Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Lyon County

95 F. 325, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3158
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Iowa
DecidedJuly 10, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 95 F. 325 (Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Lyon County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Lyon County, 95 F. 325, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3158 (circtnia 1899).

Opinion

SHIRAS, District Judge.

The general rules which should be applied in the determination of the questions presented by the record in this suit are fairly stated in the opinion of the court upon the heaiing of the demurrer to the bill, and which is reported in 82 Fed. 929. The record shows that all the owners of the series of bonds issued by the defendant county under date of May 1, 1885, and amounting to the sum of §120,000, arc parties to this suit, and therefore the final decree herein will fully settle the liability of the county, if any, upon this entire issue of bonds. The evidence proves that, aside from the defense based upon the limitation contained in the constitution of the state of Iowa, forbidding the creation of indebtedness by municipalities of the state to an amount in excess of 5 per cent, upon the value of the taxable property of the municipality, the bonds in question were issued under due and proper authority of law, and the county received full value therefor, and thus the question is narrowed down to the proposition whether the constitutional limitation prevents the granting of any relief to the complainants, under the facts established by the evidence in this case. The stipulation herein filed shows that the total taxable value of the property in the county, at the date of the issuance of the bonds now held by complainants, was the sum of §1,580,735, including therein the sum of §143,208, entered upon the tax hooks of the county as exemptions allowed under the timber-culture acts of the state of Iowa, but which sum, for tin; reasons stated in Keene Five-Cent Sav. Bank v. Lyon Co., 90 Fed. 523, I hold is not to he deducted from the valuation of the property as shown upon the county tax lists; and thus it appears that in 1885 the limitation fixed by the constitution of the state upon the extent of the indebtedness lawfully eatable by the county was the sum of §79,036.75. On May 1, 1885, the indebtedness of the county consisted of the so-called “Shade Bonds,” amounting to §100,000; §8,0-00 of the bonds issued between June 3, 1878, and June 5, 1879; the funding bonds of §40,600; and warrants to the amount of §17,700. The Shade bonds, being issued in excess of the constitutional limitation, were not enforceable, a nd, under the ruling of the court of appeals in Lyon Co. v. Ashuelot Nat. Bank, 30 C. C. A. 582, 87 Fed. 137, they cannot be included in the computation of the existing indebtedness of the county, and, omitting these bonds, there remains a total liability then outstanding of §66,300; thus showing that the county indebtedness had not reached the constitutional limit by the sum of, §12,736.75. Furthermore, the evidence shows that with the money procured from the complainants there were paid off §16,900 of the outstanding valid refunding bonds previously issued by the county, and it thus ap pears that the aggregate of these two amounts, to wit, §29,636.75, can be charged against the county without causing the indebtedness to exceed the sum of §79,036.75, the amount of the constitu[330]*330tional limitation. In other words, if the liability of the county in its contracts, evidenced by the bonds issued under date of May 1, 1885, is enforced up to the named sum of $29,636.75, the indebtedness of the county will not be increased beyond the restrictive limit of the constitution; and upon what principle of law or equity can the claim be based that the county ought not to be held liable for this amount, at least? As already stated, the coúnty has received and used full consideration for the whole amount of the bonds issued by it. The only defense against liability for the full sum of the bonds is the constitutional limitation, but force and effect is given thereto by limiting the right of recovery against the county to a sum which will not cause the indebtedness to exceed the limitation.

On behalf of the defendant, it is urged that the statute of limitations bars any recovery in this case, even admitting that a liability existed against the county at the date of the furnishing the money by the complainants. If this was an action for money had .and received, or for damages or the like, the cause of action would be held to have accrued in 1885, when the money of complainants was paid to the county, and the plea of the statute might well be availed of to defeat a recovery. The present proceedings are not to recover for money had and received, nor for damages for fraud or deceit, but the bill is filed for the purpose of having it decided what part or portion of the contracts entered into by the county with complainants can be enforced, in view of the constitutional limita,tion. The purpose of the bill is not to obtain a decree canceling or rescinding the contracts in fact entered into, whereby the complainants'paid to the county certain sums of money, in consideration of its promise to repay the same in 20 years, with interest payable at stated intérvals, but to ascertain, by judicial determination, what portion, if any, of the contract can be enforced.. If it be held that a given amount is valid and enforceable, that part must be enforced, in accordance with the terms of the contract between the parties, which fixed the time of payment of the principal sum due at 20 years from May 1, 1885.

If the suit is maintainable for this purpose, then the statute of limitations is 'only available against such portions of the interest as may have come due more than 10 years preceding the filing the bill herein, but is not available to defeat the proceeding as a whole. Thus, the pivotal question is whether the complainants can enforce their claims against the county for an amount which, if allowed, will not increase the'liability of the county beyond the constitutional limit. This is not a case wherein the rights and equities of complainants are based solely upon a purchase by them, in open market, of the negotiable securities of the county; but the evidence shows that B. L. Richards, the refunding agent of the county, directly negotiated with complainants, and submitted to them the resolution of the board of supervisors, indicating the purpose of the county to refund the outstanding indebtedness in order to reduce the interest, and submitted evidence showing that it was the purpose of the county to use the money it desired to obtain from complainants in refunding the [331]*331existing indebtedness of the county, which purpose, if effectual, would not increase the debt of the county. By these inducements, the complainants were induced to loan to the county a large amount _ of money, upon the promise that it would be repaid in 20 years, with interest, and the money thus advanced was in fact used in payment and discharge of the outstanding indebtedness of the county.

As evidence of the obligation which the county had assumed to repay the sums received by it from complainants, the written promise, in the form of negotiable bonds and interest coupons, was executed and delivered to complainants; but, when performance of the promise was demanded of the county, it replied that, owing to the restrictive limit upon municipal indebtedness contained in the constitution of the state of Iowa, it could not lawfully incur the whole amount of the indebtedness represented by the bonds held by the complainants, and thereupon this suit was brought to ascertain what part or proportion of the indebtedness actually incurred can be enforced without violating the constitutional restriction, and, it having been ascertained that at the time of the negotiations had with complainants the county could lawfully borrow from complainants a .given amount, no reason exists why the promise of the county should not be enforced against it up to this amount.

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Bluebook (online)
95 F. 325, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tna-life-ins-co-v-lyon-county-circtnia-1899.