was” right, it was complied with.
It would seem that a mere acceptance by the council of the city of Clarksville of the returns of the commissioners of registration, and the passage of an ordinance of resolution directing the mayor, “in the name of and for and on behalf of the municipality,” to formally subscribe, was not of itself a subscription which without more would bind the corporation. Nugent v. Supervisors, 19 Wall., 241, 22 L. Ed., 83; Moultrie v. Bank, 92 U. S., 631, 23 L. Ed., 631; Bates v. Winters, 97 U. S., 83, 24 L. Ed., 933. Why might not the council the next day have rescinded this action? If it had done so, could the railroad company have complained? Why might not, as in the case of any other proposition for a contract, the city have withdrawn this offer of acceptance before its communication to the railroad? It was not the case of the railroad offering to sell to the city of Clarksville $100,000 of its capital stock, but simply a proposition made to the authorities of the city for a subscription to that amount upon certain conditions embraced in the proposition, and a request that it be *717submitted in a legal way for the consideration and determination of the qualified voters of the city. The election that was accordingly held was- nothing more than a vote of authority to the corporation .to act upon and accept the proposition, not of itself an acceptance. Until the city, acting upon this warrant of authority, notified the railroad company in some legal way of its acceptance, the transaction was open and incomplete. It saw proper to accept, through its mayor, and by a subscription actually made by him. Until he acted formally, we are satisfied that neither party was bound as by a contract. At any time before this actual subscription, this offer upon the part of the railroad company, we think, might have been withdrawn by it. ■ And we see no reason for maintaining that it was not equally in the power of the city to decline to go further with the negotiation. It is insisted, however, that Nelson v. Haywood County, 87 Tenn., 781, 11 S. W., 885, 4 L. R. A., 648, is an authority for the contrary view. The facts there were that under the authority of an act of the legislature passed in February, 1870, the county court of Haywood county ordered an election to- be held for the purpose of ascertaining the sense of the voters of the county as to the issuance of bonds in aid of the construction of the Brownsville & Ohio- Railroad; that this election was held, and the officers holding the same certified to the county court that the result was that a majority of the votes was cast for the issuance of the bonds of the county. On the 4th óf May following, the county *718court, after reciting the previous order as to the election, and also the result thereof, ordered that “the chairman of this court be, and he is hereby, authorized, empowered, and ordered, in the name of Haywood county, to subscribe upon the books” for $100,000 of its capital stock, upon certain named conditions. This order further recited that “thereupon came into open court J. D. Smith, president of said Brownsville & Ohio Railroad Company, having been thereunto previously’ authorized by the board of directors of said company, and accepted in the name of said company the one' hundred thousand dollars of county subscription herein ordered and the issuance of said county bonds. . . .”
Upon the day following, to wit,’May 5, 1870, the present State constitution went into effect, by section 29, art. 2, of which it is provided “the credit of no county, city or town shall be given or loaned to, or in aid of any person, county, association or corporation, except upon an election to be first held by the qualified voters .... and the assent of three-fourths of the votes cast at said election.”
The validity of the bonds issued by the county of Haywood in aid of this railroad depended upon the question whether the subscription was made so as to be binding and effective before the constitution became operative. This court held, by a majority opinion, that, on the facts set out hereinbefore, the subscription was converted into a contract on the 4th day of May, 1870. The court said: “The contracting parties evidently under*719stood that the act of subscription was then and there consummated. No actual subscription on the books of the company was necessary.”
We have no doubt of the soundness of the conclusion announced in that case. There the minds of the two contracting parties came together on the 4th day of May. The county’s proposition to subscribe was accepted by the corporation on that day, through its duly constituted representative, and the manual subscription for the stock was unnecessary, and if .made thereafter would simply have been evidentiary. In ‘ the present case, however, we have no agent or officer of the railroad company, duly authorized to speak for it, presenting himself in the council chamber, and by speech and manner accepting the city’s offer to subscribe for the stock-, and thus converting the offer into a subscription binding in law.
It is next said in argument, though not alleged by complainants as a ground for. relief, that the act of 1887 under which this election was held contemplated a submission to the vote of the qualified electors of Clarks-ville, as an indivisible proposition, of the question of subscription and that of the mode and terms of payment of that subscription. If this was essential, as was argued, we think it was practically done in tliis case, as the notice of commissioners of registration of this election had appénded, as a part of it, a copy of the proposition, for the information of the voters, and we think every vote for subscription was an approval of the proposi*720tion in its entirety. We do not think, however, that under the constitution there was any necessity on the part of the city to submit to the vote of the people the question as to the mode or manner of payment of the subscription. As was said in the case of Johnson City v. Railroad, 100 Tenn., 138, 44 S. W., 670, the payment for the subscription was in no sense the lending of credit of the city, and therefore there was no constitutional duty upon the city authorities to' submit this qustion to be voted upon. We are satisfied that there was no occasion for the submission of any other question than the one upon which the citizens of Clarksville voted, which, as has already been said, necessarily involved so much of the proposition as covered the mode of payment.
