City of Lynchburg v. Slaughter

75 Va. 57, 1880 Va. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 25, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 75 Va. 57 (City of Lynchburg v. Slaughter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Lynchburg v. Slaughter, 75 Va. 57, 1880 Va. LEXIS 5 (Va. 1880).

Opinion

Staples, J.,

dilivered the opinion of the court.

This case ivas argued at the last term of this court by the counsel for the plaintiff. The decision was, however, deferred by consent to enable the counsel for the defendant to put in a written or printed brief. This has not been done, and. the court at last has been compelled to decide the case without the benefit of an argument from the party taking the appeal. In order properly to understand the points of controversy, it may be proper to premise that the city council of Lynchburg is authorized by its charter “ to contract loans, or cause to be issued certificates of debt or bonds, such loans, certificates or bonds, however, not to be irredeemable for a period greater than thirty-four years.”

In June, 1864, the city council passed an ordinance authorizing the issue of coupon bonds to the amount of $50,000, in sums of $100, or its multiple, bearing interest' at [59]*59tlie rate of six per cant., payable semi-annually. Tlie ordinance directed a sale of the bonds at public auction, and the payment of “ the proceeds into the treasury, subject to the order of the council, for the use and benefit of indigent families and citizens.” The bonds were accordingly sold in market to the highest bidder at the sum of $121,704.50, being a premium of about $74,000.

The object of this loan and the disposition made of the proceeds will be stated hereafter in considering another branch of the case. The plaintiff, being the holder of a part of the bonds so issued, brought her action in the circuit court of Bedford for the recovery of the past due coupons taken therefrom.

Upon the trial in that court the defendant, the city of Lynchburg, asked for five instructions, one of which was given without objection, and the other four were refused. These four objections cover the whole ground of controversy, and in disposing of them we settle all the questions arising in the case. It will be sufficient to state the propositions involved in each of the instructions, without quoting them in full. And first, it is insisted that the issue and sale of the bonds for a highly depreciated currency was a violation of law, and an exercise of power on the part of the council not warranted by the city charter.

In the petition for an appeal, it is said it cannot be supposed it was the design of the legislature that the city council should be allowed, under the guise of borrowing-money, to put its bonds upon the market and sell them for a currency depreciated at the rate of one dollar in gold for nine of the face value of the bonds.

This argument might have been addressed to the legislature which granted the charter to the city of Lynchburg with more propriety than to this court. By that charter authority to contract loans and issue certificates of debts or bonds is conferred in the broadest language. Ho limita[60]*60tion is imposed with respect to the terms on which such loans may be negotiated. In the absence of some such limitation, the power to borrow money carries with it as an incident the power to agree upon the terms of the borrowing. According to a well-known usage and custom, municipal corporations almost universally contract loans by a sale of their bonds made with reference to prices current,, and not to their par value.

If the argument now advanced should prevail with the courts, it would invalidate three-fourths of the municipal bonds of the country in the hands of the original purchasers. For, in but few instances, until very recently, were these securities sold at their face value. And this fact must have-been well understood by the legislature when it conferred upon the various municipalties of the State the power to-contract loans and issue bonds and certificates of indebtedness for municipal purposes. It has been held by the supreme court of the United States in several cases where the city charter expressly prohibits the sale of its bonds at a discount, and such a sale is nevertheless made, the city is estopped to make the defence against a bona fide holder for valuable consideration without notice. There the plaintiff was not the original purchaser of the bonds, but acquired them by purchase for value from the original owner, and there is nothing to show that she had any notice whatever of the price paid for them by the latter. Woods v. Lawrence County, 1 Black’s U. S. R. 386; Mercer County v. Hacket, 1 Wall. U. S. R. 83, 96.

The sale of a municipal bond, as of any other bond, for a sum less than its par value may constitute usury, as was. held by this court in the case of the City of Lynchburg v. Norvell, 20 Gratt. 601. After that decision was rendered, however, the legislature passed an act prohibiting municipal corporations from interposing the defence of usury in any case ; and that act was held by this court to be retro[61]*61spective in its operations. See Town of Danville v. Pace, 25 Gratt. 1. The act of course presupposes the issue and sale of municipal bonds at less than their face value; and its object manifestly was to take away a defence calculated to lessen the value and impair the public confidence in that class of securities. If, however, a municipal corporation upon the same facts may substitute the plea of ultra vires for the plea of usury, it is obvious that the legislation on this subject has not accomplished the objects intended.

For these reasons, and others which might be given, I think the circuit court did not err in refusing to give the defendant’s second instruction to the jury.

The proposition asserted in the third instruction is, that the bonds are invalid, because they were issued to be sold, and were in fact sold for Confederate money.

It would be a waste of time to discuss this proposition. The answer to it is found in the uniform decisions of this court and of the supreme court of the United States. Thorington v. Smith, 8 Wall. U. S. R. 1.

The fourth instruction asserts that whilst the city council of Lynchburg is authorized to provide for the poor of the city, this object is to be accomplished through the instrumentality of a board of overseers, and a certain mode of procedure. But that this power does not extend to the appropriation of money to be expended under.the control of a finance committee, for the use and benefit of “ indigent families and citizens,” and the bonds in question having been issued and sold for this latter object, which is apparent on the face of the ordinance, they are invalid in the hands of the plaintiff. The general statutes found in the revised Code of 1865, chap. 51, sec. 5, declare who shall be the poor in a county or town. It is therein enacted that any person unable to maintain himself, or any family unable to maintain itself, shall be provided for or assisted.”

[62]*62]STo other word perhaps in the language more appropriately describes the persons here designated than the word “indigent.” It means the needy, the poor, those who are destitute of property and the means of comfortable subsistence.

It was this very class of persons—a class greatly increased by the calamities of war—the city council was required to provide for or assist. When, therefore, to accomplish that object the council negotiated a loan by sale of its bonds, it exercised a powér plainly conferred by its charter and by the general laws of the land.

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75 Va. 57, 1880 Va. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lynchburg-v-slaughter-va-1880.