Port of Palm Beach Dist. v. Goethals

104 F.2d 706, 1 Fed. R. Serv. 597, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4847
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 1939
Docket9074
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 104 F.2d 706 (Port of Palm Beach Dist. v. Goethals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Port of Palm Beach Dist. v. Goethals, 104 F.2d 706, 1 Fed. R. Serv. 597, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4847 (5th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

SIBLEY, Circuit Judge.

The executors of George W. Goethals filed a declaration in covenant against the - *708 Port of Palm Beach District to recover a balance upon a writing dated January 7, 1928, by which the District acknowledged indebtedness to and promised to pay to George W. Goethals, or order, $15,161.84 with interest at 7% from date, concluding: "This certificate is issued as evidence of the amount due George W. Goethals on account of engineering services in connection with that certain contract between Lake Worth Inlet District and George W. Goethals bearing date March 10, A. D. 1926. Lake Worth Inlet District, By H. G. Geer, Chairman, (Corporate Seal), Attest: C. H. Ellis, Secretary.” The seal purports to be the formal seal of the District. Its name was changed later to Port of Palm Beach District. The defendant demurred, but was overruled, and then pleaded general denials, and specially denied that it had covenanted under seal to pay, and alleged that the seal had been attached by persons unknown, without a resolution or any authority of the District, and that suit was barred by the five year statute of limitation; and moreover there was in fact nothing owing to Goethals, but as engineer in charge he had not performed his duties in stated ways, had really been overpaid, and had obtained this promise to pay, equal only to an account stated, on certain false and fraudulent representations. Under Rule of Civil Procedure 36, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c, the plaintiffs sought an admission of genuineness of the document sued on and obtained an admission that the signatures of Geer, Chairman, and Ellis, Secretary, were genuine, with a repetition of the denial “that the purported seal attached was placed there pursuant to any resolution passed by defendant, or that said corporate seal was placed thereon by any person or persons vested with authority so to do.” The plaintiffs then moved for a summary judgment under Rule 56 and on three affidavits given by the three Commissioners who governed the District from 1927 until Jan. 1, 1937, each stating that because of bank failures in 1927 the work of the District had to be suspended, and that in order to adjust amicably Goethals’s compensation under his contract as engineer, and to prevent future liability on it, they had agreed with him on the compensation due, and having no money had agreed to and did issue to him the certificate sued on, under the seal of the District; and that having read the answer in this case they did not know at the time the certificate was given any reason why it should not have been given and do not now know any such reason, nor why the payments made on it since should not have' been made. An affidavit from the attorney who had had the certificate for collection stated that beginning in 1928 and up till 1937 he had repeatedly appeared before the Board to collect it and the only reasons given for not paying were that they had no money, and would be criticised if they paid this certificate in full without a court judgment, since they had compromised three similar certificates given at the same time to contractors. The only counter-affidavit offered by defendant was that of the Secretary of the present Board of Commissioners who came into office Jan. 1, 1937, to the effect that the Board’s minutes and papers in his hands did not show any resolution authorizing any person or persons to affix the corporate seal to the certificate given Goethals, and that he had talked with the three former Commissioners who gave affidavits and they said they did not remember the details, or much about the matter. The judge held that there was no genuine issue as to any material fact, and that though defendant had demanded a jury trial plaintiffs were entitled to judgment, which was accordingly entered. The points specified as relied on in the appeal are that the ruling on demurrer and the final judgment ought to have been otherwise because there was no authority of law to execute the instrument, no resolution authorizing the certificate or the seal on it, because the suit is barred by limitation, and because an opportunity ought to have been afforded to cross-examine the witnesses before a jury.

Error is also specified in that fraud and overreaching by Goethals was pleaded and was an issue. There was such pleading, but the motion for judgment asserts the defense to be a sham, and the three Commissioners who then governed the District all swear that having read the pleading they know of nothing to support it. The counter-affidavit contains nothing to show there was fraud or mistake. The burden was certainly on defendant to sustain this plea. No real issue of fact as to this matter appears.

We have no doubt the District had power to issue the paper. The Act creating it (Florida Sp.Acts of 1915, p. 173, c. 7081), Section 5, expressly authorizes *709 the Board to employ an engineer, implication they are authorized to contract to pay him; and, also by implication, to give him a note for what they owe. Ginsberg v. City of Daytona Beach, 103 Fla. 168, 137 So. 253, 254. That there may have been a compromise in fixing the amount is immaterial, for compromises are favored where there is in the public body power to contract and incur the debt, and a real dispute exists as to its amount. City of Coral Gables v. State, 128 Fla. 874, 176 So. 40. A public corporation usually may not issue negotiable paper without express authority, because the operation of the law merchant may cause it to have to pay what it does not owe; but where such authority is lacking, such a paper is not void, but merely not negotiable. It is still an evidence of debt. Federal Reserve Bank v. Panama City, 5 Cir., 87 F.2d 677. Since there is no claim here of innocent holder, the question is unimportant, but Sect. 9 authorizes the borrowing on promissory note for periods not exceeding two years at one time, and on interest not exceeding seven percent. By

It was not necessary that plaintiffs plead or produce a resolution authorizing the giving of this paper or the sealing of it. The Act, Sect. 8, requires tax levies to be entered at large on the minutes, but there is no requirement that other things be so entered. According to Johnson v. Wakulla County, 28 Fla. 720, 9 So. 690, every public body ought to keep minutes, and its minutes are admissible in evidence as public records; but according to all the cases where there is no law requiring a public contract to be entered on the minutes a failure to do so will not defeat the contract. We are not sure whether there is no minute at all about this settlement with Goethals, or whether there is none which authorizes the sealing of the instrument. No minute was produced, so no issue is raised between a minute authorizing a note not under seal and the witnesses who say a sealed instrument was agreed on. Rule 56(e) requires a sworn or certified copy if a paper is relied on. There is nothing to show this note is not exactly what the Board intended.

At one time a corporation was held to sign only by its seal. As a corollary it has been argued that a corporate seal is a mere signature and does not of itself make the instrument a specialty. But the modern doctrine is that unless charter or statute requires otherwise a corporation may transact acts of ordinary business on signature just as natural persons do.' In such matters to get out the corporate seal and affix it has about the same formality and significance as when an individual uses a seal.

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Bluebook (online)
104 F.2d 706, 1 Fed. R. Serv. 597, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/port-of-palm-beach-dist-v-goethals-ca5-1939.