The next question is upon chapter 276, p. 796, of the Acts of 1903. Is it constitutional? And if so, what is its effect?
This act is entitled “An act to approve a subscription made by the city of Clarksville for one hundred thousand dollars of the capital stock of the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, and to authorize said city to issue its bonds in payment of same, or to provide cash funds for payment.”
The preamble to this act contains recitals of the submission by the board of mayor and aldermen of the proposition to subscribe for $100,000 of the capital stock of the railroad company to the qualified voters of the city of Clarksville, and of the holding of the election, and of the resolution of the board affirming the election to *721have been fair, with, the result that more than three-fourths of the qualified voters of the city had voted in favor of the subscription, and that under the authority of an ordinance passed thereafter by the board, empowering him so to do, the mayor had duly, on the 15th of April, 1902, in the name and on behalf of the city, made the subscription, and that the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company had changed its corporate name to that of the Tennessee Central Railroad Company. This preamble is then followed by the enacting sections or clauses, only two of which need be mentioned. The first of them provides “that the .... subscription by the city of Clarksville of one hundred thousand dollars of the capital stock of the Nashville & Clarks-ville Railroad Company .... be and the same is hereby ratified and approved; and that the said city . . be and is.■ empowered to provide either .by resolution or ordinance of its governing body . . . for the issuance of .' . . . its negotiable bonds . . . . running the period and bearing the rate of interest prescribed by the terms of said subscription, and deliver the same to said railroad company in payment of said subscription, in the manner and upon the terms .... contained in the subscription ordinance.”
The second section is as follows: “Be it further enacted, that in the event the said city of Clarksville shall elect to pay said subscription in cash, it may in like man*722ner, by resolution or ordinance of its governing body, approved by the mayor, provide'for the issuance of and issue its negotiable bonds in a sum not exceeding one hundred thousand dollars, in such denominations, and running for such period of time, and bearing such rate of interest not exceeding six per cent, per annum, as may be determined by said resolution or ordinance, and sell the same at not less than par for the purpose of providing cash funds for the payment of said subscription, and may use and apply the proceeds ... as may be necessary in the payment of said subscription when the same shall become due and payable: provided, in no event shall this act be held to authorize the issuance of more than one hundred thousand dollars of bonds, par value, by the said city of Clarksville, and in case the said bonds should be sold by the said city at a premium, any excess of proceeds from the bonds sold, above the amount required to pay said subscription, shall be covered into the treasury of said city as a special fund, and to be applied to the payment of interest accruing after the issuance upon the bonds issued.”
In the first place, the complainants, through their able counsel, insist that this act is void because it is a partial law, suspending, for the benefit of the city of Clarksville, the general railroad subscription act of 1887, modified, as is contended, by the general election law known as the “Dortch Law” of 1890.
Since the case of State v. Wilson, 12 Lea, 246, it has been the settled law of this State that special legislation *723as to municipal corporations is not within tbe inhibition of article 11, section 8, of tbe constitution of 1870. Since tbe opinion in that case (its conclusion being reaffirmed .in Ballentine v. Pulaski, 15 Lea, 636), many acts of tbe legislature dealing with particular municipal corporations have been passed, some of wbicb have been before tbis court, and tbe authority of these two cases has been uniformly recognized. See Williams v. Nashville, 89 Tenn., 487, 15 S. W., 364; Reelfoot v. Dawson, 97 Tenn., 151, 36 S. W., 1041, 34 L. R. A., 725; Burnett v. Maloney, 97 Tenn., 697, 37 S. W., 689, 34 L. R.A., 541; Davis v. Rogersville, 107 Tenn., 588, 64 S. W., 893; Redistricting Cases, 111 Tenn., 234, 80 S. W., 750.
Coming now to tbe question raised by tbe complainants, that tbe ratifying or curative act of 1903 is a partial law suspending general laws for tbe benefit of tbe city of Clarksville, we think tbe case of Lauderdale County v. Fargasson, 7 Lea, 153, a controlling authority against tbis contention. That case arose under tbe constitution of 1834, and involved tbe legality of bonds issued in accordance with two acts of tbe legislature, tbe first of wbicb was passed February 25, and the last Nov. 5, 1867.
