Bankers Bond Co. v. Buckingham, Commonwealth Treasurer

97 S.W.2d 596, 265 Ky. 712, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 564
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 23, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 97 S.W.2d 596 (Bankers Bond Co. v. Buckingham, Commonwealth Treasurer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers Bond Co. v. Buckingham, Commonwealth Treasurer, 97 S.W.2d 596, 265 Ky. 712, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 564 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— rAffirming.

The part of section 4688a-2 of our present Statutes pertinent to this controversy says: “Whenever any warrant hereafter issued by the auditor of public accounts shall be presented to the. treasurer for redemption, and the funds appropriated for ■ the purpose for which said warrant was issued are exhausted, the treasurer shall endorse thereon the date of its presentation with the words, ‘No funds with which to pay this warrant, and it bears five per cent [5%] interest from this date until called in/ with his official signature thereto, and such warrant shall thereafter bear interest at the rate of five per cent [5%] per annum, payable semiannually.” That language was first enacted in its present form by chapter 72, Acts of 1910, p. 217; it being section 3 of that act. The constitutionality of the authority thereby conferred was questioned in the case of Rhea v. Newman, 153 Ky. 604, 156 S. W. 154, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.) 989, but it was upheld. The doctrine of staredecisis renders that declared policy immune from successful attack, even if it should be insisted that the conclusion reached in the Rhea opinion was erroneous. But. *714 there is no manifested disposition to do so, and it will not be referred to herein nor any discussion of the question made.

This litigation, while involving a question of wide and supreme importance to the general public of this commonwealth, involves but a simple and short transaction, and presents only three direct and narrow questions for determination. The facts Upon which it is based and out of which it grew are these: Appellant and plaintiff below, Bankers Bond Company, is a corporation having the right to do the things set out below, with an office in the city of Louisville. Hon. John E. Buckingham, one of the appellees and a defendant below, is the duly elected and qualified treasurer of the commonwealth; whilst the other defendant below and appellee here, Buchannon-Lyon Company, is a commercial corporation with its chief office in the city of Louisville, Ky. It furnished material to the Welfare Department of the Commonwealth for the benefit of the Central State Hospital at Anchorage, Ky., the contract price- of which was $500. It produced its certified claim to the auditor of public accounts, and' he issued his warnant to the treasurer. (Buckingham) for its payment. There were no funds in the budget, or otherwise available for the payment of the claim at the time defendant Buchannon-Lyon Company presented the auditor’s warrant to the treasurer, and the latter agreed with the claimant to obtain an- immediate purchaser for any warrant that he might issue for the amount of the claim, whereby the holder' of it could obtain cash for its face value, provided the holder would agree for the warrant to be stamped as bearing only 3 per cent, interest. That proposition was agreed to, and its terms were thus stated in the endorsement on the back of the treasurer’s warrant issued pursuant to the understanding: “Whereas, the commonwealth of Kentucky has no funds with which to pay this warrant, and whereas, the payee desires the face value in cash thereof immediately, therefore, in consideration of the Treasurer of Kentucky procuring an immediate purchaser of this warrant at par and the payment of the purchase price to the undersigned, the holder hereby assigns and transfers this warrant to-, or bearer, and agrees that same shall bear interest at three per cent [3%] per annum only from this date until called for. redemption .or payment *715 according to law. This the-day of-•, 19-.” (Duly signed.)

On the same day of the issual of the warrant, and the signing of its inserted indorsement (through and by the efforts of the state treasurer), the plaintiff and appellant, Bankers Bond Company, agreed to and did purchase the treasurer’s warrant so issued’and stamped as bearing 3 per cent, interest, and the proceeds thereof were delivered to the payee, Buchannon-Lyon Company. There were six interest coupons attached to it and which was an innovation in the method heretofore pursued. However, they each contained language guarding against duplicate payments and expressly prescribing, in substance, that they ceased to be obligatory upon, the payment of the warrant to which they were attached; the warrant, of course, having no fixed due' date and conforming to the plan outlined in the 1910 act as approved in the Rhea opinion. On the same day, or within a short time thereafter, the appellant, as purchaser and assignee of the warrant, presented it to the state treasurer and demanded either the issual to it of a new one stamped as bearing 5 per cent, interest, or inserting that rate in the assigned one to it. Such action on its part was based upon its contentions that: (1) The inserted portion of section 46“68a-2, supra, mandatorily required the stamping of such warrants (when their issue was permissible) as bearing 5 per cent, interest, and which was mandatory and was not subject to alteration, even by agreement of parties; (2) that if mistaken in contention (1), then there was no consideration for the agreed reduction of interest rate; and (3) that the attachment of coupons to the warrant was unauthorized and violative of the statute and rendered it wholly invalid. The treasurer declined to comply with that request, and plaintiff (assignee pf the warrant) then filed this equity action against him in which it joined the original payee of the warrant as a defendant. In its petition it set out the facts as above recounted and prayed for mandatory process requiring the treasurer to comply with its request. There were filed with the petition copies of the warrant, the coupons attached to it, and the indorsement as set out supra, and all necessary exhibits to properly present the questions. Defendants demurred generally to the petition which the court sustained, and, plaintiff declining to plead fur *716 “ther, its petition was dismissed, to reverse which it prosecutes this appeal.

At the outset we deem it not improper to state that "this is a friendly suit, but based upon actual facts, with no collusive coloring, in a bona fide effort to determine the questions raised on account of their supreme importance. There is, therefore, almost complete accord in arguments made by counsel representing the respective litigants; and which is to the “effect that the arrangement outlined and pursued by the parties up to the •time of the assignment of the warrant to plaintiff was legal in every respect and that the objections made by plaintiff were none of them meritorious. Our task is to •determine whether such opinions of counsel, and that •entertained also by the learned trial court as embodied in his judgment, are or are not correct. In discharging it we will consider and -determine the questions in the •order named.

1. That the requirement for the character of warrant here involved to be stamped as bearing interest at 5 per cent, is mandatory to the extent that it could not be made to bear a higher rate of interest is undoubtedly true, since to do so would allow contracting parties to ;set aside and annul the wholesome legislative public policy embodied in statutes against usury, which is the taking and accepting of interest over and above the rate fixed by law. No appending of authority is necessary in fortification of that statement.

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.W.2d 596, 265 Ky. 712, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-bond-co-v-buckingham-commonwealth-treasurer-kyctapphigh-1936.