Coler v. Board of County Commissioners

6 N.M. 88, 6 Gild. 88
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1891
DocketNo. 418
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 N.M. 88 (Coler v. Board of County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coler v. Board of County Commissioners, 6 N.M. 88, 6 Gild. 88 (N.M. 1891).

Opinions

McFie, J.

This was a suit to recover the amount of overdue interest coupons on bonds issued by the appellant in aid of railroads. On the thirty-first of 'December, 1887, plantiff filed in the district court in and for Santa Fe county a declaration containing ten counts. Nine of the ten counts were special counts in substantially the same language, and setting forth that the cause of action arose upon a large number of interest coupons, the different numbers and amounts being set forth in the several special counts, copies of the interest coupons being attached to and filed with the declaration. A demurrer was sustained to all the special counts, and the plaintiff elected to go to trial on the remaining count of the declaration, the common money count, the bill of particulars, and the stipulation as amendatory thereto. The defendant demanded the filing of a bill of particulars, and the rule was discharged by the plaintiff, by referring to the coupons on file with the declaration as a sufficient bill of particulars. The defendant filed six pleas: First, the general issue; second, plea of four years’ statute of limitation; third, plea of six years’ statute of limitation; and the fourth, fifth, and sixth pleas set forth substantially that the promises and undertakings alleged by the plaintiff, if any such were made, were illegal and void for want of authority in the probate judge and the county commissioners of Santa Fe county to call or hold an election for the purpose of granting aid to railroads; that the amount of the bonds issued was excessive; that the bonds bore an unauthorized rate of interest; that the county had no authority to issue or deliver the bonds; that they were not issued in accordance with the vote of the people; that the recitals did not recite the conditions upon which the bonds were voted; and that the railroad had not been constructed. The plaintiff joined issue on the first plea; replied to the second and third, in substance, that the obligations were not barred by the statute; and to the fourth, fifth, and sixth pleas of the defendant the plaintiff replied, in substance, that the action was founded upon coupons and contracts in writing for the payment of the interest upon certain bonds which on their face purported to be bonds of the county of Santa Fe, issued in full conformity to, and compliance with, the statutes of the territory of New Mexico, authorized by the vote of the qualified electors, and that the plaintiff had purchased said coupons for"a valuable consideration, and without notice of the matters alleged in the defendant’s pleas. Bejoinders to each of the replications filed by the plaintiff to the defendant’s fourth, fifth, and sixth pleas were filed by the defendant, but demurrers were sustained to each of them, and the defendant afterward filed amended rejoinders, in which it substantially rejoined to each of the plaintiff’s said replications, that the action was not founded upon certain coupons or contracts in writing, that the plaintiff did not purchase such coupons for a valuable consideration, and denied that the plaintiff purchased the same without notice. The plaintiff joined issue.

Before proceeding to the trial of the cause, and as bearing upon the question of pleading, a stipulation was filed as follows:

“William N. Coler, Jr., v. The Board of County Commissioners of Santa Fe County. In the district court, county of Santa Fe, July term, 1889.
“It is hereby stipulated by the respective parties to the above entitled action as follows: The defendant admits that bond number 45 produced by the plaintiff, is one of the bonds from which the coupons in question are detached, said bonds being issued in several series, and all of them in form, tenor, and recitals substantially like said bond number 45. The pleadings, bill of particulars, and other proceedings shall be deemed and considered, as hereby amended so as to embrace the plaintiff’s claim on coupons clipped from the bonds aforesaid, to the amount of $19,915, of which $4,165 matured January 1, 1888; $5,250 matured July 1, 1888; $5,250, January 1, 1889; and $5,250 matured July 1, 1889, with the interest thereon from said several and respective dates of maturity, as well as the plaintiff’s claim already specified in the papers on file herein, and also so as to conform to the facts as to the form and recitals of the said bonds, as hereinbefore referred to. The defendant also admits that the county of Santa Fe levied taxes for the years 1881, 1882, 1883, 1884,1885,1886, and 1887, expressly for the payment of the interest accruing in those years upon and according to the tenor of the bonds, to which the said coupons were attached; that such taxes amounted to $88,579; that of the proceeds of such taxes $36,400 were paid on account of the said interest, the said county upon such payment taking up and canceling coupons for a like amount, clipped from the said bonds; that a large sum of money, part of the proceeds of such taxation, was, by the said county, diverted from the purpose aforesaid for which it was raised and appropriated to other county purposes; that the levy of the said taxes in each of the said years is evidenced by the written records of said county, subscribed in its behalf by its county commissioners, and attested by the proper clerk; that the said bonds and attached coupons were, upon their delivery to, and acceptance by, the New Mexico & Southern Pacific Railroad Company, sold by that corporation for value, and purchased by divers persons, and in the year 1883, and from time to time thereafter, the plaintiff! acquired the said coupons and bonds for value.
“R. E. Twitchell, District Attorney.
“N. B. Laughlin, Thomas Smith,
“Gtldeesleeve & Peeston of Counsel.
“Cateon, Knaebel & Clanoy,
“Plaintiff’s Attorneys.”

Upon the issues thus made up the cause proceeded to trial on the sixteenth day of August, 1889. The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, under the instructions of the court, and a judgment was entered upon the verdict for the sum of $78,395.02. To reverse this judgment the appellant brings the cause to this court.

The legislative assembly for the territory of New Mexico, in the year 1872, passed an act to encourage the building of railroads in the territory of New Mexico, and authorizing the counties of the territory to issue bonds, or other evidence of debt, to aid in the construction of railroads, and to receive stock or other securities for the benefit of such counties. The act is as follows: “Chapter 30. An act authorizing counties to aid in the construction of railroads. Be it enacted by the legislative assembly of the territory of New Mexico: Section 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 N.M. 88, 6 Gild. 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coler-v-board-of-county-commissioners-nm-1891.