Clark v. City of Des Moines

19 Iowa 199
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 6, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 19 Iowa 199 (Clark v. City of Des Moines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. City of Des Moines, 19 Iowa 199 (iowa 1865).

Opinion

Dillon, J.

i. municipkationsT power, I. The plaintiff is the assignee of the orders or warrants in the suit. It is not alleged in the answer, nor was it shown on the trial, that he was not a bona fide holder of these instruments for value, and -without notice of matters now pleaded, as defenses thereto. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the warrants being signed by the proper officers of the city, authenticated by its corporate seal, and negotiable in form, he, as the innocent holder thereof, stands, like a similar holder of ordinary mercantile paper, free from and unaffected by the equities and defenses which the city set up in bar of his recovery.

This view of the law was the one adopted by the court below, in its rulings prior to and upon the trial. Thus, after stating the law applicable to the warrants issued for “ scrip surrendered ” — as to which more will presently be said — the court charged the jury as follows: “As to all the other warrants, they are negotiable, and there is no evidence tending to show that they were issued without authority or without consideration; all evidence of this kind having been excluded, because it was not shown or offered to be shown that the plaintiff had knowledge of such defenses; and if you believe, from the evidence, that the warrants were issued by the defendant and that plaintiff is the owner thereof, you will find for him as to all such warrants.” ■ So the bill of exceptions recites, that “ the defendant, on the trial, offered to show by the record of the proceedings of the city council, that all of said warrants were issued without any authority from the said city council, and without any vote of said council authorizing the same," but this evidence the court refused to receive* because the warrants were negotiable and there [209]*209was no offer to show that the plaintiff took them with notice of such defect or irregularity.

This view of the law is, we think, erroneous. If my name be signed to a promissory note by a person representing himself to be my agent, but “without any authority ” from me, I am not bound; and I am no more bound because the obligation has been put in a negotiable form than if it has been put in a form not negotiable.

And the same rule must and does apply to paper purporting to be issued by the agents or officers of public or municipal corporations. The general principle of law is well known and definitely settled, that the agents, officers, or even city council of a 'municipal corporation, cannot bind the corporation when they transcend their lawful and legitimate powers.

2"notice of power, s. — piea ofufflra vires, This doctrine rests upon this reasonable ground. The body corporate is constituted of all of the inhabitants the corporate limits. The inhabitants are the corporators. The officers of the corporation, including the legislative or governing body, are merely the public agents of the corporators. Their duties and their powers are prescribed by statute. Every one, therefore, may know the nature of these duties and the extent of these powers. These considerations, as well as the dangerous nature of the opposite doctrine, demonstrate the reasonableness and necessity of the rule; that the corporation is bound only when its agents, by whom, from the very necessities of its being, it must act, if it acts at all, keep within the limits of their authority. Not only so, but such & corporation may successfully interpose . . „ , , J ~ the plea ox ultra vires, that is, set up as a defense its own want of power under its charter, or constituent statute to enter into a given contract or to do a given act in violation or excess of its corporate power and authority. The cases asserting these principles are numerous and [210]*210uniform; some of the more important and striking ones need only be cited: Mayor of Albany v. Cunliff (city not liable for negligently building bridge under an unconstitutional statute) 2 Comst. (N. Y.), 165, 1849; reversing S. C., 2 Barb., 190; Cuyler. v. Trustees of Rochester (laying out street contrary to charter), 12 Wend., 165, 1834; Hodges v. Buffalo (4th July appropriation), 2 Denio, 110, 1846; Halstead v. The Mayor, 3 Comst., 430, 1850; Martin v. The Mayor, 1 Hill, 545; Boone v. Utica, 2 Barb., 104; Cornell v. Guilford, 1 Denio, 510; Boyland v. The Mayor and Aldermen of New York, 1 Sandf. (N. Y.), 27, 1847; Dill v. Wareham, 7 Metc., 438, 1844; Vincent v. Nantucket, 12 Cush., 103,105,1858, per Merrick, J.; Stetson v. Kempton, 13 Mass., 272; Parsons v. Inhabitants of Goshen, 11 Pick., 396; Wood v. Inhabitants of Lynn, 1 Allen (Mass.), 108, 1861; Spalding v. Lowell, 23 Pick., 71; Mitchell v. Rockland, 45 Me., 496, 1858; S. C., 41 Id., 363; Anthony v. Adams, 1 Metc. (Mass.), 284, 1840; Western College v. Cleveland, 12 Ohio, 375, 1861; Commissioners v. Cox, 6 Ind., 403, 1855; The Inhabitants v. Weir, 9 Id., 224, 1857; Sinead v. The Indianapolis, Pittsburgh and Cleveland Railroad Co., 11 Id., 104, 1858; Brady v. The Mayor, 20 N. Y. (6 Smith), 312; Appleby v. The Mayor, &c., 15 How. Pr., 428; Estep v. Keokuk County, 18 Iowa, 199, and cases cited by Cole, J.; Clark v. Polk County, infra.

4. conTgot™ Negotiability will not validate obligations which are not binding, because of a want of power to issue them. v. Sterling (action on loan bonds), 23 (N. Y.), 464;. S. C.,1 Am. Law Peg. (N. S.), 290; and note of Prof. Dwight thereon, a portion of whose remarks are so strikingly in,point that we quote them: “It seems entirely clear "he observes (Id., p. -297), “that no representtation by an agent can even establish the fact of agency. If a person, who is not in fact authorized, represents that he has po.wer to execute a promissory note for another, [211]*211the instrument, so far as the supposed principal is concerned, is utterly void.. The negotiability of the note will have no effect upon the question, as the inquiry turns upon the existence of the note itself. The term “ negotiability ’’ pre-supposes the existence of an instrument made by a person having capacity or power to contract in that particular manner.” (S. P. Hull & Argalls v. Marshall Co., 12 Iowa, 142, 162, per Lowe, J.) In Starin v. Genoa, and Gould v. Sterling, 23 N. Y., 452, 464, the plaintiffs were Iona fide holders, for value, of negotiable bonds, and the Court of Appeals of New York held that they were bound to inquire into the power to issue them. “ One who takes a negotiable note or bill of exchange purporting to be made by an agent,” says Mr. Justice Selden (Id., 464), “is bound to inquire as to the power -of the agent.” Analyzing in the case at bar, the view of the court below, it will be found to involve three several distinct propositions: 1st. That the warrants in suit are negotiable paper. 2d.

5 munici Nation?' warrants, ^bat officers of the city (mayor and recorder) or a^ events the city council, has power to crea^e ancj ¿ssue negotiable paper, and, 3d.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Iowa 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-city-of-des-moines-iowa-1865.