Bosworth-Chanute & Co. v. Town of Brighton
This text of 272 F. 964 (Bosworth-Chanute & Co. v. Town of Brighton) 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
Bosworth-Chanute & Co., a corporation, brought this action against the town of Brighton for damages, for its alleged breach of a contract made by the town, whereby the .Bos-worth Company agreed to buy at par $85,000 of the town’s proposed bonds for the extension of its waterworks to be dated July 1, 1918, and to be due in 15 years fromi their date, and to furnish all legal procedure required for the valid issue thereof, “including all resolutions and ordinances and procedure, provided that the town officials with reasonable promptness will take all action and pass and furnish copies of all proceedings prescribed and requested by our attorneys for the valid issuance of. said bonds,” and the town agreed to deliver the bonds to the Bosworth Company as above provided. The Bosworth Company furnished the legal procedure, as it agreed to do, offered and has been ready and willing to pay the agreed price for the bonds, but the town first notified the plaintiff that it would not deliver the bonds, and then refused to do so, to the damage of the plaintiff in the sum of $3,400, and thereafter issued its bonds for $85,000, differing slightly in terms from those described in the plaintiff’s contract, and sold and delivered them to others. The town defended the action on the grounds (1) that when the contract was made no ordinance had been passed which authorized or provided for the issue of the bonds described in the contract; and (2) that the town was wilhout corporate power or authority to make the contract in suit, or to authorize the issue or delivery of the bonds specified therein in any other way than by the passage of an ordinance to that effect by its board of trustees, and that no such ordinance had ever been passed. To these defenses the plaintiff demurred, the court below carried the demurrer back to the complaint, held that, inasmuch as the Constitution of the state of Colorado (article 11, section 8) provided that “no city or town shall contract any debt by loan in any form, except by means of an ordinance, which shall be ir-repealable, until the indebtedness therein provided for shall have been fully paid or discharged, * * * ” and the corporate powers of the town were limited in the same way by the Revised Statutes of Colorado of 1908, § 6525, sixth, the contract upon which the plaintiff sued was not actionable, sustained the demurrer to the coniplaint, and dismissed the action.
If counsel for the plaintiff insist that the contract in suit legally bound the town to issue and deliver the bonds to the plaintiff on the terms stated in the agreement, then that contract unavoidably created an indebtedness of the town without the passage of an ordinance, and it falls under the ban of the constitutional inhibition. If, on the other hand, they concede that the contract did not legally obligate the town to issue and deliver the bonds to it according to its terms, the contract was voidable while it remained executory at the option of the plaintiff, and as the plaintiff exercised its option while the contract was still executory, there was no obligation of the town remaining to sustain this action.
Let the judgment below be affirmed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
272 F. 964, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bosworth-chanute-co-v-town-of-brighton-ca8-1921.