Roberts v. Bolles

101 U.S. 119, 25 L. Ed. 880, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1891
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1880
Docket146
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 101 U.S. 119 (Roberts v. Bolles) 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
Roberts v. Bolles, 101 U.S. 119, 25 L. Ed. 880, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1891 (1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case involves the validity of certain township bonds, bearing date April 7, 1871, issued in the name of the town of Roberts, in the county of Marshall, 111., and made payable to the Hamilton, Lacón, and Eastern Railroad Company, or bearer, on the 7th of April, 1874, with interest from date, payable annually, on the presentation and surrender of the interest coupons as they matured.

Each bond, signed by the supervisor of the town, attested by its clerk, and certified upon its face to have been duly recorded in the township registry of bonds, as directed by law, recites that it “ is one of a series, amounting in the aggregate to $80,000, and consisting of thirty bonds, numbered from 1 to *121 30, inclusive, each of which is for -SI,000, and all of which are of even date herewith, and are issued in accordance with the laws of the State of Illinois, in payment of a subscription made by said town of Boberts for three hundred shares of the capital stock of the Hamilton,' Lacón, and Eastern Bailroad Company, which said subscription was made by said town by virtue of a vote of a majority of the voters of said town in favor thereof, at a special election had for such purpose in said town on the twenty-fifth day of March, 1869, in pursuance of the provisions of the laws of the State of Illinois, and of the several acts.of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois incorporating said company.”

It is found as a fact in the case that, in January, 1872, defendants in error purchased, in good faith, the bonds in the market, without notice of any defence thereto, and paying therefor at the rate of ninty-three and a half cents on the dollar.

The first plea alleges that the payee named in the bonds, the railroad company, had never indorsed them, or any of them, in writing, and that by the law of Illinois in force when they were made, as well as when they were sold by the company, without such indorsement, they were not transferable so as to vest the title thereto, and the right to sue thereon in the name of the holder.

A demurrer to that plea was sustained, and, as we think, properly so. It is true that the Supreme Court of Illinois, in Hilborne v. Actus (4 Ill. 344), held that under a statute of that State, then in force, notes payable to a person or bearer could not be transferred, or assigned by delivery only, so as to authorize the holder by delivery to sue in his own name. “ There is one way,” the court said, “ by which he can do so, and that is by virtue of the assignment indorsed on the note itself. The indorsement gives the right to sue in the name of the assignee.” That construction of the Illinois statute was followed in Roosa v. Crist, 17 id. 450. But New Hope Delaware Bridge Co. v. Perry (11 id. 467) decides that bank-notes payable to bearer, or to a particular person or bearer, are not • embraced by the provisions of the statute, or by the reasons which caused its passage; and that the holder, by delivery merely, can maintain an action thereon, unless it appears that he obtained them *122 mala fide. The. statute, it was said, applies “ only to instruments that were not negotiable by the common law or the custom of merchants.”

In Johnson v. County of Stark (24 id. 75), the court put municipal bonds and coupons on the footing, in this respect, of bank-bills, and thus brought that class of commercial securities within the rule announced in New Hope Delaware Bridge Co. v. Perry. Its language was: “ It seems to be the well-settled doctrine that State, county, city, and other bonds and public securities of this character are negotiable by delivery only, without indorsement, in the same manner as bank-bills, especially whe'n they are payable to bearer.” Subsequently, in Supervisors of Mercer County v. Hubbard (45 id. 139), which was an action on coupons attached to bonds issued by a county in payment of a railroad subscription, the court said: “More recent decisions place these coupons in the condition of bank-bills payable.to bearer, and no one will deny such bills can be given in evidence in a suit by the bearer against the bank issuing them, under the common counts. We see no difference between coupons payable to bearer for a sum certain, and a bank-bill. They alike pass by delivery only.” Finally, in Town of Eagle v. Kohn (84 id. 292), it was said : “ It is the well-settled doctrine that bonds of this character are to be treated as commercial paper ; and this court has held coupons attached to them to be negotiable by delivery only, without indorsement.”

It is thus seen that by repeated adjudications of that court, prior to the statute of 1874, municipal bonds payable to* bearer were excepted from the rule announced in Hilborne v. Actus and Roosa v. Crist.

But all doubt upon the subject is removed by the eighth section of the act approved March 18, 1874, revising'the laws of Illinois in relation to promissory notes, bonds, due-bills, and other instruments of writing, which was in force when this action was commenced. It provides “ that any note, bond, bill, or other instrument in writing, made payable to bearer, may be transferred by delivery thereof, and an action may be maintained thereon in the name of the holder thereof.” Rev. Stat. Ill. 719, sect. 8.

This act, though not in force when defendants in error *123 acquired the bonds in suit, applies, we think, to actions commenced after it took effect.

We are satisfied that this plea, tested alone by the law of Illinois, and without reference to the decisions of this court upon the subject of commercial securities, is insufficient.

The third plea, to which a demurrer was also sustained, proceeds upon the ground that the election of March 25, 1869, was called without competent authority, and conferred no power upon the supervisor and town clerk, or either of them, to subscribe to the stock or issue the bonds in question, and that the latter were, consequently, void.

Of the facts set out in the plea it is alleged that the defendants in error had “ constructive notice,” prior to their purchase of the bonds; to wit, on the day they bear date.

The questions of law presented' undér this plea arise out of certain facts which it is necessary to state somewhat in detail.

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Bluebook (online)
101 U.S. 119, 25 L. Ed. 880, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-bolles-scotus-1880.