Ohio ex rel. Laskey v. Board of Education

35 Ohio St. (N.S.) 519
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 35 Ohio St. (N.S.) 519 (Ohio ex rel. Laskey v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio ex rel. Laskey v. Board of Education, 35 Ohio St. (N.S.) 519 (Ohio 1880).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

The first section of the act of March 13, 1868 (S. & S. 710, 711), under which the bonds in controversy in this case were issued and sold, authorizes the issue of bonds “bearing interest payable semi-annually, at a rate not exceeding eight per centum per annum.” The third section provides, that “ the bonds so issued shall, in no case, be sold for a less sum than their par value ; ” and, also, that the bonds shall bear date the day of the sale, and provides for a complete record of the transaction.

That the parties intended to evade that provision of the statute against a rate of interest exceeding eight per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually, is clear.

That the form, which they gave to it, is not conclusive of its real character, as between these parties, is equally clear. These relators dealt directly with the board of education, and were parties to this attempted evasion of the statute. If that attempt avoids the bonds, they must suffer the consequences.

As a general principle, the agents or officers of a corporation like this, can not bind the public beyond the scope of its powers.

Where the duties and powers of these agents or officers are prescribed by statute or charter, all who deal with them are bound to know the extent of these powers.

It results from this doctrine, that contracts made that are unauthorized by the statute or charter, are void, and that the corporation may protect itself by the plea of ultra vires. The exception to this rule, in favor of bona fide holders of negotiable securities, need not be here noticed. There is, however, another class of exceptions, whose limits are not, as yet, very clearly defined, arising out of equitable considerations, that we may have occasion to notice further along.

[524]*524This statute imposes two limitations on the power of the board in the issue and sale of bonds: they shall not bear a rate of interest exceeding eight per cent., and shall not be sold at less than their par value.

If either inliibition were omitted, the other could be readily evaded.

By the sale of bonds, at a discount, the semi-annual interest agreed to be paid would be increased beyond eight per cent., and thus, that clause of the statute would be evaded.

These two provisions, taken together, limit the powers of a board of education, so that it can neither directly nor in directly pay interest at a higher rate than the statute prescribes.

No claim is, or can be, made that the bonds were, in fact,sold for less than their par value, as an equal amount of cash was paid and received therefor, and the money was expended as public funds, for the purposes for which it was borrowed.

The resolution of the board fully explains the real transaction, and conclusively shows that the intention was to pay an excessive rate of interest, and that it was not the intention of either party to sell the bonds at less than their face value.

So far, then, as this intention of parties gives character to and affects the transaction, it must be regarded as an attempt to evade the interest clause of this statute, and not to sell the bonds at less than par.

Conceding that the court will, as Between the parties, go behind the face of the bonds, and ascertain the real nature of the transaction, we are left to determine whether an agreement to pay illegal interest, and the giving of these orders therefor, which have never been paid, and which are themselves void, entitles the corporation to plead ultra vires, and so avoid payment of the bonds. It was the object of this statute to protect the public. No obligation should be sold at less than par, and no contract to pay a higher rate of interest than that named could be made.

[525]*525By complying with this statute the public would receive full value for the bonds, and be under no obligation to pay usurious interest.

'By non-compliance, the public would be injured to the amount of the discount, or of the excess of interest paid.

If the relief now sought be granted, it can not be claimed that any loss or injury results to the school district. It is the case of an intended violation of the statute, never consummated.

The iniquity is in thought, not in deed. It is said, however, that, taking the transaction as a whole, it is tainted with fraud and therefore void, and this view is sought to be supported by the analogies of usury laws.

In Ohio, an usurious contract does not carry with it that deep moral stain that attached under the usury laws of England and some of the states. Here, such a contract is not void, and a recovery thereon, to the extent of the loan and legal interest, can be had. The theory on which this principle is founded, is that, to the extent of the usurious interest, there is a failure of consideration, and,' therefore, as to the usury the contract is voidable only. Selser v. Brock, 3 Ohio St. 302.

These bonds, if void at all, are so, not on the ground of any deep moral stain, arising from the contract for usury, but from a want of capacity in the board to make such a contract. They are illegal, if at all, because unauthorized by statute, i. e., because the board had no power to make such a contract.

As was said in Bank of Chillicothe v. Swayne et al., 8 Ohio, 289 : “ The contract is void, not because the rate of interest is greater than the rate allowed by the general law of the land, but because it is such a contract as the plaintiffs had no capacity or power to make.”

These bonds are such as the board had capacity to issue. Upon their face they are in strict conformity to the statute. They were, in fact, sold at par, and the money has been received into the treasury and used for the purpose intended [526]*526by the statute. The public has had the full benefit of the loan, and has not sustained, nor is it liable to sustain, any loss or injury by reason of this outside agreement to pay excessive interest. If this was an action on the bonds, unaffected by this statute, there could be no doubt of a reeovery for the full amount loaned, with the legal rate of interest then in force according to the construction placed upon our interest laws. Neither can there be any doubt that the contract to pay usury, evidenced'by the orders, would be void for want of consideration to support it.

As has been already said, if this excess of interest had been paid the statute would have been violated, but as the promise to pay excessive interest was purely executory, and the orders evidencing this promise are void, and are offered for cancellation, and no injury has happened or can happen to the public, no sound reason can be given why the corporation should not pay its just debt.

The negotiations for the loan, though in their inception an entirety, for the loan of a sum of money at fifteen per cent., yet, as consumated by the contract actually made, consisted of two distinct promises by the board, based upon a single consideration. The one, evidenced by the bonds in strict conformity with the statute; the other, evidenced by the orders covering the excess of interest. The board did not intend to make one contract, nor did it. In its attempt to exercise the powers conferred, the two agreements were made, both regular and valid on their face, but one clearly in excess of the powers granted.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Ohio St. (N.S.) 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-ex-rel-laskey-v-board-of-education-ohio-1880.