Hopper v. Town of Covington

8 F. 777, 10 Biss. 488, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2418
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana
DecidedOctober 12, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 F. 777 (Hopper v. Town of Covington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopper v. Town of Covington, 8 F. 777, 10 Biss. 488, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2418 (circtdin 1881).

Opinion

Gresham, D. J.

This is an action on interest coupons, alike except in numbér, one of which reads as follows:

« $8. Covington, IND., October 1, 1876.
“ One year after date the town of Covington will pay to the bearer, in the city of Hew. York, eight dollars, being one year’s interest on bond Ho. 14.
“ A. Gest, President.
“Attest: FRANK M. Hicks, Clerk.”

It is alleged in the complaint that the town of Covington executed certain bonds to which the coupons in suit had been attached. Copies of the bonds are not filed with the complaint; there is no allegation as to their tenor and effect, the purpose of their issue, or the authority for it, To this complaint a demurrer is interposed, which presents the question under consideration.

Power is given by a statute of Indiana, (1 Davis, 343,) under specified conditions, to cities and towns, to issue bonds not exceeding $50,-000, payable in not less than one nor more than twenty years, to provide means for school purposes. And in section 27 of another statute (1 Davis, 881) it is declared that towns shall not have power to borrow money, or incur any debt or liability, except upon the petition of the citizen owners of five-eighths of the taxable property.

It is insisted, in support of the demurrer, that the power to issue negotiable bonds is not inherent in a municipal corporation; that if it exists in a given case it must be exercised in the mode and for the purpose prescribed in the act conferring the authority; and that in an action upon the bonds of a municipal corporation, containing no recitals, the declaration must show authority to issue the bonds sued on, and its exercise in the mode and upon the conditions prescribed by law.

In support- of the complaint it is contended that municipal corporations in Indiana have power to issue commercial paper for some purposes; that public officers are presumed to act in accordance with and not contrary to the law; and that the plaintiff had a right to buy the coupons as commercial paper, without inquiry, presuming they were issued for a proper purpose, and under authority of the statutes just mentioned.

[779]*779Municipal corporations are created to secure to the people residing ■within their jurisdiction the benefits of local government, and not for business purposes. Unlike trading or business corporations, their powers are governmental and administrative. In addition to the power to raise revenue by taxation, and other express powers conferred upon them by their charters, they may exercise such incidental powers as are necessary to enable them to accomplish the object of their being. The power to make contracts and expenditures carries with it the implied power to incur indebtedness, and to issue proper obligations therefor. But it does not follow that because municipal corporations, in the exercise of their legitimate and ordinary jurisdiction, may incur indebtedness and issuS vouchers, orders, or other instruments for the same, they may issue commercial securities, payment of which will be enforced against the tax-payers, in favor of bona fide holders, however irregular or fraudulent the issue may be.

The court, in Mayor v. Ray, 19 Wall. 477, say:

“ If, in the execution of their important trusts, the power to borrow money and issue bonds or other commercial securities is needed, the legislature can easily confer it, under proper limitations and restraints, and with proper provisions for future repayment. Without such authority it cannot be legally exercised. * * * IS0 such power ought to exist, and in our opinion no such power does exist, unless conferred by legislative enactment, either express or clearly implied.”

While concurring in the judgment of the court, but dissenting from some of the grounds upon which it was based, Justice Hunt said that in his opinion a municipal corporation might borrow money for legitimate uses and issue its commercial paper for the same, unless expressly prohibited by its charter, or by some statute, from so doing. Police Jury v. Britton, 15 Wall. 566; Hitchcock v. Galveston, 2 Woods, 272; Chisholm v. City of Montgomery, Id. 584.

But, while municipal corporations cannot borrow money or issue commercial securities without legislative authority, express or clearly implied, it is, nevertheless, the law in the federal courts that when a municipality, or its officers, are invested with authority to issue bonds and to decide whether the conditions exist under which a special enactment authorizes the issue of such securities, and such officers issue bonds, reciting the existence of the necessary conditions, the recital is itself a decision by the appointed tribunal, which is conclusive in favor of a bona fide purchaser. Coloma v. Eares, 92 U. S. 484.

In Buchanan v. City of Litchfield, 102 U. S. 278, the city issued its water bonds, amounting to $50,000, to aid in constructing and main-[780]*780taming a system of water-works. The bonds recited that they were issued under and in pursuance of a particular act of the legislature and a city ordinance, which authorized the issue, and the plaintiff was a bona fide holder. The court held that the bonds were void, because they created an indebtedness in excess of the amount to which the municipality was restricted by the state constitution. “As, therefore,” says Justice Harlan, in delivering the opinion of the court, “neither the constitution nor the statute prescribed any rule or test by which persons contracting with municipal corporations should ascertain the extent of their indebtedness, it would seem that, if the bonds in question had contained recitals which, uj>on any fair construction, amounted to a representation upon the part of the constituted authorities of the city that the requirements of the constitution were met — that is, that the city indebtedness, increased by the amount of the bonds in question, was within the constitutional limit —then the city, under the decisions of this court, might have been estopped from disputing the truth of such representations as against that Iona fide holder of its bonds. * * * The present action cannot be maintained unless we should hold that the mere fact that the bonds were issued, without, any recital of the circumstances bringing them within the limit fixed by the constitution, was in itself conclusive proof in favor of a bona fide holder that the circumstances existed which authorized them to be issued. We cannot so hold.”

This case clearly supports the doctrine that municipal bonds which contain no recitals are not unimpeachable in the hands of bona fide holders for value; that is to say, they are not commercial paper.

It is not claimed that the town of Covington had any general or incidental power to issue bonds or other commercial paper, but it is asserted for the plaintiff that when a municipality has express authority, as in this case, to issue bonds for one purpose, it may issue its securities with or without recitals, and it will be conclusively presumed, in favor of purchasers for value without notice, that the issue was authorized.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. 777, 10 Biss. 488, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopper-v-town-of-covington-circtdin-1881.