Truman v. Inhabitants of Town of Harmony

205 F. 549, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1582
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedMay 29, 1913
DocketNo. 686
StatusPublished

This text of 205 F. 549 (Truman v. Inhabitants of Town of Harmony) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Truman v. Inhabitants of Town of Harmony, 205 F. 549, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1582 (D. Me. 1913).

Opinion

HALE, District Judge.

This case now comes before the court for final hearing upon bill, answer, replication, and proofs. The' bill prays that a certain portion of an issue of bonds issued by the defendant town may be declared a valid obligation of the town. On August 1, 1896, the town issued bonds to the amount of $8,500, bearing interest at the rate of 4 per cent, per annum. This issue of bonds was to aid in the construction of the Sebasticook Moosehcad Railroad from Hartland to Harmony; in this railroad the town was to take stock in return for the bonds so issued. On June 20, 1895, at a town meeting, the town voted to authorize the selectmen to issue bonds to the amount of $8,500, and to subscribe for stock to that amount in the railroad as soon as organized, provided the railroad could guarantee, to the satisfaction of a committee to he chosen by the town, that the balance of the money over and above $8,500 necessary for the construction and completion of the road to Harmony pledged should be subscribed and furnished, and said road equipped and operated, or, if the railroad did not give this guaranty, the selectmen could issue the bonds and take the stock in the railroad upon completion of the road to Harmony village, if such completion should be within one year from the date of the meeting. On May 11, 1896, another town meeting was held at which it was voted to extend the time to August’ 20, 1896; but this vote did not receive the necessary two-thirds majority, as required by the statutes of Maine. On June 13, 1896, a third town meeting was held, at which it was voted to ratify all acts and doings of the meeting of June 20, 1895, and of May 11, 1896, and to authorize the town to- subscribe for stock to the amount of $8,500’ in the Sebasticook & Moosehcad Railroad Company, the sum of $8,500 was voted to pay for this stock, and the selectmen were authorized' to issue bonds of the town to this amount, at a rate of interest. not exceeding 4 per cent., and to deliver the bonds, or the proceeds thereof, as might be deemed expedient, to. the railroad, on securing a guaranty from the railroad that it would be completed and operated to Harmony village within six mouths. At that time a statute df the state of Maine, then in force, provided: . -.

“Whenever a city or town has voted at any legal meeting thereof upon any question of loaning Its credit to, or taking stock in, or in any way aiding any person or corporation, said city or town shall not vote again upon ¡the same subject, except at its annual meeting.” Revised Statutes of Maine 1883, c. 51, § 138. ''

[552]*552The meeting of July 13, 1896, was not an annual meeting. The bonds were, however, issued on August 1, 1896, and were signed by the selectmen and treasurer of the town; they were placed by the selectmen in the hands of the officials of the railroad, were sold by such officials, and came into the hands of one Joseph H. Johnson, who, on November 24, 1896, pledged them with the complainant as security for a loan of $6,800. The loan was not paid by Johnson, who became insolvent, and has remained insolvent ever since. The complainant has been forced to realize on the security, in so far as he is able, to discharge the debt. The first installment of interest on the bonds was not paid when due; and the bonds have ever since remained in default. The issuance of the bonds by the town created a debt which, together with the existing town debt, exceeded the amount which the town could at that time have legally borrowed under the Constitution of Maine. At the time of taking the bonds, the complainant was ignorant of this fact, and supposed them to be valid obligations of the town of Harmony. This bill in equity prays that the court ascertain the portion of these bonds which represent what, on August 1, 1896, the town might have legally borrowed, and that the court decree such portion to be a valid obligation of the town. The complainant offers to surrender for cancellation such portion of the bonds as the court may decree to be invalid.

The defendant filed a demurrer to the bill, which demurrer has been passed upon by this court. By its opinion (198 Fed. 557) the court held that, even though the bonds created a liability exceeding the constitutional debt limit of the town of Harmony, this did not prevent a court in equity from enforcing the liability to the extent the town could legally borrow. The court held further that, although the bonds purported to have been issued in conformity to a vote passed at a town meeting which was not a legal meeting, this would not prevent a recovery, if, in fact, there was authority to issue them under a vote passed at a previous meeting legally held. ■

No contention is raised by the defendant but that the meeting of June 20, 1895, was a legal meeting; and the complainant at the time he took the bonds was a bona fide holder, ignorant of any defects in the manner of their issue.

[1] The learned counsel for the defendant urges that the burden is on the complainant to show that all the conditions precedent required by the vote of the valid meeting of June 20, 1895, were carried out. The bonds recite that they were issued—

“in conformity of the vote passed at the special town meeting held July 13, 1896, which.vote is recorded in the town records of said town of Harmony.”

It appears that the meeting of July 13, 1896, was not a legal meeting, but it also appears that the terms of the vote passed at the meeting of June 20, 1895, and the vote of the meeting of July 13, 1896, were substantially the same. The vote at the latter meeting ratified the vote of the former meeting. The recital in the bonds themselves, therefore, refers the purchaser back to the vote of June 20, 1895, as the authority upon which the bonds were issued. The recital in the bonds to which we have referred is very significant to a purchaser, as [553]*553indicating that the terms of the vote passed at the legal meeting of June 20, 1895, had been complied with. The second vote provided that:

“Sufficient guaranty should be given that the railroad would be completed and operated to Harmony village within six months.”

The first vote provided:

“That a guaranty to the satisfaction of a committee to be chosen by said town that the balance of the money oyer and above $8,500 necessary for the construction and completion of said road and appurtenances to said Harmony village shall be subscribed and furnished and said road equipped and operated.”

[2] We have already seen that the second vote purports to ratify the first. There appears to be no inconsistency between the two provisions relating to the sufficiency of the guaranty. They are substantially the same in effect. By either of the provisions the purchaser of the bonds had the right to assume that the bonds would be issued when a sufficient guaranty was given, which guaranty must be satisfactory to a committee to he chosen by the town, that the railroad would be completed and operated to Harmony village within six months, and that the balance of the money necessary for this completion should be subscribed and furnished as required by the first vote.

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Truman v. Inhabitants of Harmony
198 F. 557 (D. Maine, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
205 F. 549, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truman-v-inhabitants-of-town-of-harmony-med-1913.