109 US 1 Osborne v. County of Adams

109 U.S. 1

3 S.Ct. 150

27 L.Ed. 835

OSBORNE, Jr.,
v.
COUNTY OF ADAMS, in the State of Nebraska.

October 15, 1883.

Adna H. Bowen and Mott Ames, for petition.

No counsel in opposition.

HARLAN, J.

1

This case was decided at the last term of this court, and is reported in 106 U. S. 181; [S. C. 1 SUP. CT. REP. 168.] We there held that a steam grist-mill was not a work of internal improvement, within the meaning of the statute of Nebraska, approved February 15, 1869, authorizing counties, cities, and precincts of organized counties 'to issue bonds to aid in the construction of any railroad or other work of internal improvement.' It was also said that the court was not justified by anything in Township of Burlington v. Beasley, 94 U. S. 310, or in the decisions of the courts of Nebraska, 'in holding that a steam or other kind of grist-mill is of the class of internal improvements which municipal townships in that state are empowered, by the statute in question, to aid by an issue of bonds.'

2

A petition for rehearing was filed near the close of the last term, calling our attention to the fact that the supreme court of Nebraska had then recently decided that a grist-mill operated by water-power was a work of internal improvement within the meaning of the before-mentioned statute. The judgment was suspended in order that appellee might have an opportunity of presenting the full text of the opinion of the state court. That has been done at the present term. The case to which reference is made is made is Traver v. Merrick Co. 5 N. W. Rep. 690, the opinion in which was not filed in the state court until after the close of our last term.

3

It is quite true, as claimed by counsel for appellee, that the state court does, in that case, rule that a water grist-mill is a work of internal improvement within the meaning of the statute in question. But the court takes care to say:

4

'In our view there is a clear distinction between aiding the development of the water-power of the state—a power that is continuing in its nature and may be used without cost or expense, and must be used at certain points on a stream where a dam can be erected and power obtained—and a mill propelled by steam, that must be attended with a continuous cost for fuel, and may at any time be moved to another locality.'

5

So far from the decision of the state court furnishing any ground for a rehearing, it is an authority in support of that construction of the act of 1867 which excludes steam grist-mills from the class of internal improvements in aid of which counties, cities, and precincts of organized counties are, by the statute, authorized to issue their bonds. The rehearing is denied.