Hamlin v. Board of Liquidators

30 La. Ann. 443
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1878
DocketNo. 6873
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 La. Ann. 443 (Hamlin v. Board of Liquidators) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamlin v. Board of Liquidators, 30 La. Ann. 443 (La. 1878).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Marr, L

Plaintiffs, assignees of the Exchange Bank of Canandaigua, allege that they are the' lawful holders and owners of five bonds, Nos. 13, 14, 15, 16, 20, of the State of Louisiana, issued to the Baton Rouge, Grosse Tete, and Opelousas Railroad Company in accordance with Acts Nos. 179, 231, 271, of 1853, in exchange for stock of said company, indorsed by said company, and purchased by their assignees in open market, in the city of New York, in good faith, for value, without notice.

That they desire to fund said bonds, under the provisions of Act No. 3, of 1874; but the Board of Liquidation refuse to fund them, alleging they are forbidden to do so by Act No. 11, of 1875, extra session.

That said bonds were issued in strict conformity to law, and not in [444]*444violation o£ the constitution oí this State, or of the United States, and for a valid consideration; and that they are entitled to be funded.

They pray that it be decreed that these bonds were issued in strict .conformity to law, and not in violation of the constitution of the United States, or of this State, and for a valid considei ation; and that they ought to be funded.

Isidore Newman intervened, alleging that he is lawful holder and owner for value and in good faith, of one bond of the State of Louisiana, issued under the act for the relief of the State treasury, approved April 30,1853, to the order of the State Treasurer, and by him indorsed, being No. 605 of said issue.

The other allegations and the prayer correspond with those in the petition of plaintiffs.

The Attorney General appeared for the Board ’of Liquidation, and answered the demands of plaintiffs and intervenor by general denial. He afterward.filed amended answers, alleging that the bonds in question are not valid obligations in the hands of relators; that the Act No. 81, of 1872, so far as it authorized the re-issue of the said bonds, is void; and that the State has received no valid consideration for them.

The judgment of the district court was in favor of plaintiffs and intervenor, as prayed for; and we are called upon to review that judgment.

By the constitution of 1845, article 113, the Legislature was forbidden to “pledge the faith of the State for the payment of any bonds, bills, or other contracts or obligations, for the benefit or Use of any person or persons, corporations, or body politic whatever.”

Works of internal improvement, considered to be of great importance to the public interest, were projected, for the prosecution of which the aid of the State was deemed essential; and one of the chief objects of calling the convention of 1852, was to remove the restrictions on the legislative power to contract, imposed by the constitution of 1845. We are indebted to this convention for the constitution of 1852, article 109 of which gave power to the legislature “to grant aid to companies or associations of individuals, formed for the exclusive purpose of making works of internal improvement wholly or partially within the State, to the extent of one fifth of the capital of such companies, by subscription of stock, or loan of money, or public bonds.”

Article 114, of the constitution of 1845, provided that “ the aggregate amount of debts hereafter contracted by the Legislature shall never exceed one hundred, thousand dollars, except in case of war, to repel invasions or suppress insurrections, unless for some single object or work, to be distinctly specified therein.”

Article 110, of the constitution of 1852, fixed the limit of liabilities [445]*445that might be incurred at eight millions of dollars; and article 111 required the Legislature, in the law creating a debt exceeding one hundred thousand dollars, “ to provide adequate ways and means for the payment of the current interest and of the principal, when the same snail become due.” _ .

The Legislature of 1853, the first that met under the constitution of 1852, exercised freely the power conferred by that instrument. Act No. 179, the sole object of which was “to grant the aid of the State to the Grosse Tete and Baton Bouge Plank-road Company,” made it the duty of the State Treasurer, within ten days after the passage of the act, to subscribe, on behalf of the State, for two thousand shares, of twenty-five dollars each, of the stock of the company, that being one fifth of the whole number of shares, representing one fifth of the entire capital.

The object of Act No. 231, as declared by the title, was “to provide for the manner of giving the aid of the State to railroad and plank-road companies.” It authorized the issue of bonds of the State, each for §1000, having forty years to run, bearing six per cent interest, to the order of the company, to be delivered to the company, at par, in payment for stock taken and subscribed by the State, for an amount equal to one fourth of the amount actually received by the company from its other stockholders. Provision was made for the payment of the current interest and principal of these bonds; and by section two “said bonds may be transferred by the indorsement of the president and secretary of the company.”

The Grosse Tete and Baton Bouge Plank-road Company was organized by notarial act, under the general corporation law of the State. By Act No. 271 of 1853 the charter was «amended, and the company was incorporated under the name of the Baton Bouge, Grosse Téte, and Opelousas Plank-road Company;” and, by section four, “with the vote of two thirds of the stock of said company, said road, or any part thereof, may, at any time, be converted into a railroad or common toll road.”

The testimony of Andrew S. Herron, formerly Secretary of State, proves that the five bonds held by plaintiffs, which are for §1000 each, dated April 7, 1855, were issued to the “ Baton Bouge, Grosse Tete, and Opelousas Bailroad Company, in 1855 and 1856, in exchange for stock of the company subscribed by the State under and in conformity with Acts Nos. 179, 231, 271, of 1853. The railroad was at first a plank-road; but at the time of the issue of these bonds it had been converted to a railroad under its said name, under the provisions of the law.”

The Auditor of Public Accounts certifies that these five bonds, “ in favor of the Baton Bouge, Grosse Tete, and Opelousas Bailroad Company, were issued to said company in accordance with Act No. 231 of 1853.”

Act No. 277 of 1853, entitled “An Act to provide the means necessary [446]*446for the relief of the treasury of the State,” authorized the Governor to issue bonds, in sums of $500 each, having forty years to run, for the total amount of $750,000. It was the duty of the Governor, forthwith, by publication for sixty days, to invite proposals for the purchase of these bonds, and to accept the best price offered, not less than par. This Act provided for the payment of the current interest and principal of these bonds.

These several acts seem to have been very carefully drawn, and to have been in strict conformity to the power conferred by the constitution of 1852, articles 109, 110, 111.

The five bonds held by plaintiffs, and the bond held by intervenor, and the indorsements on them, appear by the note of evidence, to. have been offered and received without objection.

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Related

Freed Realty Co. v. Singer
5 La. App. 551 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 La. Ann. 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamlin-v-board-of-liquidators-la-1878.