Lewis v. Commissioners

105 U.S. 739, 26 L. Ed. 993, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2185
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 13, 1882
Docket819
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 105 U.S. 739 (Lewis v. Commissioners) 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
Lewis v. Commissioners, 105 U.S. 739, 26 L. Ed. 993, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2185 (1882).

Opinion

Me. Justice Harlan,

after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

At an election held on the 27th of August, 1873, in the county of Barbour, State of Kansas, the qualified voters gave their sanction to a donation of $100,000 in bonds of the county, to aid in the construction of the Nebraska, Kansas, and Southwestern Railroad. .By the terms of the proposition voted on, the bonds were to be placed in the hands of the State treasurer, who was to deliver to the railroad company one-half of them when the proposed road should bé constructed to Medicine Lodge, and,the remainder of them when *744 it should be completed through the county. A few days after the election, they were signed, sealed, and attested by the proper officers of the county, in conformity with the order of the board of commissioners. They are dated Sept. 1, 1873, and payable to the railroad company, or bearer, with interest, semi-annually, at the rate of ten per cent per annum, payable at the National Park Bank in the city of New York. ' Each is signed by the chairman of the board of county commissioners, is attested by the county clerk, and purports, upon its face, to be “ one of a series of one hundred bonds of one thousand dollars each, all of like tenor and date, . . . issued for the purpose of aiding in the construction of the Nebraska, Kansas, and Southwestern Railroad, through said Barbour County, in the State of Kansas, under and in pursuance of an act of the legislature of the State of Kansas, entitled ‘ An Act to authorize counties, incorporated cities, and municipal ’townships to issue bonds for the purpose of building bridges, aiding in the construction of railroads, water-power, or other- works of internal improvements, and ’providing for the registration of such bonds, the registration of other bonds, and the repealing of all laws in conflict therewith,’ approved March 2, 1872.”

There is nothing upon the face of the’bonds indicating that the donation was otherwise than absolute and unconditional.

They were left by the county officers- with one Hutchinson, to be .deposited with .the treasurer of state, as required by the terms of the proposition upon which the people had voted. But they were.nevér so deposited, and by. Hutchinson were procured to be registered"by the auditor.of state, and .then fraudulently put in .circulation.- . - • ’ -

An-indorsementwas.made upon-each bond as follows.: -—

“ State oe Kansas, ss
“ I, D. W/Wilder, auditor of the ‘ State of Kansas, do- hereby certifythat this bond has been regularly and legally issued; that the signatures thereto a.re genuine, and that the same ha.s been duly registered in my office according to law.
“In witness- whereof I have hereunto set my hand-and affixed my seal of office, at Topeka, this nineteenth day-of November, 1873.
“ D. W. Wilder, AuditorJ

*745 Lewis purchased the bonds and coupons before the maturity of any of the coupons, and (according to our interpretation of the facts specifically found) without notice of any fraud, in their execution or issue, unless, as claimed by the county commissioners, such notice was furnished by the terms of the act above mentioned. He brought the present action against the board of commissioners of the county, to recover the coupons due Sept. 1, 1875, March 1, 1876, and Sept. 1, 1876. The defence, which was sustained in the court below, is placed upon the ground that the bonds were issued in plain violation of that act, and that all persons, whether purchasers in good faith or not, were required to take notice of the fact that they were not binding obligations of the county.

We have carefully considered the reasons upon which the judge of the Circuit Court based the conclusion that the comity was not liable upon the bonds even in the hands of a bona fide purchaser for value. His opinion seems to proceed upon these grounds: That under the act of 1872 it was a condition precedent that the bonds should not bear interest nor be negotiable until they should pass through the hands of the State treasurer, he alone being invested with authority to determine when they were to be delivered to the parties entitled thereto, for the purposes of registrationthat the requirement of that condition was manifest from the statute, of the terms of which all were bound to take notice; that although the bonds, on their face, disclosed1'no conditions whatever for their delivery, the purchaser should have ascertained whether, prior to their registration, they had, in the first instance, been deposited with that.officer as escrows, and that he could not take the certificate of the auditor as conclusive evidence that the statute nad been pursued; that as the bonds were not placed in the hands of the treasurer,1 they never had the quality of negotiability, and could not, therefore, have been rightfully registered, nor their regularity and legality certified by the auditor under his seal of office; and since the conditions affixed by the popular vote had never been performed by the construction of the proposed road, the bonds were not'the valid obligations of the county.

We are unable to concur in some of the views expressed by *746 the learned judge, especially in his conclusion that the bonds are not enforceable 'against the county. The fundamental, proposition upon-which that conclusion seems to rest is, that bonds executed under the act of 1872 could not, consistently with its purpose and language, be registered and issued, even when .the subscription was payable immediately and without conditions; unless, in the first instance, they be delivered to the treasurer of state, and be by him delivered to the party entitled thereto.... This interpretation is not, we think;; justified by any fair construction of the act. Under some' circumstances, distinctly disclésed upon, -its face, it is not at all necessary that -they be delivered to the treasurer, in order. that they may be registered ■ ¡and .become the Valid obligations of the municipality, in whose name they are issued. The last proviso, of -the eleventh section expressly declares that that section — the only one which refers' to the custody of the bonds by the State treasurer — “ shall not apply when the-people have named some party as trustee- in their vote upon the proposition, and the contractor [that is, as we suppose, the railroad company proposing' to do. the work of construction] /may thereafter agree to the same.”-’ If,the people on one side, and the company on the other, agree upon a trustee to hold the bonds until certain contingencies happen, or certain terms, or conditions are performed, the statute explicitly declares the eleventh section shall not apply. Again, suppose the people had voted — as, it would seem, that uiider sects. I, 2, and 3, they might have done — for a donation, of a subscription of stock, to be paid in .bonds deliverable at once, without any conditions or terms whatever, Could it be claimed that the bonds must, of necessity, have been delivered to the treasurer state? If so, for what purpose could he have received them ? What ends could have been subserved by his custody of them, when to their' delivery no conditions were attached? .

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Bluebook (online)
105 U.S. 739, 26 L. Ed. 993, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-commissioners-scotus-1882.