Parsons v. Jackson

99 U.S. 434, 25 L. Ed. 457, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1557
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 28, 1879
Docket156
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 99 U.S. 434 (Parsons v. Jackson) 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
Parsons v. Jackson, 99 U.S. 434, 25 L. Ed. 457, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1557 (1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case arises out of the supplementary proceedings which took place in the case of Jackson et als. v. The Vicksburg, Shreveport, & Texas Railroad Co. and Others (reported under the name of Jackson v. Ludeling, in 21 Wall. 616), after our decision therein. In pursuance of the mandate issued in that case, the court below made a further decree on the twenty-second day of March, 1875, directing, amongst other things, as follows, that is to say: —

*437 “ 3. It is ordered that F. A. Wollfley be appointed special master to take the proofs of the bonds bona fide' issued by the said Vicksburg, Shreveport, and Texas Railroad Company, and to report the names of the owners and the amounts due to the holders of such bonds so issued. . . .

“ He will give notice to the holders of bonds bona fide issued for twenty days by publication in one of the city papers that he is ready to receive proofs of the debt aforesaid, and that he shall hold sessions for thirty days each day, Sunday excepted, from the date of his first publication in the paper for that purpose.”

In pursuance of this decree the master gave the required notice, and received proofs adduced by those claiming to hold bonds entitled to the benefit of the decree rendered by this court. By his report, filed the seventeenth day of January, 1876, it appears that there were then outstanding seven hundred and sixty-one bonds bona fide issued by the said railroad company, of which schedules were annexed to his report. He further reported a schedule of certain other bonds executed by the company, and presented to him as issued under the mortgage mentioned in the decree ; but which the testimony taken by him proved were never issued by the said company, its officers or agents, but were carried off by persons belonging to, or taking advantage of, a raid upon the town of Monroe, La., during the late war, in the month of April, 1864. As to these bonds, the master further reports as follows: —

“ None of the parties presenting these bonds, or the coupons on them, have proved at what time, for what consideration, or under what circumstances they acquired them, except Francis T. Willis, Charles Parsons, E. G. Pearl, Edwin Parsons, George Parsons, and Sc<t., Zérega, & Co. in liquidation. In reference to this class, if the bonds were complete in all their parts and no circumstances of suspicion appeared on their face, the proof that they had not been issued bona fide under the authority of the corporation, and other facts relative to the issue, would have required the parties to prove that they were bona fide holders for a valuable consideration.

“ In reference to the claims of Francis T. Willis, Charles Parsons, E. G. Pearl, Edwin Parsons, and Scott, Zérega, & Co. *438 in liquidation, I report that in addition to the fact that the bonds were not issued bona fide, but were taken by force from the custody of the company, that there appears on the indorsement of the bonds a material deficiency and an incompleteness which deprives them of the character of commercial instruments fit for circulation. I also report that the railroad was at the date of their purchase in a damaged condition, it having been under the control of the military power of the Confederate States and the United States, which had been used to partially destroy it. That there were several years of unpaid coupons on each of the bonds, in the most of cases being contemporaneous with the execution of the mortgage; that these bonds were sold for an insignificant sum, and apparently purchased at a hazard, without any view to their character as commercial instruments fit for circulation, and that neither from the date of this suit, the 1st of December, 1866, ,nor in any proceedings antecedent thereto, did the holders, or any of them, appear to maintain any claim for protection.

.“I therefore report that the said bonds mentioned in the schedule BB were not issued bona fide by the said railroad company, and ought not to be allowed as a charge on the mortgage.”

The parties above named excepted to this report; but after hearing thereon, the court confirmed the same, and made a decree disallowing the said last-mentioned bonds, and from that ■ decree the present appeal was taken.

From the evidence taken by the master it appears that the .appellants purchased the bonds held by them, in the city of New York, in November and December, 1865, at from ten to fifteen cents on the dollar, without any actual knowledge that they were not issued by the company. But it further appeared that none, or very few, of the coupons had been cut off from the bonds, and that the latter were imperfect in form.

Each bond, on its face, certifies “ that the Vicksburg, Shreveport, and Texas Railroad Company is indebted to John Ray, or bearer, for value received, in the sum of either £225 sterling or $1,000 lawful money of the United States of America; to wit, £225 sterling if the principal and interest are payable in London, and $1,000 lawful money of the United States of *439 America if the principal and interest are payable in New York or New Orleans,” &c. This is the obligatory part of the instrument, and is necessarily indeterminate in its character without some further designation of the place at which it is to be paid. Each bond, further, on its face declares that “the president of said company is authorized to fix, by his indorsement, the place of payment of the principal and interest in conformity with the terms of this obligation.” And on the back of the bonds is indorsed a printed blank in the following words, to wit: “ I hereby agree that the within bond and the interest coupons thereto attached shall be payable in--.” On the bonds, which are conceded to be genuine and bona fide issued, this blank is filled up with the name of some place, as, for example, “ the city of New York ; ” or, in some cases, “ New Orleans, at the Citizens’ Bank of Louisiana,” &c. All the indorsements have the signature of the president of the company, but on the bonds in question the above blank for the place of payment is not filled up. The mortgage under which the bonds purport to be issued, and which is referred to in the body thereof, contains the same provision with respect to the place of payment.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pleasantville Bank v. Cox
26 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 460 (Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County, 1927)
Central State Bank v. Peoples Savings Bank
196 Iowa 43 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1923)
Estate of Philpott v. Philpott
169 Iowa 555 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1915)
Merchants National Bank v. Grigsby
170 Iowa 675 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1914)
Smythe v. Central Vermont Railway Co.
90 A. 901 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1914)
Doty v. Garfield Township
133 P. 172 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1913)
Cooper v. Merchants' & Munufacturers' National Bank
57 N.E. 569 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1900)
Regener v. Warner
56 N.Y.S. 310 (New York Supreme Court, 1899)
Mercantile Trust & Deposit Co. v. Low
87 F. 241 (Fourth Circuit, 1898)
Long Island Loan & Trust Co. v. Columbus, C. & I. C. Ry. Co.
65 F. 455 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana, 1895)
Bangor Electric Light & Power Co. v. Robinson
52 F. 520 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1892)
Simmons v. Taylor
38 F. 682 (U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa, 1889)
Rouede v. Mayor of Jersey City
18 F. 719 (U.S. Circuit Court, 1883)
Ronede v. Jersey City
20 F. Cas. 1152 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey, 1883)
Stern Bros. v. Germania National Bank
34 La. 1119 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1882)
Railroad Co. v. Sprague
103 U.S. 756 (Supreme Court, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 U.S. 434, 25 L. Ed. 457, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-v-jackson-scotus-1879.