Citizens' Savings Bank v. Town of Greenburgh

65 N.E. 978, 173 N.Y. 215, 11 Bedell 215, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1141
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 65 N.E. 978 (Citizens' Savings Bank v. Town of Greenburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens' Savings Bank v. Town of Greenburgh, 65 N.E. 978, 173 N.Y. 215, 11 Bedell 215, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1141 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinions

Gray, J.

The plaintiff, a savings institution incorporated under the laws of this state, sues the defendant for the interest due upon certain bonds issued by it. The defense, in substance, is that the bonds were invalid, for having been issued in violation of the provisions of the act which authorized their issue, and that the act itself is, in a certain respect, unconstitutional. The act is contained in chapter 493 of the Laws of 1892. It is entitled: “ An Act to provide for the construction of highways and bridges upon highways running through two or more towns of the same county.” Its first section provides that “ Any twelve or more freeholders, residing in any county of this state, may present a petition which must be duly verified by at least one of the said freeholders, to the supreme court at a special term to be held in the judicial district where such county is situated, or to the county court of said county, stating that it is necessary for the public welfare and convenience that a highway in any one town in said county shall be continued along and through another town in the same county. Upon receipt of the said petition, the said court shall carefully consider the facts therein alleged, and if it shall be satisfied that the said highway is necessary for the public welfare and convenience, and that its continua *220 tion and construction will afford a nearer route between two populous points in two towns, than by any existing highway, then the said court may make an order directing that a notice shall be published in two newspapers of said county for two successive weeks, of the time and place when an application for commissioners shall be made, and at said time and place said court may make an order appointing three commissioners for the purposes hereinafter described, all of which commissioners shall be freeholders residing within the said county.” Other sections prescribe the functions, duties and powers of the commissioners, who may have been appointed, and the 6th section provides that “ The said commissioners shall ascertain, and determine the cost, charges and expense of laying out and opening, constructing and grading the said road and the amount of damages awarded to owners or occupants of property through which the same shall have been laid out for the lands taken, and the amount as so ascertained shall be paid by the town through which said road was continued and constructed and said lands taken. The bonds or obligations of each of said towns for the proportion of such damages, costs, charges or expense so charged to them shall be issued by each of said towns in such sums as are deemed advisable by the respective supervisors thereof, and shall be payable in twenty years from the date thereof. Such bonds shall bear interest at the rate of four per centum per annum and the bonds of each town shall be executed by the supervisors and town clerk thereof •and delivered to the said commissioners to be paid out by them at not less than par in liquidation of the said damages, costs, charges and expenses of laying out, opening and constructing the said road or, at their option, to be sold at not less than par and the proceeds thereof applied as aforesaid.” Pursuant to the provisions of the act, a petition was presented to the Supreme Court for the appointment of commissioners, for the purpose of constructing a road through the town of Greenburgh, which should, in effect, extend, or continue, Warburton avenue, in the city and town of Yonkers, through a portion of the town of Greenburgh, to the village of Hast *221 ings; both towns being in Westchester county. Such proceedings were, thereupon, had under the act that commissioners were appointed ; who performed the duties devolving upon them and to whom were, eventually, delivered bonds of the defendant, the town of Greenburgh, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of §149,000 of principal, duly made and executed as required by the act. It is not claimed that they were invalid upon any ground to be found in the proceedings relating to their execution and issue, up to the time when the commissioners, to whom they had been delivered, undertook to dispose of them. Under the act, they might pay these bonds out “ at not less than par,” in liquidation of the damages and costs incurred in constructing the proposed road, or, at their option,” they might sell them “ at not less than par ” and apply the proceeds for such purposes. What they did was to dispose of them to the brokerage firm of Coffin & Stanton under a contract, whereby the latter obtained them at their face value, or, in technical parlance, “ flat; ” that is, without taking into account the interest which had accrued upon them, to the extent of about §700. Coffin & Stanton used the bonds as collateral security in transactions of loans of money made to them by this plaintiff, until they failed ; at which moment the plaintiff held §51,000, in amount, of the bonds, now involved in this action. There is no question hut that the plaintiff’s title as pledgee, eventually, became that of an owner, with every right of ownership, and it is not claimed that it had any knowledge of the terms upon which the bonds had been disposed of by the commissioners. The argument is, so far as it concerns the validity of the issue of these bonds, that the commissioners’ act, in disposing of them to Coffin & Stanton at less than par, or at less than what was actually due upon them, was illegal and, therefore, void; that the plaintiff was obliged, at its peril, to inquire into the authority of the commissioners to sell them to the purchasers as they did and that, as the bonds never had a legal inception as obligations of the defendant, their payment is unenforceable by the plaintiff, or by any other holder. The *222 question becomes one, therefore, which requires us to determine whether the feature of invalidity insisted upon by defendant, and thus far decided by the courts below to exis^ was jurisdictional, or fundamental, and, therefore, affected the authority to issue the bonds, or their factum as obligations; or whether it was an irregular exercise by the commissioners of their power to dispose of the bonds for the defendant. That is to say, is the difficulty in some irregular execution of that power; or is it in the creation of the power itself ? If the former, then, within the authorities, the irregularity is an unavailing objection to the demand of a holder, who, like the plaintiff, has purchased the bonds in good faith and for value; while, if the latter, the defect is incurable and the issue of the boiids lacks the necessary foundation to make them valid obligations of the defendant.

These bonds were, in their nature, negotiable instruments and were so intended by their maker. They were intended to pass from hand to hand, and, like all municipal bonds made in such form, to be valid obligations in the hands of any holder. This the defendant does not dispute; except that it is said, in its behalf, and very properly, that their character of negotiability does not prevent the defense of any invalidity which, under the law authorizing their creation, was of a jurisdictional, or fundamental, nature. Possessing the character of negotiable instruments, they should be unassailable in the hands of an innocent holder for value, upon any ground relating to the consideration received by the obligor; unless something in the law of their creation compels us to hold otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.E. 978, 173 N.Y. 215, 11 Bedell 215, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-savings-bank-v-town-of-greenburgh-ny-1903.