By these acts, any county along tbe line wbicb tbe Mississippi Railroad was proposing to build was authorized to subscribe for its capital stock to any amount not exceeding two-tbirds of tbe estimated cost of grading tbe roadbed through tbq county, and to- issue short-time bonds to tbe railroad company in anticipation of tbe revenues to be raised from taxes wbicb tbe county *724was empowered to levy to meet these bonds; and this was to be done by the majority of the justices of the county, assembled either in general or special session, without referring the matter to the qualified voters of the county. At the time of the passage of these acts the general railroad subscription act of 1852 was in force, by the terms of which all counties and incorporated towns and’ cities of the State were authorized to make such subscriptions in the prescribed way and upon prescribed conditions, a majority of the qualified voters assenting thereto1, but not otherwise.
The line of. this projected road was laid out to pass through Lauderdale county and a majority of the justices of the county, in court assembled under the authority of the acts of 1887, made a subscription for an amount of the capital stock of that road, and issued short-time bonds to the railroad company in payment of that stock; and the case in Question involved the validity of this action.
It was insisted by the complainant, Fargason, that the act of 1852 was “the general law of the land at the time of the passage of the act under which these bonds are [were] issued, and that these acts were void, and that either they suspended a general law for the benefit of the particular counties, or else conferred a benefit on these counties inconsistent with the general law of the land.” The court said, however, that this insistence was in no sense sound, that the general law (that is, the ast of 1852) was not suspended by the acts of 1867, and *725that the prohibition of the constitutional provision referred to had no rightful application to the contracting of obligation by which burdens are self-imposed by counties and incorporated towns. It is true, this case arose under the constitution of 1834, but the section of that constitution invoked to invalidate the bonds in question is repeated in totidem verbis in our present constitution. So this court referred to it as authority in Burnett v. Maloney, supra. While in this latter case there was a dissenting opinion, yet it did not reach the point we are now considering; and, so far as the record shows there was a concurrence of view by all the judges on this point. We do not see any reason now to doubt the soundness of the conclusion announced in the Fargason case; nor can we see any peril likely to result from adapting legislation to meet the special needs of particular counties, cities, or incorporated towns. It is true, many evils have resulted from the self-imposition by municipal corporations of burdens in the way of bonuses or subscriptions to the capital stock of railroads, yet we think, if these burdens are to be avoided, some other ground for doing so must be found than the one insisted upon by the complainants.
It is next contended that this ratifying or curative act is .violative of section 17 of article 2 of our constitution, which provides as follows: “No bill'shall become a law which embraces more than one subject, that subject to be expressed in the title.”
Assuming for the moment that the legislature may, *726within proper constitutional limitations, pass a ratifying or curative act, does the present act have the vice thus attributed to it? Its avowed purpose was to approve the subscription already made by the city of Clarksville to the capital stock of the Nashville & Clarksville Railroad Company, and to authorize the city to provide funds for the payment of the same. The body of the act corresponds with the title, and the question is, does the act contain more than one subject?
This act was drafted in view of the contract already made by the city with the railroad company. By the terms of the contract, payment for the stock which the city agreed to take might be made either in cash or twenty-year bonds of the city, bearing interest at not less than 4 per cent., payable semiannually, as the city might elect. This contract was strictly within the limitations of section 12 of chapter 3, p. 60, of the Acts of 1887. We think it clear that the act and proposition both contemplated that after the subscription was made the option was to be open for the city of Clarksville to determine the mode of payment for this either in its 20-years bonds or in cash; the limitation on this option being that if paid in bonds they should bear not less than 4 per cent, interest. Thus the matter stood at the passage of the act of 1903, and it would seem that any resolution which came to the aid of the city in discharging its contract in either mode would be in harmony with the contract, and would derogate neither from the rights of the railroad nor the city.
*727And further it would seem that any provision by the act itself of the method by which the city could discharge its liability or its subscription would be cognate to the purpose of the act. It is as if the legislature had said to the city of Clarksville: “I authorize you to make this subscription, or, having made it, I now ratify it, and empower you to use one of two methods to discharge your liability — either to issue your bonds direct to the railroad, bearing not more than six per cent, interest, in payment thereof, or else to put the bonds on the market for the purpose of realizing cash and appropriating enough of the funds so received to pay the subscription; the excess, if any, to be covered into your treasury.” The authority to incur the obligation involved the idea of payment. The two were connected, so that, in authorizing the one, naturally the other was to be provided for. And so it was, when the legislature came to its act of ratification of the* contract already made,-it provided, of logical necessity, the method by which the contract was to be discharged; and in so doing it was acting, as we think, strictly within constitutional limitations.
In Ryan v. Terminal Company, 102 Tenn., 111, 50 S. W., 744, 45 L. R. A., 303, this clause of the constitution Ayas invoked to invalidate an act entitled “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act to provide for the organization of railroad terminal corporations and define the powers, duties and liabilities thereof/ ” because, as was insisted, this title covered much of incongruous legislation. Among the provisions found in the act which Avere *728supposed to be subject to this criticism were those which empowered railroad companies entering into contracts with the terminal company to guaranty the principal and interest of bonds issued by such company, as well as other contracts made by it in regard to its corporate business, and also to subscribe for holding and disposing of the capital stock or bonds which might be issued by the terminal corporation.
