Board of Com'rs v. Woodbury
This text of 187 F. 412 (Board of Com'rs v. Woodbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff below was the innocent purchaser for value of 13 bonds of the county of Clark dated April 10, 1889, payable April 10, 1919, with annual interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum evidenced by coupons attached thereto. In August, 1901, the treasurer of the county gave notice that the county would pay these bonds at its fiscal agency in New York on the 10th day of October, 1901, and that they would then cease to bear interest, and the question in this case is whether or not the plaintiff is entitled to interest on his bonds since that-date. The bonds recited that they were issued in payment of a subscription of capital stock of a railroad company made by the county by virtue of the authority conferred upon it by the act of the Legislature of Kansas approved February 25, 1876, Laws of Kansas 1876, c. 107, and by acts of the Legislature amendatory thereof (Laws 1877, cc. 142, 144) and supplemental thereto. The subscription was made on September 24, 1886, and the express terms of it were that in payment of the subscription the county would issue its bonds when the railroad should be completed to the town of Englewood payable “thirty years after the date thereof bearing interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum payable annually, for which interest coupons shall be attached.” In performance of this contract the railroad company built the railroad and completed it to Englewood by March 15, 1888, and on April 10, 1889, in obedience to a mandamus of the Supreme Court of the state of Kansas (Southern Kansas & Panhandle R. R. Co. v. Towner, 41 Kan. 72, 87, 21 Pac. 221), the county issued these bonds, and thereafter the plaintiff for value bought the coupons in suit and the bonds to which they were [414]*414attached without notice of any defense thereto. On March 5, 1887, more than five months after the contract of subscription was made, chapter 77 of the Laws of Kansas 1887, entitled “An act relating to the redemption of bonds issued to railroad companies,” was approved. That act provided that all bonds thereafter issued by any county in the state of Kansas to railroad companies should be redeemable at the pleasure of the board of county commissioners at any time after 10 years from the date of their issue, and that it should be the duty of the county treasurer “when there are sufficient funds in his hands belonging to the sinking fund for the redemption of any bonds, to call in and pay as many of' said bonds and accrued, interest as the sinking fund on hand will liquidate,” in the order of their numbers. It was under this statute that the county treasurer issued his call and that the county now claims that the court below erred in its rendition of judgment against it for the interest upon these bonds subsequent to October 10, 1901.
The judgment below was right, and it must be affirmed.
It is so ordered,
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
187 F. 412, 109 C.C.A. 244, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-comrs-v-woodbury-ca8-1911.