State v. of Buttles

3 Ohio St. (N.S.) 309
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio St. (N.S.) 309 (State v. of Buttles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. of Buttles, 3 Ohio St. (N.S.) 309 (Ohio 1854).

Opinion

Ranney, J.

The questions presented in this case arise upon a demurrer to the plaintiff’s declaration. The importance of the case to the parties, the large amount involved, and the difficult application of the principles upon which its decision depends, fully justify the very elaborate examination given it by counsel.

On the 31st of December, a. d. 1849, the canal fund commissioner of the state drew from the treasury, of money belonging to the state, and applicable to the payment of its indebtedness becoming 314] due in the city of New York on the *first of January, 1852, and delivered to the Columbus Insurance Company, one hundred thousand dollars, taking from the insurance company a bond of that date, by which, after reciting that that sum had been deposited by the commissioners with that company, the company, for value received, promised to pay the amount, with seven per cent, interest thereon, on the 28th day of December, 1851, at the office of the Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company, in the city of New York, or at such other place in New York city as said commissioners might direct, with the privilege of paying the whole, or any part of the amount, in the seven per cent, stocks of the state at par. At the same time, and as a part of the same transaction, the defendant’s testator, with others,' executed and delivered to the commissioners a separate bond, binding themselves that the insurance company should pay the amount, with interest, at the time it fell due, or, in default, that they would pay it. The declaration avers that the sum was deposited with the company, “ with a view to the redemption of a portion of the seven per cent, stock of the state of Ohio, and to the increase and advancement of the canal fund, at the instance and request of Joel Buttles and others named,” and to he transmitted by said insurance company to the city of New [315]*315York, and there to be paid to said fund commissioners, in money or in seven per cent, stock of the State of Ohio at par.”

In support of the demurrer, it is claimed:

1. That the transaction was, in substance and legal effect, a loan of the public moneys, which the fund commissioners were not only not authorized by law to make, but were expressly prohibited from doing so, and made liable to indictment and punishment for doing it.

2. That this transaction being a loan of money not only not authorized, but expressly prohibited by statute, the instrument set out in the declaration, on grounds of public policy, is illegal and void; and no action can be sustained on it in a court of justice.

*3. If it should not be held a loan, but a deposit (which it is [315 conceded the commissioners might lawfully make), it is still objected that the instrument is illegal and void, because the insurance company had no corporate power to receive money on deposit, or to engage in the business of exchange.

I. We can entertain no doubt that the money advanced to the insurance company was, in substance, and legal effect, a loan, which, upon its face, established the relation of lender and borrower between the state and the company. The instrument, it is true, ! recites that the sum has been deposited with the insurance company, and that it is to be repaid as specified in other parts of the bond. But the whole instrument, taken together, most clearly shows that it was to, and did, become the money of the company, and constitutes the “value received,’-’ for which the company undertook to pay the sum of one hundred thousand dollars two years thence, with interest.

The fund could not be withdrawn at the will of the state; it was not placed with the company for safe keeping, or transmission; but the clear and manifest object was to enable the company to obtain the use of the money for a long period of time, to be used, controlled, and treated as its own, and the state to derive a profit from its use.

The authorities are united in treating such a transaction as a loan upon interest: Commercial Bank of Albany v. Hughes, 17 Wend. 100; Bank of Orleans v. Morrill, 2 Hill, 295; Leavitt v. Palmer, 3 Conn. 35 ; Southern Loan Company v. Morris, 2 Barr, 175.

Had the commissioners power to make the loan? Upon this question a large number of statutes, extending from 1825 to 1846 [316, 317]*316, 317have been referred to, and commented upon at length by counsel. It is unnecessary for us to examine them in detail. We have carefully read them all, and are entirely satisfied that tire policy of the state has always been, what we have no hesitation in saying it should have been, to prohibit its officers and agents from loaning 316] or dealing in its *funds, either on public or private account. A. few exceptions, when they have been authorized by special statutes to loan or otherwise improve particular funds, only make the general rule the more manifest. The act of 1825 (Chase Stat. 1472), while it gave to the commissioners the most ample power in relation to obtaining loans, paying interest, depositing and transferring funds, contains this significant provision: “ They [the commissioners] shall recommend, from time to time, to the legislature, the adoption of such measures, as they may think proper for the improvement of said fund.” Nothing could show more clearly the fixed purpose of the general assembly to- reserve to itself the exclusive power of determining whether any portion of the fund should be loaned or invested. The commissioners were only to recommend measures for legislative action; not to attempt to improve the fund, without express authority given by that body.

But it is quite immaterial what might have been the state of legislation prior to 1840. The act of March 23, of that year, “to regulate the receipts and disbursements of the canal fund,” which repeals all prior laws inconsistent with its provisions, very carefully provides for paying into the state treasury, all moneys belonging to that fund as they are received, and, except the portion applicable to the sinking fund, expressly prohibits their being drawn from the treasury until they are needed to pay the liabilities of the state; while the 15th section of the act of March 10,1843, to reorganizo the board of canal fund commissioners, provides, that they shall act as commissioners of the sinking fund, “and shall, from time to time, apply all moneys accruing to the credit of said fund to the purchase of, or investment in, the public debt of this state, and to no other use or purpose whatever

The act of March 2, 1846, “ to prescribe the duties of the board of public works, canal fund commissioners, etc-.,” after requiring sundry duties to be performed by the auditor and treasurer of state, 317] in the 6th section provides, that all *“ revenues appropriated by law to the canal fund, or to the interest fund, shall be carried by the state auditor to the credit of the interest fund, and shall be [318]*318paid by tbe state treasurer, on tbe warrant of the auditor, to the commissioners of the canal fund, and shall be, by said commissioners, applied to the payment of interest on the public debts of the state, and for no other use or purpose.”

On the same day was passed an act “ to punish the embezzlement of public moneys, and for other purposes.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio St. (N.S.) 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-of-buttles-ohio-1854.