State ex rel. Exchange Bank v. Board of Liquidators

29 La. Ann. 264
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1877
DocketNo. 6505
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 La. Ann. 264 (State ex rel. Exchange Bank v. Board of Liquidators) 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
State ex rel. Exchange Bank v. Board of Liquidators, 29 La. Ann. 264 (La. 1877).

Opinions

Tho opinion of tho court was delivered -by

Manning, O. J.'

Tho relator holds ñvo bonds of one thousand dollars each, issued by tho State to the Baton Rouge, Grosse Teto, and Opelousas railroad in 1855, and purchased by him in 1872, which with their coupons ho desires to fund in tho consolidated bonds of the State. Tho exchange is to bo made at tho rate of sixty cents on tho dollar, under the funding act of 1874. To accomplish this he applied to the defendant. [265]*265who refused to fund them, alleging that the act of May 17. 1875, had prohibited it until tho Supreme Court of this State had so ordered. Thereupon the relator took this proceeding by mandamus to compel tho defendant to exchange his bonds and coupons for the consolidated bonds of the State.

The defendant met tho alternativo writ with a denial that relator was in a situation which authorized him to require that his bonds bo funded, and for this: that the act of 1875 expressly prohibits tlie defendant from issuing any bonds in exchange for outstanding bonds or warrants of dato anterior to January 24,1874, the legality of which has been or shall hereafter be questioned, until said bonds or warrants shall have been declared by tho Supreme Court of this State legal and valid obligations against the State, and that they were issued in strict conformity to law, and not in violation of tho State and Federal constitutions, and for a valid consideration. Acts 1875, p. 110.

The same act proceeds to declare “ questioned and doubtful as to their legality and validity” certain enumerated bonds, among which are thirty thousand dollars of bonds of tho kind held by the relator, and tho Board of Liquidation is prohibited from issuing bonds, authorized by the funding act, in exchange for tho bonds thus enumerated until their legality, validity, and consideration have been tested under the provisions of the act and a final decree rendered thereon. Tho relator must therefore obtain from this tribunal a final decree establishing tho legality and validity of his bonds before lie can properly demand of the defendant that they be funded, and until he has obtained such decree he is not entitled to the writ Of mandamus to compel tho defendant to do that which it is not his duty to do before a final decree of this court is exhibited to him declaring such funding to be his ditty.

Tlie answer of the defendant also denies that relator’s bonds form any portion of tho floating debt, or of tho valid outstanding bonds, within the -meaning of tho supplemental funding act, and alleged that they did not pass from the possession of the State lawfully, and that the State did not receive any valid consideration for them.

It is manifest that the issue thus tendered is of higher dignity than a mere question of practice. It strikes at the root of the power of tlie Board of Liquidation to fund certain enumerated bonds, or classes of bonds, and the whole scope of that power, its original range and extent, and its subsequent limitation, come necessarily under review in order ■to determine the rights of relator in the present proceeding.

The funding act (acts 1874, p. 39) was a confession of bankruptcy on the part of tho State. It provided for tho exchange of all valid outstanding bonds of tho State; and all valid warrants drawn previous to its enactment, with certain exceptions, for consolidated bonds at the [266]*266rato oí sixty cents in the latter for one dollar of tlio former. To effect this exchange, a Board of liquidators was constituted, whose duty was to receive the old bonds and warrants and issue tho new bonds, and in ease of the rejection of any bond or warrant by this board and its refusal to make tho exchange tho holder of tho bond or warrant thus rejected might apply by petition to tho proper court for relief, and if final judgment should bo rendered in his favor against tlio board, then it shall-lie its duty to fund tho bond or war-rant thus offered.

• The supplemental act, enacted tho following year, separated certain bonds ironi the general mass of the State obligations, and put them under suspicion. It enumerated them, in aggregate over fourteen millions, and declared their legality and validity questionable, and prohibited the Board of Liquidation from exchanging them until their validity shall bo tested in the manner pointed out by the act, and prescribed that the solo convincing and determinativo test should bo a final decree of tins tribunal declaring them to ho legal and valid obligations of the State, and that they were issued in strict conformity to law, and not in violation of the constitution of this State or of the United States, and for a valid consideration.

In order to enlarge this facility for testing the validity of any bond enumerated in tlio proscribed list, permission was given to any person assessed for State taxes to institute suit in liis own name, or to intervene in any suit instituted by another, against tho Board of Liquidation and prosecute it to a final termination; and any holder of braids or warrants whoso validity is questioned in any suit brought under the provisions of this aet may intervene in such suit, tlio final termination of all of them being a decree rendered by tho Supreme Court, without which tlio bond or warrant thus questioned could not bo funded. ■

Tlius it is apparent that the board was not compelled to exchange any bond or warrant that might bo presented under the act of 1874 for a consolidated bond without question. That it had a discretion is obvious from tho provision made Cor tho holder in ease ids braid was rejected; i. e., lie may apply by petition to a proper court for relief, and if final judgment is rendered in his favor, it shall bo the duty of tho board to fund his claim.

But tho act of 1875 deprived the board of this discretion quoad the bonds enumerated in it. So far from imposing upon its members the duty of inquiry touching the validity, or legality, or consideration of these bonds, tho act commanded them to assume that they wore invalid, illegal, and of no consideration, and prohibited them from deciding the question — prohibited them from exchanging the bonds until another designated tribunal had decided it for them.

Under the act of 1874, it is the duty of the board to fund the general [267]*267indebtedness of tlio State, with discretionary power to reject such claims as did not seem proper, and with tho right to the holder to test tho merits of the rejection before a competent court. Under tho act of 1875; it is tho duty of the board to reject the bonds enumerated in it, and the holder of them must himself lift the cloud which that debt declares rests upon them, and vindicate their validity, legality, and good consideration by obtaining- a decroe from tho court of tho last resort in liis favor. That which was the duty of the board to do under the first act is its imperativo duty not to do under tho second.

A mandamus is an order issued in tho name of tho .State, addressed to an individual, or corporation, or court of inferior jurisdiction, directing- the performance of some act belonging to tho placo, duty, or quality 'With which it is clothed. Its object is to prevent a denial of justice, and it should therefore bo issued in all cases where tho law has assigned no relief by the- ordinary means, and even when a party has other means of relief, if the slowness of ordinary legal forms is likely to produce such delay that the public good and the administration of justice will suffer from it. Code of Practice, arts. 829 et sey.

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Related

Kostmayer v. Police Jury
1 La. App. 618 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1925)
Devin v. Belt
17 A. 375 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1889)
State ex rel. N. Y. Guaranty & Indemnity Co. v. Board of Liquidation
1 Mann. Unrep. Cas. 63 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
29 La. Ann. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-exchange-bank-v-board-of-liquidators-la-1877.