Bliss v. Pathfinder Irrigation District

240 N.W. 291, 122 Neb. 203, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 18
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1932
DocketNo. 28019
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 240 N.W. 291 (Bliss v. Pathfinder Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bliss v. Pathfinder Irrigation District, 240 N.W. 291, 122 Neb. 203, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 18 (Neb. 1932).

Opinion

Good, J.

This is an action to cancel a real estate mortgage and to quiet in plaintiff title to the mortgaged premises. The trial court entered a decree for plaintiff. Defendant has appealed.

The state bank, of which plaintiff is now receiver, executed and delivered to defendant a mortgage for $5,000 on real estate, an asset of the bank, to secure repayment of deposits of funds that defendant thereafter might make in the bank. Later the bank became insolvent and a re-, ceiver was appointed, at which time defendant had $4,714.23 deposited in the bank. The receiver seeks to have the mortgage canceled on the ground that the bank [204]*204had no authority to pledge any of its assets to secure such a deposit, and that the contract securing it was against public policy.

In its answer defendant set out in detail the transaction, and claimed that the mortgage was a valid lien to secure its deposit. The answer also contained the following: “Defendant denies that the Irrigators Bank of Scottsbluff, Nebraska, is a corporation duly organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Nebraska.” A general demurrer to the answer was sustained. Defendant elected to stand upon its answer and refused to further plead.

Defendant argues that the quoted denial puts in issue the corporate capacity of the bank. The denial is of the exact language of an allegation in the petition. The argument is unsound. There is pleaded only a legal conclusion. The denial is in the nature of a negative pregnant. It might be that the bank had failed in some immaterial respect to fully comply with the law in its organization as a corporation, but which failure would be insufficient to deprive it of the right to transact business as a banking-corporation. No fact is pleaded which shows in what respect, if any, the bank failed to comply with the statutory requirements in its organization. In fact, defendant dealt with the bank and accepted from it a mortgage executed by it as a corporation. In Knight v. Denman, 64 Neb. 814, it is held: “A denial of the very words of the allegations of the petition, without denying their substance and effect, tenders no issue.”

The principal question for determination is the power of a state bank to pledge any of its assets to secure the deposit of funds by an irrigation district. The statutes of this state authorize state bahks to pledge assets to secure the deposit of certain public funds where the bank has been designated as a depository. Section 77-2506 and section 77-2601, Comp. St. 1929, as construed by this court in Bliss v. Mason, 121 Neb. 484, authorize a state bank, designated as a county depository, to pledge sufficient of its assets [205]*205to protect the deposit of county funds in the depository bank. It is contended by defendant that the opinion in that case is authority for the securing of a deposit of any public funds by pledge of assets. It is true the language contained in that opinion uses the term “public funds.” It is a universal rule that the language in a j udicial opinion has reference to and must be construed to apply only to the facts presented by the case under consideration. Whether a state bank could pledge any of its assets to secure a deposit of public funds other than county was not , intended to be, and was not, in fact, determined in that case.

Defendant contends that section 77-2601, Comp. St. 1929, authorizes a state bank to pledge sufficient of its assets to secure the deposit of funds made by an irrigation district. That section provides, in part, as follows: “In all cases in which public moneys, or other funds belonging to the state or to any county, school district, city or municipality thereof, have been deposited or loaned to any person or persons, corporations, bank, * * * it shall be lawful for the officer or. officers making such deposit or loan, or his or their successors in office, to maintain an action or actions for the recovery of such moneys deposited or loaned, and all contracts for the security or payment of any such moneys or public funds made shall be held to be good and lawful contracts binding on all parties thereto.” It is contended that an irrigation district is a municipality, within the meaning of the quoted section.

Corporations are generally classed as public and private. While a municipality is a public corporation, it does not follow that every public corporation is a municipality. In 1 Dillon, Municipal Corporations (5th ed.) 58, sec. 31, the term “municipal corporation” is defined as follows: “A municipal corporation, in its strict and proper sense, is the body politic and corporate constituted by the incorporation of the inhabitants of a city or town for the purposes of local government thereof. Municipal corporations as they exist in this country are bodies politic and corporate of the [206]*206general character above described, established by law partly as an agency of the state to assist in the civil government of the country, but chiefly to regulate and administer the local or internal affairs of the city, town,, or district which is incorporated.” A like definition is found in 43 C. J. 65, and in the same volume, at page 72, we find the following with respect to public corporations: “Public corporations are all those created specially for public purposes as instruments or agencies to increase the efficiency of government, supply public wants, and promote the public welfare. Public corporations are classified as municipal, quasi-municipal, and public-quasi corporations. Public corporations include not only municipal corporations, but also all other incorporated agencies of government of whatever size and form or degree of organization. While all municipal corporations are public corporations, all public corporations are not municipal corporations.”

In 43 C. J. 73, it is said: “There is a want of harmony in the decisions relating to what local subdivisions are embraced by the phrase ‘municipal corporations.’ There are many public bodies which are not corporations in the full sense but resemble them in that they have some of the attributes of a corporation, and which are therefore called quasi corporations. Some of these are almost perfect in their organization and scarcely distinguishable from municipal corporations. Others represent the lowest order of corporate life, with few powers and imperfect organization. Between these two extremes are a large number of districts erected as agencies of government, of divers names and objects, with varying degrees of organization; sometimes styled political, sometimes public, sometimes civil; including counties, towns, townships, school districts, drainage districts, highway districts, improvement districts, hospital districts, irrigation districts, * * * and all other sections of territory delimited and organized for the performance of certain governmental functions; * * * such bodies are not ‘municipal corporations’ or ‘municipalities’ in the proper sense.”

[207]*207In Board of Directors of Alfalfa Irrigation District v. Collins, 46 Neb. 411, it is held: “Irrigation districts organized under our laws are public, rather than municipal corporations, and their officers are public agents of the state." This holding was approved and followed in Lincoln & Dawson County Irrigation District v. McNeal, 60 Neb. 613. There have been many sessions of the legislature since these decisions were handed down. Had the legislature desired, it could have amended section 77-2601, supra, to include irrigation districts.

In State v.

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Bluebook (online)
240 N.W. 291, 122 Neb. 203, 1932 Neb. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bliss-v-pathfinder-irrigation-district-neb-1932.