German Ins. Co. of Freeport v. City of Manning

95 F. 597, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3176
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa
DecidedJuly 25, 1899
DocketNo. 3,588
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 95 F. 597 (German Ins. Co. of Freeport v. City of Manning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
German Ins. Co. of Freeport v. City of Manning, 95 F. 597, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3176 (circtsdia 1899).

Opinions

WOODSON, District Judge.

This case is now presented on the merits. Upon the legal question tendered in petition, a decision was handed down in 1897, and is found in 78 Fed. 900. That decision overruled the demurrer- interposed by defendant to the original petition. The plaintiff is a citizen of the state of Illinois, and defendant is a citizen of the state of Iowa. The action is based upon five negotiable bonds, severally dated October 23, 1884, for $1,000 each, with interest from date at 8 per cent, per annum, payable semiannually; the bonds maturing October 14, 1894. Interest on these bonds was regularly paid to the date of maturity thereof; so that, [599]*599if the bonds are valid, there is due thereon to plaintiff the principal, with interest from October 14, 1894, at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, payable semiannually. The defendant is a municipal corporation, being an incorporated town, according to the classiiication of municipal corporations in force in the state of Iowa at the date of said bonds and yet in force. The defendant, for its defense herein, while admitting that the papers in suit were signed by its officers, as exhibited, and that plaintiff, before the maturity thereof and for value, became, and is now, the holder and owner thereof, and that nothing lias been paid thereon, except interest up to date, including the installment covering October 14, 1894, nevertheless, for the reasons below slated, denies its liability thereunder: (1) Said bonds are void, because defendant liad not legal authority to execute same under the Code of Iowa then in force. (2) Denies defendant ever issued or authorized the issue of said bonds. (3) That at the date said bonds are claimed to have been issued, defendant was indebted in a sum largely exceeding the limitation contained in the constitution of the state of Iowa, to wit, in excess of 5 per cent, on the value of the taxable property within such defendant corporation, as ascertained by the last state and county tax lists preceding the issue of said bonds. It is proper here to state that in the agreed statement of facts tiled herein the second ground of defense above slated is waived, by the agreed fact that defendant did issue said bonds. In its reply, plaintiff avers that what is set out in answer of defendant under its third above-stated defense, as an indebtedness of defendant ouislanding at the time the bonds in suit were issued (and which, if valid, would invalidate the bonds in suit), was not a valid indebtedness; but (hut the bonds which evidenced or constituted such alleged outstanding indebtedness were not valid, in that, at the date of their issue, the aggregate indebtedness then outstanding of the defendant exceeded 5 per centum of the value of the taxable property within the limits of defendant corporation, as ascertained by the last state and county tax lists previous to the issuance of said bonds.

It is due to counsel herein that the findings of the court shall be sufficiently comprehensive to permit a thorough review in the appellate court. This court has been favored by counsel on either side with exhaustive briefs, supplementing the oral argument. While perhaps not actually required, in view of the present decision herein reached, yet counsel may properly expect that the findings of the courl will cover substantially all the material issues raised by the pleadings.

1. As to the contention of defendant that the bonds in suit are invalid, because, at date of their issue, the aggregate indebtedness of defendant, in violation of the constitutional limitation, exceeded 5 per centum of the taxable property within the defendant corporation, as ascertained by the last preceding state and county tax list: If the fact claimed is sustained by the evidence, the conclusion claimed must follow. The limitation prescribed in the constitution of (he state of Iowa is correctly given in this contention, and the evidence is undisputed that at the date of issuance of bonds in suit there were outstanding bonds, issued in 1882 by defendant, which, if included in [600]*600the then existing aggregate indebtedness of defendant, make such aggregate in excess of the constitutional limitation. It is practically conceded that such 1882 bonds (the bonds in suit were issued in 1881) were themselves, at date of their issue, obnoxious to the above-quoted constitutional limitation. They were, however, treated by defendant as a valid indebtedness, and previous to the institution of the present action had been paid in full. They were thus treated by defendant when the bonds in suit — issue of 1881 — were issued.

Defendant contends that, since defendant treated them as valid, and has paid them out of the ordinary revenues of the defendant, the spirit of the constitutional limitation does not apply, and especially so as they were so treated by defendant, and were being so paid, when the bonds in suit were issued. But to my mind the fact that the defendant elected to pay, while the law did not require it to pay, does not convert into an indebtedness that which the law does not recognize as an obligation to pay. There may exist, from the standpoint of mere morals, an obligation which the law does not regard as an' obligation enforceable in the courts. The constitutional limitation uses the term “indebted” as meaning an indebtedness which the law will recognize, and by its process enforce. Such a test may readily be applied. The process is simple and uniform. Given the facts, will the law, applied thereto, compel payment? If so, there is an indebtedness. But if the will of the corporation, -the mood of its governing officials, is to be the test, there can be no certain or reliable and permanent knowledge as to whether an enforceable indebtedness exists. To-day the officials recognize, and are discharging by payment, a “debt” which the courts would not enforce. Additional bonds, now issued, are obnoxious to the constitutional limitations, because of the former “debt.” A month later new officials are installed. They do not recognize the “debt” which their predecessors were paying off, and refuse payment of same. Will the additional bonds, issued as above suggested, no longer be obnoxious to the constitutional limitation, but thus become valid? Or, take the converse: A series of bonds, issued yesterday, are beyond the constitutional limitation and invalid. Hence a series of bonds issued to-day are valid, because the former issue is not, in law, an outstanding indebtedness. Next month a new set of city officials recognize as valid, by paying off, the first set of bonds just above suggested. Does their payment of these bonds, thus rendering them valid, now make this former issue an outstanding indebtedness, and therefore the latter issue thereby become invalid? And what shall be said when the same officials change the course of the corporation during their own administration? These difficulties increase if we accept as the test the will of the corporation in place of the force of the law.

If it be claimed that, because the corporation has paid off such bonds, therefore what the law would not have compelled the corporation to pay has become, because of voluntary payment, an indebtedness, we are yet further than before from an acceptable test; for such “debt,” though not recognized as such by the law, is capable at any time of being paid off, and thus a new bond issue cannot [601]*601be safely made while the old issue is outstanding.

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Bluebook (online)
95 F. 597, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/german-ins-co-of-freeport-v-city-of-manning-circtsdia-1899.