City of Great Falls v. Theis

79 F. 943, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3086
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington
DecidedMarch 29, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 79 F. 943 (City of Great Falls v. Theis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Great Falls v. Theis, 79 F. 943, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3086 (circtdwa 1897).

Opinion

HANFORD, District Judge.

This is an action at law by the city of Great Falls, a municipal corporation of the state of Montana, against the firm of Theis & Foster and the Washington Nat ioual Bank of the City of Spokane, upon a contract and a check. The contract was entered into by Theis & Foster, whereby they agreed to purchase bonds of the city of Great Falls to the amount of $300,000. The check was drawn by Theis & Foster upon the Washington National Bank for the sum of $5,000, and was duly certified by the bank, and was deposited with the treasurer of the city of Great Falls as a guaranty [944]*944of good faith on’ the part of Theis & Foster in bidding for the purchase of said bonds, and was intended to insure performance of the contract on their part. By stipulation of parties, a jury was" waived, and the case has been tried and submitted to the court for its decision upon all the questions of fact and law.

Upon consideration of the evidence, and admissions of the parties, I find the material facts to be as follows: Pursuant to a resolution of the city council of Great. Falls, there was submitted to the qualified electors of said city, to be voted upon at an election held on the 11th day of April, 1892, propositions to issue bonds of the city as follows: $40,000 to provide means for the purchase of land for a city park, $30,000 for the purpose of funding the floating debt of the city, $30,000 to provide means to pay for the construction of a main sewer in said city. The vote at said election was favorable to the issuance of all of the bonds proposed. Assuming to act under authority conferred by vote of the electors as aforesaid, the city officers advertised the bonds for sale, and invited bids therefor. Theis & Foster put in a bid for all of said bonds, accompanied by the $5,000 check above mentioned. Their bid being accepted, they afterwards signed the contract above mentioned, agreeing to purchase the bonds, and pay the amount bid therefor within a specified time. In the contract it is provided that the city should furnish full information and copies of the record of all proceedings affecting the validity of the bonds, and that the buyers should give notice of their rejection of the bonds for illegality prior to a specified date, otherwise they should be deemed to have, accepted them. There was delay in completing the transaction, and, after the time had passed for the "buyers to give notice of rejection, a representative of the city submitted copies of the record to Messrs. Hornblower, Byrne & Taylor, attorneys at law in the city of Few York, upon whose opinion as to the validity of the bonds the buyers depended, and said attorneys afterwards gave an opinion adverse to the bonds. Without receiving formal notice from the buyers of their rejection or acceptance of the bonds, the same were disposed of to other parties, and that transaction gave rise to a lawsuit in the courts of the state of Montana, which culminated in a decision of the supreme court sustaining the validity of the bonds See Dunn v. City of Great Falls, 31 Pac. 1017-1020. Fo ordinance of the city was ever passed authorizing said propositions to be submitted to the voters at said election, nor authorizing the issuance or sale of bonds, nor authorizing the officers of the city to enter into said contract with Theis & Foster. The vote in the city council upon which the resolution authorizing the submission of the question of issuing bonds to the voters at said election was not taken by ayes and nays. There is no competent evidence in the case before me to prove that notice of the proposed sale of said bonds was advertised, as the laws of Montana prescribe that such notice shall be advertised. At an election held in the city of Great Falls on April 14, 1891, a proposition was carried to issue bonds of the city to the amount of $50,000, and the bonds so authorized were issued and disposed of, and were outstanding on the 11th day of April, 1892.

The several provisions of the Montana statutes material to be considered are as follows: By section 325, div. 5, of the Montana Com[945]*945piled Statutes, under which the city of Great. Falls was incorporated, i he city is given limited power to borrow' money and issue bonds;- and power is conferred upon the city council to pass ordinances for the purpose of carrying into effect the powers of the corporation. No other mode of exercising the power to borrow money or issue bonds is provided. This section also enumerates the purposes for which the city may borrow money, and the purchase of laud for a city park is not among the things enumerated. Sections 326 and 334 of the same statute prescribe the style in which all ordinances must: be formulated, and provides for keeping a proper record thereof. Section 337 requires that upon the passage of ordinances and resolutions by the city council the ayes and nays shall be called and recorded, and that an affirmative vote by a majority of the members shall be necessary to pass any ordinance or resolution. Section 370 gives the mayor power to sign or veto any ordinance, and no ordinance can take effect until it shall have been submitted to the mayor for his signature. ►Section 3 of an act dated September 14, 1887, which was in force at the time of the transactions here involved, prescribes that notice of a proposed sale of city bonds must: he advertised for four weeks in a newspaper of the city, and also in a newspaper published in the city of New York. Section 2 of the statute last: cited provides that: an election for the puipose of authorizing the issuance of bonds by a city shall not be held oftener than once in 12 months.

Theis & Foster failed to take the bonds and pay for them, and they defend this action for the reason that they were advised by their attorneys, Messrs. Homblower, Byrne & Taylor, that said bonds were invalid, because the city failed to conform to the laws of the state in the proceedings referred to. On the other hand, the city relies' upon the decision of the supreme court of Montana in the case of Dunn v. City of Great Falls as a final determination by the court: of highest authority, affirming the validity of the bonds, and if. also maintains that Theis & Foster waived all right to reject the bonds by their failure to give notice of such rejection prior to the date fixed by the contract for giving such notice. T accept, without question, the decision of the supreme court of Montana in the case of Dunn v.Oity of Great Falls as a final adjudication of the only question which the record in that case presents; that is, whether or not the bonds were invalid, by reason of the amount thereof, when added to other indebtedness of the city, being in excess of the limitation upon the power of the city to incur indebtedness. prescribed by the constitution of the state. The report of the case shows that every other question affecting the legality of the bonds must have been excluded from the consideration of the court by the manner in which the case was made up and submitted, for it must-be presumed that the court considered and passed upon all questions arising from the facts appearing by the record, and the opinion of the court certainly gives no hint, of any other question in the case. Other questions of a serious nature are presented in the record before me, and must receive attention, before a decision can be rendered determining (he rights of the parties in this action. I do not think that Theis & Foster should he estopped from questioning the validity of the bonds by reason of their failure to give notice of their rejection [946]*946of the bonds in time.

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Bluebook (online)
79 F. 943, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-great-falls-v-theis-circtdwa-1897.