Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Middleport

124 U.S. 534, 8 S. Ct. 625, 31 L. Ed. 537, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1893
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 6, 1888
Docket1134
StatusPublished
Cited by176 cases

This text of 124 U.S. 534 (Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Middleport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Middleport, 124 U.S. 534, 8 S. Ct. 625, 31 L. Ed. 537, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1893 (1888).

Opinion

Me. Justice Millee,

after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.

In the argument of the demurrer before the Circuit Court several objections to the bill were taken. The defendant in error,1 however, relies here upon three principal grounds of defence : First, it denies the right of subrogation, upon which rests the whole case of the complainant; second, it relies upon the statute of limitations of five years; and third, it asserts that the former decree in the state court is a bar to the action here.

The Circuit Court held that the statute of limitations was a bar to the present suit, and dismissed the bill on that ground.

But we regard the primary question, whether the complainant is entitled to be substituted to the rights of the railroad company after buying the bonds of the township, a much more important question, and are unanimously of opinion that the transaction does not authorize such subrogation.

The bonds in question in this suit were delivered by the agents of the town of Middleport to the railroad company, and by that company sold in open market as negotiable instruments to the complainant in this action. There was no in-dorsement, nor is there any allegation in the bill that there was any express agreement that the sale of these bonds carried with them any obligation which the company might have had to enforce the appropriation voted by the town. Notwithstanding the averment in the bill that the intent of complainant in purchasing said bonds, and paying its money therefor, was to acquire such rights of subrogation, it cannot be received as any sufficient allegation that there was a valid contract to that effect. On the contrary, the bill fairly presents the idea that by reason of the facts of the sale the complainant -was in equity subrogated to said rights, and entitled to enforce the same against the town of Middleport.

The argument of the learned counsel in the case is based entirely upon the right of the complainant to be subrogated *545 to the rights of the railroad company by virtue of the principles of equity and justice. He does not set up any claim of an express contract for such subrogation. He says:

The equity alleged in the plaintiff’s bill is, as I have said, the equity of subrogation. Before proceeding to call the attention of the court to the facts from which this equity arises, it may be useful to advert to the instances in which the right of subrogation exists, and to the principles on which it. rests.”

He founds his argument entirely upon the proposition, that when .the complainant purchased these bonds he thereby paid the debt .of the town of Middleport to the railroad company, as voted by it, and that because it paid this money to that company on bonds which are void, it should be subrogated to, the right of the company against the town.

The authorities on which he relies are all cases in which the party subrogated has actually paid a debt of one party due to another, and claims the right to any security which the payee in that transaction had against the original debtor. But there is no payment in the case before us of any debt of the town. The purpose of the purchase, as well as the sale of these bonds, and what the parties supposed they had effected by it, was not the payment of that debt, but the sale and transfer of a debt of the town from one party to another, which debt was evi- • denced by the bonds that were thus transferred. Neither party had any idea of extinguishing by this transaction the debt of the town. It Avas very clear that it Avas a debt yet to be paid, and the discount and interest on the bonds aauis the consideration Avhich induced the complainant to buy them.

The language of this court in Otis et al. v. Cullum, Receiver, 92 U. S. 447, is very apt, and expresses precisely Avhat was done in this case. In that case Otis & Company were the purchasers of bonds of the city of Topeka from the First National Bank of that place. These bonds Avere afterwards held by this court to be void for want of authority, just as in the case before us. A suit Avas brought against the bank, which had failed and was in the hands of a receiver, to recover back the money paid to it for the bonds. After referring to the decis *546 •ion of Lambert v. Heath, 15 Meeson & Welsby, 486, this court said:

“ Here, also, the plaintiffs in error got exactly what they intended to buy, and did buy. They took no guaranty. They are seeking to recover, as it were, upon one, while none exists. They are not clothed with the rights which such a stipulation would have given them. Not having taken it, they cannot have the benefit of it. The bank cannot be charged with a liability which it did not assume. Such securities throng the channels of commerce, which they are made to seek, and where they find their market. They pass from hand to hand like bank notes. The seller is liable ex delicto for bad faith; and ex contractu there is an implied warranty on his part that they belong to him, and that they are not forgeries. Where there is no express stipulation, there is no liability beyond this. If the buyer desires special protection, he must take a guaranty. He can dictate its terms, and refuse to buy unless it be given. If not taken, he cannot occupy the vantage ground upon which it would have placed him.” p. 449.

Nor can this case be sustained upon the principle laid down in this court in Louisiana v. Wood, 102 U. S. 294. That was a case in which the city of Louisiana, having a right by its charter to borrow money, had issued .bonds and placed them on the market for that purpose. These bonds were negotiated by the agents of the city, and the money received for their sale went directly into its treasury. It was afterwards held that they were invalid for want of being'registered. Afterwards the parties who had bought these bonds brought suit against the city for the sum they had paid, on the ground that the city had received their money without any consideration, and was bound ex aequo et bono to pay it back. The court said:

“ The only contract actually entered into is the one the law implies from what was done, to wit, that the city would, on demand, return the money paid to it by mistake, and, as the money was got under a form of obligation which was apparently good, that interest should be paid at the legal rate from the time the obligation was denied.”

In the present case there was no borrowing of money. *547 There was nothing which pretended to take that form. No money of the complainants ever went into the treasury of the town of Middleport; that municipality never received any money in that transaction. It did not sell the bonds, either to complainant or anybody else. It simply delivered bonds, which it had no authority to issue, to the railroad company, and that corporation acceptecLthem in satisfaction of the donation by way of taxation which had been voted in aid of the construction of its road.

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Bluebook (online)
124 U.S. 534, 8 S. Ct. 625, 31 L. Ed. 537, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-life-ins-co-v-middleport-scotus-1888.