Oubre v. Town of Donaldsonville

33 La. Ann. 386
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1881
DocketNo. 7769
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 33 La. Ann. 386 (Oubre v. Town of Donaldsonville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oubre v. Town of Donaldsonville, 33 La. Ann. 386 (La. 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Fenner, J.

Plaintiff, as the holder of fifty bonds of the town of Donaldsonville, for $100 each, negotiable in form and acquired by him for valuable consideration and before maturity, brings this suit against the said defendant for the amount thereof with the unpaid interest. He avers that the said bonds were issued by the Mayor and Selectmen of the town, in virtue of legislative power conferred upon them to that effect by Act of the General Assembly, No. 69 of 1861 ; that in the ordinances under which the bonds were issued, provision was made for the payment of annual interest and also for the levying and collection of an annual tax of one thousand dollars upon all the real estate of said corporation, for ten years, to form a sinking fund to pay and redeem said bonds.

He prays for judgment against the town for the whole amount claimed, and for further judgment ordering the .tax collector of the town to collect forthwith the said special tax of $1000 for the several years for [387]*387which it had not been collected and to apply the same to pay and satisfy the judgment herein.

Defendant opposes numerous defenses, of which, in this case, we find it necessary to consider only the following, viz:

1st. That the bonds sued on are without consideration, because given in settlement or renewal of prior bonds or evidences of debt which were illegal and absolutely null and void; because, at the time of issuance of the same, no provision was made in the ordinance creating the debt for the payment of the principal or interest thereof, as required by law.

This defense cannot avail, in the present ease, where the plaintiff is not the party to whom the bonds were originally issued, but is alleged and proved to be a bona fide holder, for value, acquiring the bonds, negotiable in form, before maturity.

Against such holder of such bonds, the only defense permissible is the want of power to issue them, and they are not subject to equities as to consideration or otherwise.

See numerous cases cited in Dillon on Munic. Bonds gg 5 and 7.

Dillon on Munic. Corps, gg 405, 415, 416.

Daniell on Nego. Inst. § 1500. State ex rel. Moore vs. City, 32 A. 46.

By Act No. 69 of 1861, the General Assembly authorized the Mayor and Selectmen of Donaldsonville “to issue bonds of said town, for such sums, not exceeding 1525,000, as in their judgment may be required for the interest of said town.”

It is not disputed that these bonds were issued in pursuance of this legislative authority. Purchasers of such bonds, after issuance and before maturity, were not bound to inquire beyond the existence of the power and its exercise by the corporate officials designated. They have no concern with the motives or considerations which guided these officials in the exercise of the discretion vested in them by the legislative power.

2d. They urge that the bonds sued on are void, because, in the ordinance creating the debt, the means of paying the principal and interest thereof were not fully provided. From 1853 to the present time the following provision, now embodied in Section 2448 Revised Statutes, has been the law of this State ; “ The police juries of the several parishes, and the constituted authorities of incorporated towns and cities, shall not hereafter have power to contract any debt or pecuniary liability, without fully providing, in the ordinance creating the debt, the means of paying the principal and interest of the debt so contracted.”

By the very terms of this provision, it is a limitation upon the power of police juries and municipal authorities, and is, therefore, operative as well against third persons holding negotiable municipal bonds as against the original holders thereof. Frequent adjudications of this [388]*388Court have placed it beyond controversy that debts contracted by municipal authorities in violation of this prohibitory law are stricken with nullity and are incapable of judicial enforcement.

29 A. 677 ; 23 A. 235 ; 24 A. 458; 26 A. 60; 28 A. 614; 30 A. 40, 41, 462]; 31 A. 180 ; 28 A. 243; 23 A. 251, 19 ; 10 A.

Dillon on Mun. Corp. 372, 381.

We are not disposed to construe the provision so strictly as to say that where some provision is made, the contract will not be valid to the extent of such provision; but it will be valid only to such extent.

Neither would we be so technical as to hold that if contemporaneous provision be made even in a different ordinance from that creating the debt it would not be a sufficient compiiance with the statute. In such case we should consider the two ordinances as substantially one.

After a close scrutiny of all the ordinances and resolutions of the corporate authorities connected with the issuance of the bonds, of which those herein sued on are a part, we And no provision whatever made for the payment of either principal or interest on these bonds, except the following, viz : “ that an annual tax of one thousand dollars be levied on all the real estate of the corporation of the town of Donaldsonville, and that the same be set aside to .form a sinking fund to pay the said consolidated debt.”

The liability of the town must be clearly restricted within the limits of this provision, unless either these bonds can be removed from the operation of section 2448 Revised Statutes, or unless it can be shown that they are entitled to the beneAt of some other provision validly made for their payment.

It is suggested that inasmuch as 'the Act of 1861, authorizing the issuance of these bonds imposed no condition requiring provision to be made for their payment, they were excepted from such condition. This position is utterly untenable. The Act of 1861 was a special law and did not repeal the general law of 1853 and 1855, now Sec. 2448 R. S. There is no express repeal, and there is no inconsistency from which a repeal can be implied. R. O. C. Art. 23. Municipal corporations and police juries have no right to issue notes or bonds at all, without special legislative authority. 23 A. 191, 235. The Act of 1861 was intended solely to supply this authority. The power, however, when granted, fell under the control of the general law of the State as to the requisites to its valid exercise. Suppose a special law had granted the town the power of executing mortgage notes upon certain immovable property belonging to it, would that havq dispensed the town from observing the provisions of the general law establishing requisites to the validity of mortgages ? Clearly not.

See Destrehan vs. Police Jury, 31 A. 180.

[389]*389It is next contended that, besides the provision made at the time of issuing these bonds, there existed provisions for the prior existing obligations taken up by the bonds, which continue in force for the payment of the latter.

To this the answer is three-fold :

First. The record does not enable us to trace any connexion between the bonds here sued on and any other pre-existing obligations of the town, except the corporation note or bond dated April 3d, 1861, issued in pursuance of the resolution or ordinance of January 1st, 1881, which was itself given in renewal of a prior note issued under an ordinance or resolution of March 29th, 1860. In neither of these ordinances was any provision whatever made for their payment.

Second.

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Bluebook (online)
33 La. Ann. 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oubre-v-town-of-donaldsonville-la-1881.