Oswego City Savings Bank v. Board of Education

35 Misc. 540, 72 N.Y.S. 15
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 35 Misc. 540 (Oswego City Savings Bank v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oswego City Savings Bank v. Board of Education, 35 Misc. 540, 72 N.Y.S. 15 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.

There is practically no dispute of fact in this case. In 1895, there was a private educational corporation at Dolgeville, N. Y., known as the Dolgeville School Association. It owned a schoolhouse and site, with fixtures and some personal property and appliances. The plan originated for a purchase of this property by the defendant for the sum of $18,000, said purchase price to be met by the issue of bonds. The proposition of sale made by the Dolgeville School Society showed a valuation of real estate of $19,500, and a valuation of fixtures and personal property of $2,158.54, for all of which the school society agreed to accept the sum of $18,000. All of the personal property included in said valuation was naturally incident to the maintenance and operation of a school, and a large portion of it might be regarded as ordinary fixtures, such as desks, cupboards, racks, etc. The appraised valuation of the Other personal property, which, perhaps, could not be regarded as fixtures naturally and necessarily appurtenant to a schoolhouse, did not exceed, upon the basis of $18,000 for the entire plant, a few hundred dollars.

Steps which are conceded, upon the submission to me, to have been sufficient and properly and legally taken, were taken under the statute, through and at a meeting of the voters of the district, to authorize tfie acts and vote the taxes necessary for the purchase of this property, and subsequently the trustees of said school dis[542]*542triet took what are likewise conceded to have been the necessary and proper preliminary legal steps for an issue of bonds with which to pay for said property.

As I have stated, no question is made upon this submission to me, but what the necessary and proper legal and statutory steps were taken at the meeting of the voters of the district, and by the board of trustees, to authorize the purchase of the property in question, and the issue of bonds with which to provide means of paying therefor, subject to the claim of defendant that the purchase included the purchase of certain property which could not be met under the statute with an issue of bonds. The bonds were duly advertised and sold at auction in form as provided by statute. Upon such auction one Armstrong, who really represented the school society which was selling the property, bid off the bonds at par as provided by the statute. At the time he paid no cash for them, but subsequently he went with some officer representing the defendant to a bank in Herkimer. There Armstrong went through the form of tendering to the representative of the defendant $18,000 for the bonds purchased and the representative of the1 defendant went through- the form of tendering and paying said .$18,000 to the representative of the selling school society for the property which was to be purchased as aforesaid. As a matter of fact, the $18,000 was furnished by the bank and was not'carried away by anybody, and the net result was that the selling school society got the $18,000 of bonds and the defendant obtained the deed for the property which was to be sold.

These bonds which were so delivered had been duly executed by the proper officials of the defendant, and were regular in form and within the provisions of the statute. They were, however, struck off upon a typewriter. Subsequently, one Alfred Dolge, who was the president of the board of education of the defendant, and likewise a member of the executive committee of the Dolgeville School Society, the vendor, went to New York for the purpose of disposing of the bonds. He went to some brokers, who, in effect, told him that they could not dispose of typewritten -bonds, but that it would be necessary to have them printed and struck off in the form usually adopted for such bonds. The brokers caused printed forms of bonds to be struck off, and subsequently sent them to Mr. Dolge, who had returned home. Number one of the original bonds was never reprinted or exchanged in any manner, [543]*543but for the other seventeen bonds of the issue Mr. Dolge procured the bonds prepared under the supervision of the brokers to be duly executed by the proper officials of the defendant in. proper form, and subsequently he went with said second lot to New York to the brokers. The original typewritten bonds were can-celled and mutilated by being cut up and slashed with a knife, and were delivered back to the defendant, through its president, Mr. Dolge, the brokers taking the seventeen newly prepared bonds executed as aforesaid, paid the purchase-price thereof, and subsequently, in the ordinary course of business, disposed of them, the one in question coming into the hands of the plaintiff, who paid value therefor and became a tona fide holder thereof. The original typewritten bonds, cancelled and mutilated and delivered to Mr. Dolge, an officer and representative of the defendant aforesaid, seem to have been passed around some subsequently, it being claimed that they passed into the possession of the vendor school society above named. At any rate, no claim has ever been made upon them, or that they were still outstanding, nor have any of the coupons thereof been presented, but they have been produced upon the trial of this action and submitted as exhibits. For several years the defendant paid the coupons upon this and other bonds, and no question was raised in regard to their validity.

Upon these facts, the defendant insists that said issue of bonds, including plaintiff’s, is invalid, for the following reasons, in substance :

1. That they were issued for the purpose of meeting the purchase-price of the site, and a schoolhouse-already standing thereon, and of certain personal property, and it is claimed that the statute did not authorize such issue.

2. That the transaction between Armstrong, the purchaser of the bonds, and the defendant, as it is claimed by defendant, amounted to an issue of the bonds for the purchase price of the property, and there was not a sale of the bonds for cash as contemplated by the statute.

3. The bonds, of which plaintiff’s is one, were not the bonds originally executed by the defendant’s officers, and, as claimed, the authority of such officers was exhausted when they signed and executed the typewritten bonds, and they had no power to execute the printed or lithographed bonds in the place thereof

I will discuss these defenses in the order stated:

[544]*5441. Defendant’s counsel does not argue very strenuously that these bonds are invalid because issued for the purpose of acquiring a site with a sehoolhouse already on it, rather than for the purpose of acquiring a site and of then building a sehoolhouse thereon, although he suggests that question. He argues more strenuously the proposition that this purchase included certain personal property, and that because the value of such personal property was included in the sum of $18,000, for which these bonds were issued, the entire issue is invalid. I am not able to conclude that bonds held by a bona fide holder upon which interest has been paid without question for years should be held invalid, because of any of the facts which appear in this case in respect to the two points suggested. That part of the section covering this subject, being section 10 of chapter 273 of the Laws of 1895, as amended, which relates to the issue of such bonds as these, should be considered and construed in the light of the preceding part of the section.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Misc. 540, 72 N.Y.S. 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oswego-city-savings-bank-v-board-of-education-nysupct-1901.