State ex rel. White v. Dickerson

33 Nev. 540
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1910
DocketNo. 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 33 Nev. 540 (State ex rel. White v. Dickerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. White v. Dickerson, 33 Nev. 540 (Neb. 1910).

Opinions

By the Court,

Talbot, J.

(after stating the facts as above):

This proceeding is based upon a petition for a writ of mandate, asking that the lieutenant-governor, who, under a provision in the constitution, has been the acting governor since the death of Governor Sparks, be required to accept, on behalf of the state, 145 bonds of the State of North Carolina, which, with their unpaid interest coupons, are of the par value of $401,170, under an act of our legislature approved February 26,' 1901, entitled “An act to require the acceptance and collection of grants, devises, bequests, donations and assignments to the State of Nevada,” which reads as follows:

“Section 1. That whenever any grant, devise, bequest, donation or gift or assignment of money, bonds or choses in action or of any property, real or personal, shall be made to this state, the governor is hereby directed to receive and accept the same, so that the right and title to the same shall pass to the state; and all such bonds, notes or choses in action or the proceeds thereof when collected, and all other property or thing of value, so received by the state as aforesaid, shall be reported by the governor to the legislature, to the end that the same may be covered into the public treasury, or appropriated to the state university or to the public schools, or to state charities as may hereafter be directed by law.
“Sec. 2. That whenever it shall be necessary to protect or assert the right or title of the state to any property so received or derived as aforesaid,*or to collect or reduce into possession any bond, note, bill or chose in action, the attorney-general is directed to take the necessary and proper proceedings, and to bring suit in the name of the state in any court of competent jurisdiction, state or federal, and to prosecute all such suits, and is authorized to employ counsel to be associated with him in such suits and actions who, with him, shall fully rep[554]*554resent the state and shall be entitled to reasonable compensation out of the recoveries or collections in such suits and actions.” (Stats. 1901, c. 19.)

As reasons for respondent’s refusal to accept the bonds, and against the issuance of a writ requiring their acceptance, numerous objections are made, as detailed in the foregoing statement of facts and issues. Among the more important of these, and illustrative of others, are the ones that the bonds were issued as the result of a conspiracy to defraud the State of North Carolina; that they were declared invalid by an act of the legislature and by a constitutional amendment in that state; that the bonds of the par value of $11,262,000, in addition to the ones of the par value of $401,170, are owned by individuals who are without remedy for the enforcement of their payment, because under the eleventh amendment to the federal constitution the persons holding them cannot maintain a suit against the State of North Carolina; that the bonds are barred by the statute of limitations of that state; that by reason of the declaration of invalidity expressed by the legislature in the constitutional amendment, the holders of the bonds are without remedy to enforce their collection, and that they are therefore without any real value, and that the acceptance of them would impose upon the state expensive litigation for their enforcement and would tend to disturb the friendly relations existing between the people of North Carolina and this state. The most of these obj ections and others raised, such as those which relate to the validity of the bonds, are grave judicial questions which might be determined in an action between the State of Nevada and the State nf North. Carolina, in which the latter would be entitled to appear and defend. These, and other serious questions, judicial in their nature, are for the courts, and not properly for the executive to determine. Whether North Carolina, acting as her own judge, and denying the holders of the bonds the right to enforce them, even in her own courts, can make such a constitutional and legislative repudiation of them, in [555]*555the nature of a declaration of a party in his own favor, as will prevent their enforcement in a disinterested tribunal such as the Supreme Court of the United States, and whether the statute of limitations would run after that state had abrogated any provision in its laws by which the holders of the bonds might bring suit and recover judgment, are not questions essential to be determined in this proceeding. The statute itself does not provide that the bonds must be of any value, but directs the governor to accept them, without specifying that he may decline to receive them if he believes they are without value or cannot be collected, or that the acceptance of them will not be for the best interests of the state. Courts may decline to consider matters which are trivial and regarding which there is no real controversy. Ordinarily the district court and the supreme court have jurisdiction where the amount is over $300, but the constitution confers upon this court the right to issue writs of mandamus without mentioning any amount as being necessary to give the court jurisdiction to grant the writ, State and federal statutes generally fix the jurisdiction of courts according to the demand or amount in controversy, which in this proceeding, incidental to a suit for recovery on the bonds, may be considered their face value, the same as in a suit directly upon them. Neither this court nor any officer is greater than the organic act under which the state and the court and officers are created. We ought not to usurp the rights of the people by amending into the constitution nor the powers of the legislature by judicially legislating into the statute a requirement that the value of the bonds must be proven before a suit can be maintained to recover upon them, when neither the constitution nor the act requires such value to be shown before this court can issue the writ of mandate. It is not necessary or usual in suing upon bonds or other negotiable instruments to allege or prove that they are of value. If it be conceded that unless they are of some value the lieutenant and acting governor is not required to accept them, being regular upon their [556]*556face and issued under a statute of North Carolina, they are presumed to be of par value; but whether of any value the holder, the same as the holder of other obligations or claims, is entitled to maintain an action to determine whether they are legally due, and if they are to judgment, even though the judgment may be valueless by reason of the inability of the defendant to pay.

No proof was submitted on behalf of respondent to support the allegation in his answer that the bonds are of no value. The statement of counsel for petitioner that the bonds were of the market value of 25 per cent of the face value, which is not directly denied, does not indicate that they may not be of greater value, or par value, when owned by the state, which, differently from individuals, can maintain an action to recover upon them. The value of the bonds to the state would be dependent largely upon the result of a suit. If litigants had to allege and prove the value of bonds and negotiable instruments in advance of maintaining a suit upon them, the burdens of litigation, already too great, might be doubled or greatly increased.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Nev. 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-white-v-dickerson-nev-1910.