J. B. McCrary Co. v. Town of Brantley

79 So. 602, 202 Ala. 136, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 326
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 20, 1918
Docket4 Div. 751.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 79 So. 602 (J. B. McCrary Co. v. Town of Brantley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. B. McCrary Co. v. Town of Brantley, 79 So. 602, 202 Ala. 136, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 326 (Ala. 1918).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

[1] Pleas 15 and 16 presented no valid defense to this action. . The action is not on any bond or bonds so alleged to be issued in violation of the statute. This action is on two notes executed by the city. The consideration for the notes is not by-the pleas shown to be illegal, nor do the pleas show any want of authority or power to execute the notes. If the action had been on one of the bonds issued as alleged, .the pleas would be appropriate whether a good defense or not; but they are not shown to he appropriate in an action on these notes. Construing the pleas most favorably to the pleader, they show that the city made an unauthorized issue of bonds which, under a contract, plaintiff was to accept in payment of a debt due from it to plaintiff, and that thereafter, by consent of both parties, a valid issue was made in lieu of the invalid issue, and the notes were to cover the difference between the value of the first and the value of the second issue. The parties not only had a legal right to do what they did, but it was the duty of the city to make some such' arrangement to cover the full consideration which it had agreed to pay plaintiff for the construction of the plants under the contracts. It is true that the record show-s conclusively that the real consideration of the notes was the difference between the value of an issue of 6 per cent, bonds and that of an issue of 5 per cent, bonds, and that it was not the “extras on plant, attorney’s fees,” etc., as stated in the modified contract; but this did not affect the validity of the amended contract, nor does it appear to be a badge of fraud because reciting a fictitious, rather than the real, consideration. The parties at that time were evidently of the opinion that the first issue, the 6 per cent, bonds, was invalid because not authorized by the statute, and that to have it affirmatively appear that the consideration of these notes was the difference in value between the 5 per cent, and the 6 per cent, issues would render the consideration illegal because it would appear to be an evasion of the statute. Under some conditions this would be true; but not in this case, where it clearly appears that it was not an attempt to evade the statute, but was an attempt to comply with it.

It does not follow, however, that because the original contract could not he complied with, on account of the statute as to issuing bonds at 6 per cent., the plaintiff should not be paid the agreed price for the two plants which it constructed, or was to construct for the defendant. The bonds were only a means by which the debt due from defendant to plaintiff was to be paid. If the bonds were never paid, the plaintiff would lose its debt. The plaintiff agreed to accept the bonds in lieu of money. The parties,'however, fixed a money value therefor. There is no allegation or proof that there was any attempt to evade or violate -the statute, as to the issue of bonds to be made in payment of the debt. The most that can be said of the allegations in the pleas, or of the proof, is that the parties, after the contract and -the issue of the 6 per cent, bonds, concluded that the bonds were invalid by virtue of the statute, which, in such cases, only authorized the issue of bonds at not exceeding 5 per cent, interest, and that in order to comply with the statute, and not to avoid or evade it, they made the issue to conform with their view of -the statute. And as it was and is perfectly obvious that a bond drawing 5 per cent, interest is less valuable than a bond drawing 6 per cent., the plaintiff agreed to accept the notes of defendant for -the agreed difference of value between the two issues, one of which was substituted in lieu of the other. So the execution of the notes here sued on was effected as a part of the plan to comply with the spirit of both the statute and the contract, and not to avoid or evade either, in letter or spirit; and the original, by mutual consent, was changed to that extent. We fail to see anything wrong, in morals or in law, in the amended contract by which the notes here sued on were given and accepted as part payment for the plants erected or to he erected, and in lieu of bonds of their amount and value as agreed on between the parties.

We have treated pleas numbered 15 and 16 as if the statute did prohibit the issue of *138 6 per-cent, bonds by towns within the class of defendant, i. e., those having less than 6,000 inhabitants. If the statute did not prohibit such issue, then, of course, there was nothing to base the ■ contention upon that the amended contract was void by which the parties agreed to give and accept the notes as the difference between the value of the 6 per cent, bonds and the value of the 5 per cent, bonds.

[2] It has been held by this court that article 27 of chapter 32 of the Political Code, relating to the issue of municipal bonds for the purpose of constructing or maintaining public utilities for the municipality, has been repealed by a later and substituted act approved August 26, 1909, Acts Sp. Sess. 1909, p. 188. See Colvin v. Ward, 189 Ala. 198, 66 South. 98. Section 1432 of the Code was included in the article thus repealed or superseded by the later act, and hence the character and denominations of the bonds which can be issued by municipalities are controlled by the later act, and not by the provisions of the Code. Section 11 of the later act corresponds with section 1432 of the Code, and this section reads as follows:

“11. That the denomination of the bonds, and time for which the same are to run, the place of payment and the rate of interest to be paid on the same shall be fixed by the governing body of the municipality issuing the bonds; provided, that no bonds issued under the provisions of this act shall run for a longer period than thirty (30) years, and no bond issued by a city with a population exceeding six thousand shall bear a greater rate of interest than five per centum per annum, payable semiannually, but cities of less than six thousand population and towns, may issue bonds bearing six per cent, interest shall run for a longer period than ten years.” Acts Sp. Sess. 1909, p. 192.

If the printed act is a correct copy of the original act, as it was passed, it will be observed that cities of less than 6,000 inhabitants when the bonds in question were issued were not prohibited from issuing bonds to the amount of $30,000, at 6 per cent., and hence both issues of the bonds in question were valid. We have endeavored to find the original act as it passed the Legislature, but were unable to find it in the office of the secretary of state or in the Department of Archives and History, in which similar documents are kept. It is, however, not necessary for us to ascertain or decide whether the printed copy is a correct copy of the original, for the reason that pleas 15 and 16 would not constitute a defense to this action, under the Code provision or under the amended statute, whether the printed copy be a correct or an incorrect copy of the original.

It follows that the trial court erred in overruling plaintiff’s demurrer to pleas 15 and 16, because they presented no defense to the action.

[3] Plea 18 attempted to set up a defense to the action, on the ground that the debt sought to be collected w.as incurred in violation of section 225 of the Constitution.

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Bluebook (online)
79 So. 602, 202 Ala. 136, 1918 Ala. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-b-mccrary-co-v-town-of-brantley-ala-1918.