Supervisors of Saratoga v. Seabury

11 Abb. N. Cas. 461
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 Abb. N. Cas. 461 (Supervisors of Saratoga v. Seabury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Supervisors of Saratoga v. Seabury, 11 Abb. N. Cas. 461 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1881).

Opinions

Learned, P. J.

The complaint sets up that the plaintiffs, in November 1874, authorized Henry A. Mann, their treasurer, to borrow on the credit of the county, a sum amounting in fact to $20,800.44; that under this authority he borrowed some $188,000, and issued therefor to sundry persons, defendants in this action, notes uniform in style and form on behalf of the county; that these notes were held severally by the defendants, and that suits had been commenced on some of them ; that in the belief of plaintiffs, only $20,800.44 of these notes were legal claims against the county ; and that the plaintiffs were ready to pay that amount; that the plaintiffs did not know who were the rightful owners of the legal debt; that it would require a long examination to ascertain which of the claims were valid ; that the invalid notes are not distinguishable on their face from the valid notes, and that lapse [464]*464of time would make it difficult to determine which were valid.

One of the defendants demurred, and when the case came before us on the demurrer it seemed to us that the defendants had severally distinct causes of action, triable at law and by a jury. That the several claims of the defendants were entirely independent, one of the other ; and that a recovery by one defendant on his claim in no way interfered with or affected the claim of another defendant on his claim. It seemed to us that a debtor had no right to bring all his separate and independent creditors into court in one action to deprive them of a jury trial and to compel the legal creditors to await the decision for, or against, those who might prove to be no creditors at all. Nor did we see that the fact that the plaintiffs were a muncipal corporation gave them any further rights, in this respect, than would be possessed by any private individual whose agent, authorized to issue $20,000 of notes, had issued to tona fide holders for value, notes of his principal to the amount of $130,000.

It was, however, held that the demurrer was not well taken. And it becomes important therefore, at this time, when the case comes before us on appeal from the judgment of the special term, to ascertain what principles were necessarily laid down by the court in its decision. As a demurrer admits none of the legal conclusions alleged in the pleading demurred to, but only the facts legally pleaded, we are confined to those facts in the complaint, and to the decision that those facts constitute a cause of action. Since, too, the constitution retains the trial by jury in all cases in which it existed, and since this action takes away from the defendants such a trial, as a matter of right, it necessarily follows that this action must have been decided to be one which, before the adoption of the constitution, might have been brought in the court of chancery.

[465]*465The court of chancery allowed a bill of peace where there was one general right to be established against a great number of persons (2 Story, § 854). That is not this case ; because here the plaintiff insists upon different and diverse rights against the several defendants admitting the claims of some and denying those of others. It also allowed a bill of peace where there had been several trials at law (§ 859). That is not the present case, and these are the only classes of bills of peace (§ 860). So a bill quia timet, was brought to prevent anticipated wrongs, and for the protection of specific property (§ 826). The present is hardly that case.

It remains, therefore, that this action must have been considered to be a bill of interpleader. And the peculiarity of that action is, that two or more parties claim the same thing or money, and that the plaintiff does not know to whom that thing or money is due or owing (1 Story Eq. 806). And therefore it must be that the court of appeals held, on the allegations of the complaint, that these defendants severally claimed the same thing or money, viz., the $20,800.44, and that the plaintiffs, honestly desiring to pay that money, did not know to whom to pay it. A plaintiff who claims any part of the thing in controversy while the defendants' claim the whole, is not allowed to bring an action of interpleader. If, then, the facts set forth in the complaint had been deemed by that court to show a possible liability of the plaintiffs for any nore than the $20,800.44, clearly the complaint would not have shown a cause of action. For if the plaintiffs on the complaint showed that they owed, or might by any possibility owe, more that the $20,800.44, then the court would not have overruled the demurrer, and would not have permitted plaintiffs, who owed $130,000, to delay payment by offering to pay $20,000, and by asking the defendants to litigate in regard to that amount.

[466]*466We feel therefore compelled to say that it follows . necessarily from the decision of the court of appeals ] that, upon the facts stated in the complaint the de- / fendants are liable only for $20,800.44. The complaint did not aver that the defendants had not given full value for the notes. If the defendants, or any of them, had not severally given full value for the notes, that fact would have been a good defense at law for such defendants as had not given value, and there would have been no need of a bill of interpleader. So too, if the defendants, or any of them, had had actual notice of an over exercise of power on the part of Mr. Mann, that too would be to plaintiffs as a defense equally available for such defendants as a defense in law, as it would be a ground for relief in equity. Therefore, from these principles, and from the silence of the complaint, we may assume that the decision, sustaining the complaint, did not rest on the ground of want of consideration for the notes, or on actual notice of any defect of power in Mr. Mann in the case of any defendant.

The principle then which we understand to be laid down is this : that where a municipal corporation lawfully authorizes one of its officers to issue obligations of that corporation to a certain definite amount, and such officer issues such obligations to a larger amount, the corporation is liable only to the extent of the amount which it authorized, even though all the obligations be in hands of bona fide holders for value. And it would seem also to follow that the obligations which are first issued, to the extent authorized, are those which are valid, for no other test can be suggested to determine which are valid, and which are invalid. It is true that no person who should take the obligations subsequently issued by such officer, would have any means of ascertaining whether or not the limit had been exceeded. The statements of the officer to the effect that the limit had not been exceeded, would be no [467]*467more binding on the corporation than would the act of the officer in the issue. And therefore, under this principle, every person taking such obligations takes them at a risk from which no inquiry will protect. And if the officer has exceeded the amount to which the instructions of his principal limited him, the principal is not liable. The defendants on this appeal cite many cases which, as they claim, establish firmly the contrary doctrine. But we feel, ourselves to be concluded in this case by the decision of the court of appeals on the demurrer, to the doctrine that the plaintiffs are liable only to the extent of the $20,800.44, as to which sum that courtmnst have/ held that the defendants were practically to interplead.

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11 Abb. N. Cas. 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supervisors-of-saratoga-v-seabury-nysupct-1881.