It was there argued with much force and plausibility that these provisions were foreign to the title, and introduced into the body of the act new and independent subjects. After a review of the authorities, the court rejected this contention, and, adopting the language of Judge Cooley, said, “The generality of a title is no- objection to it, so long as it is not made a cover to legislation incongruous in itself, and which by no fair intendment can be considered as bearing necessary or proper connection.”
Again returning to the line of suggestion already made, had this been an act authorizing the city of Clarksville to subscribe for $100,000 capital stock of this railroad in the event three-fourths of the qualified voters of the city, at an election held, approved the subscription, and to issue, its bonds to pay for the same, and both these matters were embraced in the title and the body of the act, could it be maintained that these were distinct and independent subjects, making the whole act void? That the authority to subscribe was one thing, and providing a mode of payment was a dif*729ferent thing? If these questions must be affirmatively answered, then chapter 3, page 57, of the Acts of 1887, providing a general law for subscription to the stock of railroads, which complainant seeks to interpose as an obstacle to this special act, is also void. For on examination it is found to contain the same vice charged against this special legislation. That act is entitled “An act to empower counties and incorporated cities, and towns to subscribe to the capital stock of any railroad company, . . . and to provide for the payment of such subscriptions.” Section 12 of this act follows the title, and does what section 2 of chapter 276, page 797, of the Acts of 1903, attempts to do; that is, it provided a method of discharging a subscription made under the terms of this general act. This statute has been standing unchallenged for about seventeen years, and under it, no doubt, subscriptions have been made, and many bonds issued; and while this would not prevent the court from declaring it, if necessary to do so, unconsti-stitutional, yet it would greatly increase our responsibility, and require of us the closest scrutiny before reaching such result.
But the argument of the counsel of complainant in relying upon this act as one which, in part, serves to avoid the curative act of 1903, by clear implication, concedes the constitutionality of that act; and we think that, if in it there was no violation of the constitutional provision in question, there is none in the act now being examined. We do not think, however, either of these *730acts obnoxious to tbe clause of tbe constitution invoked bj tbe complainants.
It is further insisted that chapter 276 is void because it confers a new power upon tbe city, in that it authorizes tbe issuance of bonds for a longer term than twenty years, by mere resolution of tbe municipal board, when one of tbe terms of tbe proposition voted on was that payment should be made in 20-year bonds, bearing not ■■more than 4 per cent, interest. It is true that section 2 of tbe act does not fix tbe date of tbe maturity of tbe bonds which are to be issued under its authority, but chapter 3, page 57, of tbe Acts of 1887, does; and these two acts, being in pari materia on this point, are to be construed together, so as to impose a 20-years’ limitation in tbe running of these bonds, and thus leave tbe proposition and section 2 of chapter 276, page 796, corresponding in every particular.
Nor does section 2 of chapter 276 make a departure so far as interest is concerned. The proposition submitted was to take bonds in payment of tbe subscription, bearing interest at not less than 4 per cent. Not more than 6 per cent, could be paid on these bonds under tbe law. Tbe proposition therefore left it open for adjustment, as between tbe city and the railroad, as to tbe rate of interest — anywhere between 4 per cent, and’6 per cent. So, when tbe legislature authorized tbe issuance of these bonds, and limited interest upon them to 6 per cent., we do not discover in what respect it made *731a departure from tbe terms of tbe proposition submitted to and accepted by tbe city.
Tbis leaves open, as tbe only question yet to be determined, tbe right of tbe legislature to pass chapter 276 of tbe Acts of 1903, and its legal effect. Tbis question has already been answered in our reported cases. Shields v. Land Company, 94 Tenn., 123, 28 S. W., 668, 26 L. R. A., 509, 45 Am. St. Rep., 700; Muse v. Lexington, 110 Tenn., 655, 76 S. W., 481. Tbe import of these cases may be condensed in a paragraph from Sykes v. Mayor, 55 Miss., 137, embodied and approved in tbe opinion of tbe court in Grenada Supervisors v. Brown, 112 U. S., 261, 5 Sup. Ct., 125, 28 L. Ed., 704: “The idea implied in tbe ratification of a municipal act performed without previous legislative authority is that tbe ratifying communicates authority which relates back to and retrospectively vivifies and legalizes tbe act, as if the poAver bad been previously given.”
It results that tbe demurrer to tbe bill on tbe point discussed herein was well taken, and tbe decree of tbe court of chancery appeals must be reversed and tbe bill of complainants dismissed.