German Ins. Co. v. City of Manning

78 F. 900, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2523
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 16, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 78 F. 900 (German Ins. Co. 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. v. City of Manning, 78 F. 900, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2523 (circtsdia 1897).

Opinion

WOODSON, District Judge.

Counsel have not pointed the court to any mandatory requirement of statute or otherwise with reference to the manner in which bonds issued by an Iowa city shall be signed. Jn the absence of such mandatory requirement, it would seem that the bonds of a city might be signed by any of the officers of the city whom the city council, as the governing board of the city, should designate therefor. The bonds in suit, as issued by said defendant, recite that “the said city of Manning, Iowa, lias caused this bond to be signed by the treasurer and countersigned by the mayor of said city of Manning” etc. Upon demurrer to said petition, the defendant city may not — in the face of this recital — successfully urge that the bonds are not the bonds of said city, because signed without its au-ihority therefor by the treasurer and mayor. The recitals in the bonds must be held, certainly when attacked by demurrer, to speak the truth, and, as thus spoken, the truth overthrows the second point of demurrer.

Beet ion 500, c. 10, tit. 4, Code Iowa 1873, is as follows:

“500. Loans may f>o negotiated by a,ny municipal corporation in anticipation of tile revenues thereof, but the aggregate amounts of such loans shall not exceed the sum of three per cent, upon the taxable property of any city or town.”

By amendatory legislation this section was somewhat changed as to the amount of loans permitted, such aggregate varying according to population; but these amendments are immaterial as to the point to be [902]*902now. considered. The contention of defendant is that the section just quoted does not authorize the city to evidence by negotiable bonds a loan made “in anticipation of revenue,” and that the bonds in suit, being negotiable bonds, and issued, as in said bonds recited, under the section which authorizes loans to be negotiated only “in anticipation of revenue,” were issued by the city without authority therefor, and are invalid and void in the hands of a bona fide holder. Plaintiff does not contest the proposition that, if the bonds were by the city issued without authority of law therefor, they are invalid in the hands of a bona fide holder. But plaintiff maintains the right of the city to issue, under said section 500, the negotiable bonds in suit. The question whose decision determines the present hearing is whether said section 500 authorizes a municipal corporation to issue, in anticipation of its revenues, negotiable bonds of the character of those in suit. There exists no disagreement of counsel herein as to the general rules to be followed in ascertaining the powers granted by the act of incorporation of a city. As was said by Chief Justice Marshall in Head v. Insurance Co., 2 Cranch, 169, when speaking of bodies having only a legal existence:

“The act oí incorporation is to them an enabling act. It gives them all the power they possess. It enables them to contract; and when it prescribes to them a mode of contracting they must observe that mode, or the instrument no more creates a contract than if the body had never been incorporated.”

In his valuable treatise on the Law of Municipal Corporations (4th Ed., § 89), Judge Dillon, treating of the powers of municipal corporations, says:

“It is a general and undisputed proposition of law that a municipal corporation possesses and can exercise the following powers, and no others: First, those granted in express words; second, those necessarily or fairly implied in, or incident to, the powers expressly granted; third, those essential to the declared objects and purposes of the corporation, — not simply convenient, but indispensable. Any fair, reasonable doubt concerning the existence of the power is resolved by the courts against the corporation, and the power is denied. Of every municipal corporation, the charter or statute by which it is created is its organic act. Neither the corporation nor its officers can do any act, make any contract, incur any liabilities, not authorized thereby, or by some legislative act applicable thereto. All acts beyond the scope of the powers granted are void.”

In Minturn v. La Rue, 23 How. 435, 436, the supreme court of the United States, speaking through Mr. Justice "Nelson, declare:

“It is a well-settled rule of construction of grants by the legislature to corporations, whether public or private, that only such powers and rights can be exercised under them as are clearly comprehended within the words of the act, or derived therefrom by necessary implication, regard being had to the objects of the grant. Any ambiguity or.doubt arising out of the terms used by the legislature must be resolved in favor of the public.”

See, also, Barnett v. Denison, 145 U. S. 135, 141, 12 Sup. Ct. 819. The same rule of construction is followed by the supreme court of Iowa in Henke v. McCord, 55 Iowa, 381, 7 N. W. 623; Becker v. Waterworks, 79 Iowa, 419, 44 N. W. 694. The decisions of the supreme court of the United Státes, as applied to statutes somewhat similar in terms to the Iowa statute above copied, do not present entirely harmonious constructions. A brief reference to some of these deci[903]*903sions may be necessary to a decision herein. Rogers v. City of Burlington, 3 Wall. 654, was decided in 1865. That court: had theretofore been required to determine various questions relating to bonds issued by Iowa municipal corporations. Gelpcke v. City of Dubuque, 1 Wall. 175; Meyer v. City of Muscatine, Id. 384. The Muscatine Case upheld the validity of bonds issued by that city, under power, in its charter, “to borrow money,” etc. The Burlington Case, supra, involved (1) whether the power conferred on the city “to borrow money for any public purpose” gave authority to borrow money to aid a railway company, and (2) whether such power to' “borrow money” gave the municipality the authority to guaranty payment of 20-year negotiable bonds issued by the company. The court (five to four) decided both these points in the affirmative. The decision of the latter point of necessity compelled the court to consider and affirmatively decide that authority to issue negotiable bonds was granted by the charter power to “borrow money.” Mitchell v. City of Burlington, 4 Wall. 270, involved tbe same general questions of the power of the city, except that the bonds in question were bonds of tbe city, signed by its mayor and recorder, and recited they were issued “to provide for procuring and investing the loan of $10,-000 to the city, to be invested in the stock of the ⅜ * Plank-Road Co., and for other purposes.” The answer of the city set up as one of its defenses “that the officers of the city had no authority to issue the bonds, and that the bonds, as against the defendant city, were void.” To this part of the answer plaintiff demurred. The trial court sustained the demurrer. The opinion of the court (page 273) declares that the pleadings raise the question of the validity of the bonds. The court announce that they are satisfied with the decision reached by the court at: the previous term, when the present defendants presented the same question, and the court held “that the power to borrow money for any public purpose, within the meaning of the provision, was conferred by the charter in express terms, and that there was nothing in the constitution of the state which limited the authority so conferred, or rendered it invalid.” In the extract just quoted reference is made to Rogers v.

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Related

German Ins. Co. of Freeport v. City of Manning
95 F. 597 (U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
78 F. 900, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/german-ins-co-v-city-of-manning-circtsdia-1897.