Insurance Co. v. Bruce

105 U.S. 328, 26 L. Ed. 1121, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2128
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 24, 1882
Docket41
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 105 U.S. 328 (Insurance Co. v. Bruce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Co. v. Bruce, 105 U.S. 328, 26 L. Ed. 1121, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2128 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.-

This action involves the liability of the town of Bruce, in the State of Illinois, upon sundry interest coupons, attached to bonds, in the ordinary form of negotiable municipal bonds. On the first day of December, 1870, they were delivered by the constituted authorities, of the town to the Plymouth, Kankakee, and Pacific Railroad. Company in payment of a subscription to the capital stock of the Kankakee and Illinois River Railroad Company. The latter company, after organization, became consolidated with the former, .and hence the delivery to the consolidated. company. The bonds upon their face recite that they are “ issued by virtue of the law of the State of Illinois, entitled ‘ An Act to incorporate the Kankakee and Illinois River Railroad Company,’ approved April 15,1869, and ‘An Act to fund and provide for paying railroad debts of counties, townships, cities, and towns, in force April 16, 1869; ’ and we, the supervisor and town clerk of the township of Bruce, do hereby certify that a special election was held in said township on the seventh day of September, 1869, at which special election a majority of the legal voters, participating at the same, voted- ‘for subscription-’ to the-capital stock of-the Kankakee and Illinois River Railroad Company in the sum of $25,000, *329 and to issue bonds of said township therefor; and said special election was by the proper authorities then and there duly declared carried ‘for subscription,’ and that all the other requirements of the law in relation to said special election were duly complied with.”

The act of April 15, 1869, is the charter of the railroad company. By the sixteenth section thereof it is made the duty of the • supervisor or clerk of any town or township, declaring by'-a majority of its' voters in favor of subscription to the capital stock of the railroad company, to make the subscription, receive the proper certificates, and execute bonds therefor, which shall be delivered to ;the president or secretary of said railroad company for the use of said company, and shall be a pledge upon the revenue of said territories respectively. Sess. Laws Ill., 1869, vol; iii. p. 1.

The coupons in suit, before their maturity, to wit, on the 19th June, 1871, together with the bonds to which they are severally attached, were, purchased by the American- Life Insurance Company, the plaintiff in error, from one Alexander Whillden, the lawful and bona fide holder thereof, for the sum of $9,500 cash in hand paid. Neither Whillden nor the insurance company had any notice, at the time, of any irregularity, invalidity, or informality in the making, issuing, or delivery of the bonds.

It is not seriously disputed, either in the pleadings or in argument, that the acts of assembly referred to in the bonds gave ample authority for subscription by the town to the capital stock of the Kankakee and Illinois River Railroad Company, to be paid for in bonds- of the town, provided a majority of legal voters, at. an election previously called and held for that purpose, expressed their approval of such subscription and its payment in that mode. But the contention of the town is: 1st, That by the seventh section of the act of April 16, 1869, it is provided that “ any county,, township, city, or town shall have the right, when making any subscription or donation to any railroad company, to prescribe the conditions upon which such bonds and subscriptions or donations shall be made, and such bonds, subscriptions, or donations shall not be valid and binding until such conditions precedent *330 shall have been complied with: ” 2d, That, in pursuance of the authority thus given, the town voted to make a subscription of $25,000, to be paid for in bonds, subject to the following conditions, distinctly set forth in the notice under which the election was held, and assented to by the railroad company, viz.: that the. road be so constructed as to pass through the town, making Streater a point in a northwesterly direction towards Bureau Junction; that a depot be located and maintained in the town of Bruce; that the bonds be delivered in sums of $1,000 for every mile of road graded, as the work progresses, and $1,000 for every mile of ties laid, and the balance when the road-bed is ready for the iron; and that no further calls or assessments shall be made u$on the town or upon the subscription to stock over the amount aforesaid; provided, nevertheless, that the subscription be void and of no effect unless an agreement by the ■ railroad Company for said iron, and rolling-stock with responsible parties shall be made on or before one year from the day of the election, and the railroad company shall have formed satisfactory arrangements to connect said railroad with some eastern terminus : 3d,' That the conditions thus prescribed: have never been complied with in these respects; more than one. year elapsed after' the election and yet no agreement had been made on or before Sept. 7, 1870, by'the original or consolidated , company, with any party for the iron or the rolling-stock of the railroad.; the road was never so constructed as to pass through the town of Bruce; it was not constructed when the bonds were ■ issued, and has never béen constructed .at any time since ; no depot has ever been located or maintained in the town ; the’ ties were never laid for any one mile of the railroad within the town; and ‘ no part of the railroad for the line of railroad of the Kankakee and Illinois River Railroad Company, or of the original line ■of the original Plymouth,-Kankakee, and Pacific' Railroad, has ever been constructed:

■These facts are set out in detail in the special plea of the town. Do they constitute a defence against a bona fide holder, for value, of the bonds and their coupons ? Or to state the question more distinctly, can the town, after the bonds have been signed, sealed, and delivered by its constituted *331 authorities to the railroad company, and have passed into the hands of bona fide holders for value, escape liability by showing that the conditions or some of them imposed by popular vote have not been complied with upon the part of the railroad company ?

The statute did not make it obligatory on the town to impose conditions upon the performance of which its liability should depend. It conferred simply the right to do so, leaving the. town at liberty to prescribe conditions or to make an unconditional subscription. Consistently with the statute the town' could issue and deliver bonds for the subscription in advance of the construction of any part of the road. But when conditions were prescribed, good faith, and the obligations which everywhere .arise out of negotiable securities, required.— if the town intended to rely upon them — that the public, who were expected to buy the bonds or to advance money upon them, should be informed by their recitals that the town had exercised its statutory right to impose conditions upon its liability. The officers both of the town and the railroad company knew, however, that bonds could, not have been negotiated in the market had their recitals disclosed the fact that payment depended'upon conditions thereafter to be fulfilled by the railroad corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
105 U.S. 328, 26 L. Ed. 1121, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-co-v-bruce-scotus-1882.