Bloomfield v. Charter Oak Bank

121 U.S. 121, 7 S. Ct. 865, 30 L. Ed. 923, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2029
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 4, 1887
Docket119
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 121 U.S. 121 (Bloomfield v. Charter Oak Bank) 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
Bloomfield v. Charter Oak Bank, 121 U.S. 121, 7 S. Ct. 865, 30 L. Ed. 923, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2029 (1887).

Opinion

*129 .Mr. Justice Gray,

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

W e have not found it necessary to consider how far a town in .Connecticut has the power to give promissory notes, because in our opinion the evidence in this case is incompetent to prove that this town ever authorized its treasurer to make the notes in suit, Or did any :act which made them binding on the town.

Towns in Connecticut, as in the other New England Statés, differ from trading companies, and even from municipal corporations elsewhere. They are territorial corporations,'.into which the State is. divided by the legislature, from time' to time, at its discretion, for political purposes and the-convenient administration of -governnlent; they have those powers only, which have1 been expressly conferred upon them by statute, or which- are necessary for conducting municipal affairs; and all the inhabitants of a town are members-of the quasi corporation. 1 Swift’s System, 116, 117; Granby v. Thurston, 23 Conn. 416; Webster v. Harwinton, 32 Conn. 131; Dillon Mun. Corp. §§ 28-30.

• In Connecticut, as in Massachusetts and Maine, by common law or immemorial usage, the property of any inhabitant may be taken-on execution upon a judgment-against the town. Atwater v. Woodbridge, 6 Conn. 223, 228; 1 McLoud v. Selby, 10 Conn. 390; 2 Beardsley v. Smith, 16 Conn. 368; 3 5 Dane Ab. 158; Chase v. Merrimack Bank, 19 Pick. 564, 569; 4 Gaskill v. Dudley, 6 Met. 546; 5 Adams v. Wiscasset Bank, 1 Greenl. 361; 6 Fernald v. Lewis, 6 Greenl. 264. See also Hopkins v. Elmore, 49 Vt. 116; Rev. Stats. N. H. 1878, c. 239, § 8.

A town cannot make a contract, or authorize any officer or agent to make one in its behalf, except by vote in a town meeting' duly notified or warned; and the notice or-warning must specify the matter to be acted- on, in order that all the inhabitants (whose, property will be subject Jo be taken on execution to satisfy the obligations of the town) may know in-advance what business is to be transacted at the meeting. *130 If' the subject of the vote is not specified in the notice of warning, the vote has no legal effect, and binds neither the .town nor the inhabitants.. No one can rely upon a vote as giving him any rights against the town, without proving a sufficient notice or warning of the meeting'at which the vote was passed. Reynolds v. New Salem, 6 Met. 340; Stoughton School District v. Atherton, 12 Met. 105; Moor v. Newfield, 4 Greenl. 44; Dillon Mun. Corp. §§ 266-268.

Upon this point'the. statutes-and decisions of Connecticut are perfectly clear.

i The statutes require the annual town meetings to be held-in October, November or'December, and permit special meetings to be convened when the selectmen deem it necessary, or on the application of twenty inhabitants qualified to vote in town meetings; and provide for notifying or warning both annual and special meetings as follows: “"When town meetings are to be held, a notification, either written or printed, specifying the objects for which -they are to be held, signed by the.-.seleetmeñ, or a majority of them, set upQn the sign post or sign posts in the towns, at leash five days inclusively before the meeting is to be held, shall be sufficient notice to the inhabitants to attend such meeting.”' Eev. Stats. 1866, tit. 7, §§ 19r 21; 1821, tit. 103, § 2. They also provide thatiC the Avarning of eArery meeting of any borough, city, ecclesiastical society, school society, school district, or other public community, shall specify the objects for which such meeting is to be held.” Kev. Stats. 1866, tit. 7, § 232.

"Whenever a town meeting is warned agreeably to the provision above'quoted, the statutes, with a vieAV to preserving the best eAddence of the contents of the notice or Avarning, malice it the duty of the selectmen to cause a copy or duplicate thereof to be left with the toAvn cleric before the meeting, and the duty of the cleric to record it. Bév. Stats. 1866, tit. 7, § 19. Bút these duties are imposed on the selectmen and the cleric as public officers, not as agents of the town. They are not made duties of the inhabitants of the town in their corporate capacity, but official duties of those charged Avith their performance. The neglect of' the officers to file or to record a sufficient *131 notice of a town meeting is theirs 'only, and not the neglect of-the'town. So far as the town is concerned, the utmost effect, .of- an omission to .record the notice is to authorize its contents to he proved by other evidence. Brunswick First Parish v. McKean, 4 Greenl. 508.

.The annual election of town officers, or any other act wh'.chthe.statutes require to be done-'by the inhabitants at -each annual meeting, might perhaps be sufficiently proved by the -record of what was> done at the meeting, without proving' a • special notice of it in the warning. Thayer v. Stearns, 1 Pick. 109; Gilmore v. Holt, 4 Pick. 258. But, with those excep-i tions, such 'a notice is a necessary prerequisite to the validity of any act of the town, either at the annual meeting or at a special meeting.-

' The statutes, for instance, provide that “ the inhabitants'of the respective towns, in legal meetings assembled, shall have power” to make certain by-laws for .the welfare of the towns.. Kev. Stats. 1866, tit. Y, § 31; 1821, tit. 103, § 6.' But it has always been held that no by-law, though passed at, an annual meeting, is valid, without a previous notice thereof in the warning.

In the leading case, decided in 182.4, of Hayden v. Noyes, 5 Conn. 391, where the,annual meeting of a, town was warned to choose town officers, “and to do any other business then thought proper by said meeting,”' the Supreme Court of Errors decided that by-laws passed at that meeting, to regulate the shell fishery of the town, were void; and Chief Justice Hosmer, delivering judgment, said:

“ By the act concerning towns, the mode of warning town meetings is specially prescribed. There is’ to' be a notification in writing, ‘ specifying the objects for which they are to be held,’ signed by the selectmen, and set upon the public sign post or posts in the town, at least five days before the meeting. A meeting not warned agreeably to the mode designated is no legal congregation of the town; ancl jts acts in that capacity are void.

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Bluebook (online)
121 U.S. 121, 7 S. Ct. 865, 30 L. Ed. 923, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloomfield-v-charter-oak-bank-scotus-1887.