National Life Ins. Co. of Montpelier v. Board of Education

62 F. 778, 10 C.C.A. 637, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2346
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 1894
DocketNo. 402
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 62 F. 778 (National Life Ins. Co. of Montpelier v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Life Ins. Co. of Montpelier v. Board of Education, 62 F. 778, 10 C.C.A. 637, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2346 (8th Cir. 1894).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge,

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

Before entering upon the discussion of any other question in this case, it is well to dispose of the contention that the holders of these bonds had notice of their invalidity before they paid for them. This contention rests chiefly upon the proposition that the defendant was forbidden by the statute to sell the bonds for less than 98 cents on a dollar (section 1830, Comp. Laws Dak.), and that the New England Loan & Trust Company bought them October 17, 1890, for 97⅛ cents on a dollar. The records of the board of education, however, disclose the facts that Mr. Stick, the president of one of the hanks of Huron, bid 100 cents on a dollar for them, and that the defendant, the hoard of education, accepted that hid, and ordered the bonds delivered to him, October 3, 1890. Under this order, evidenced by a resolution of the board, the bonds were delivered to him, and he accepted them. This constituted a sale of the bonds at par. It vested the title in Mr. Stick, and a perfect right of action for the |60,000 in the hoard of education. If the hoard failed to enforce its right and to collect the purchase price, that cannot affect the sale, or the title to the bonds. So far as Mr. Stick was concerned, however, it did collect the full purchase price. Its treasurer received a credit of $5,000 from the sale of these bonds, in the First [784]*784^National Bank of the city of Huron; and the board, by a'resolution passed October 3, 1890, transferred its right of action for the other $55,000 to the city of Huron, directed Mr. Stick to pay that amount to the city, and subsequently received therefor á city warrant for. $55,000. The records of the board of education themselves exhibit, not only a sale of these bonds to Mr. Stick, but a disposition by the board, not ¡of the $58,500 paid to Mr. Stick by the trust company, but of the entire $60,000 bid by Mr. Stick for the bonds. The only testimony that tends in the least to throw suspicion on the truth of these records is that a Mr. G-ilbough, who was a joint purchaser of the bonds with the trust company, October 17, 1890, testified that he supposed or understood that he was buying of the defendant; and the mayor of the city of Huron, who accompanied Mr. Stick to Hew York to assist in selling the bonds, testified that he telegraphed to the defendant about the price that was offered for them, because he did not feel like selling them at that price without further authority. But this is evidence of no material fact. The supposition, understanding, or feeling of strangers to the transaction between the board and Mr. Stick cannot be held to overthrow the executed sale which the records of the board, the admitted delivery of the bonds to Mr. Stick, and the appropriation of their proceeds by the defendant effected. A careful perusal of all the testimony has brought us to the settled conviction that there is no evidence in this record that would warrant either court or jury in finding that the records of this corporation do not here disclose the truth. Under this evidence, Mr. Stick must be considered the first purchaser of these bonds. The first sale was at par, and all purchasers subsequent to him were innocent purchasers for value, before maturity* or assignees of such purchasers, equally protected.

This conclusion disposes at the' outset of two defenses that are urged against these bonds.

It is no defense to these bonds, against innocent purchasers for value, before maturity, that the defendant loaned $59,500 of the proceeds of the sále of them to the city of Huron for city, warrants that were never paid, and that cannot be legally enforced, so that it has actually realized but $500 from the sale of its bonds. That a municipal corporation has given away or squandered the proceeds of negotiable securities which it placed upon the market cannot affect the rights of bona fide purchasers, who had no knowledge of, nor part in, the gift or waste. They are in no way responsible for the wise and economical use by the corporation of the funds it borrows. County Com’rs v. Beal, 113 U. S. 227, 240, 5 Sup. Ct. 433; Cairo v. Zane, 149 U. S. 122, 137, 13 Sup. Ct. 803; Maxcy v. Williamson Co., 72 Ill. 207.

Hor is it any defense to such bonds, as against bona fide purr chasers, that the citizens and officers of a municipal corporation, with the intention to use the proceeds of the bonds for an unlawful purpose, took the necessary steps to issue them for a lawful purpose, certified on the face of the bonds that they were issued for such lawful purpose, and then appropriated the proceeds to the unlawful purpose. Corporations are as strongly bound to an adherence [785]*785to truth in tbeir dealings with, mankind as are individuals, and they cannot, by their representations or silence, induce others to part with their money or property, and then repudiate the obligations for which the money was expended, and which their statements represented to be valid. The defendant, in its resolutions and records, in all the resolutions and records of the city council of Huron, in the call for and vote at the election which authorized the issue of the bonds, and in the bonds themselves, declared that they were issued for a lawful purpose, viz. “to raise funds for the purchase of a school site, and for the erection of a school building (hereon.” The present holders purchased them and paid for them with no notice or knowledge that they rvere issued for any other purpose, and in the frill belief that these declarations were true. It is no defense for this corporation, as against these bona fide purchasers, that during all this time it intended to use, and has since used, the money it raised from these bonds for the unlawful purpose of conducting a campaign for the state capital. It is no defense that it knew at the time it was taking these proceedings and making these declarations that they were false, and that during all this time it Intended — First, to deprive itself of the school site and building; and, second, to deprive the purchasers of the bonds of the moneys they paid for them on the faith of its representations, and that it has accomplished the former purpose, and-now seeks, with the aid of the courts, to accomplish, the latter. Such a plea cannot be entertained in a court of justice. The corporation is ('stopped to deny that these bonds were issued to raise money for a school site* and school building. Moran v. Commissioners, 2 Black, 722; Hackett v. Ottawa, 99 U. S. 86, 90; Ottawa v. National Bank. 105 U. & 342, 345; Zabriskie v. Railroad Co.. 23 How. 381; Omaha Bridge Cases, 10 C. S. App. 101, 189, 2 C. C. A. 174, 51 Fed. 309; Paxson v. Brown, 61 Fed. 874, and cases cited.

Another contention of counsel for the defendant is that article 3, c. 17, of t he Compiled Laws of Dakota, under which the bonds were issued, was never legally adopted, and hence the bonds were void, and this, because the resolution of the city council of Huron passed August 30, 1890, calling the election for the adoption of this article, was required, by a positive provision of the city charter, to be published two weeks before it took effect, and the election was held September 11, 1890, and before it could have been so published. In support of this contention, they cite National Bank of Commerce v. Town of Granada, 4 C. C. A. 212. 54 Fed. 100.

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Bluebook (online)
62 F. 778, 10 C.C.A. 637, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-life-ins-co-of-montpelier-v-board-of-education-ca8-1894.