Union Bank v. New Orleans

24 F. Cas. 550, 5 Am. Law Reg. (N.S.) 555

This text of 24 F. Cas. 550 (Union Bank v. New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Provisional Court for the State of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Bank v. New Orleans, 24 F. Cas. 550, 5 Am. Law Reg. (N.S.) 555 (usprovctla 1866).

Opinion

PEABODY, Provisional Judge.

The plaintiff was the owner .of bonds of the city of New Orleans to the amount of $300,000. The bonds are not yet due. The interest on them was payable semi-annually in July and January of each year. The principal and interest are expressly stipulated to be paid on the face of the bonds themselves. There were also separate from the bonds, coupons for the interest — one for the interest on each bond for each half year. These coupons are separate, or separable by the holder, from the bonds, and show, each of them, how much interest is due, and the particular time at which it is due according to the tenor of the bond to which it relates. Each bond is payable to bearer, and each coupon for the interest on it is also payable to bearer. These bonds and coupons were by plaintiff deposited with the auditor of the state of Louisiana. He was to hold them as security for the redemption and payment by plaintiff of certain bills issued by it. Whenever those bills or notes should be paid and can-celled. he was to return the bonds and coupons to plaintiff, and so pro rata when any part should be paid. This deposit was made under a law of the state under which plaintiff organized and obtained its corporate powers; and being a matter between the plaintiff and the bill-holders as parties in interest, it is much the same as if it had been done by compact between them. Two hundred and fifty-two thousafid dollars of the bills or notes of the bank, for which the bonds or coupons were pledged, have been paid and cancelled. Those notes have been returned to the person with whom the bonds and coupons were deposited as auditor, and plaintiff has demanded and sought to obtain from him the bonds and coupons held as security for them, but has been and is wholly unable to recover them by legal process or otherwise. Moreover, the man with whom, as auditor, they were pledged (Mr. Peralta) has ceased to be an officer of this state, and has fled beyond the jurisdiction of the authorities thereof, and for all practical purposes, out of the state, taking the securities with him. Both the man and securities are entirely beyond the reach of plaintiff and beyond all process of courts or of the government itself. He is moreover an alien enemy of the United States, and he and the securities with him are within the lines of the enemy. in territory held by them jure belli, and therefore in law as well as in fact inaccessible to plaintiff, and incapable of being dealt with by it.

Money for the payment of the interest due has been deposited by the city, the debtor. [552]*552■with the defendant “The First National Bank,” the legal fiscal agent of the city, and is held by it for that purpose, and for that purpose alone. That Interest the bank is ■willing to pay if the coupons are produced, but it refuses to pay it until they.are produced, on the ground that it is authorized to pay only on the surrender of the coupons, and that the coupons being outstanding may hereafter appear in the hands of some one who can compel payment from one or the other of the defendants to him. Plaintiff claims to recover the interest due; he claims to do this without producing the coupons, on the ground that they are placed beyond his power to produce by the unwarranted action of the recreant trustee, being detained by him wrongfully within the enemy’s lines. The claim is, that as plaintiff is the actual owner of the securities (bonds and coupons), it has a right to be paid what is due on them, and that as they were both in the iiands of Mr. Peralta after the interest sought to be recovered, and the coupons for it had become due, and no one had any right to them then, no one can now have, or can hereafter acquire a title to them which will enable him to recover on them after payment made to plaintiff. Of the matters discussed on the trial, many of them at very great length, these are all that are material to the case, in the view I have taken, and most of them were substantially conceded, and nearly all the rest are very easily deduced from the evidence.

On these facts one question arises: Are the coupons for the interest, which plaintiff claims to recover, shown to be so situated that no one hereafter to appear can have the right to them of a borní fide holder for value without notice? 'if they are, plaintiff must recover; if they are not. it is not so easy to say how he can recover. If they are so situated, at any rate there is no difficulty in deciding that lit» may recover. The mere fact that they are in the territory of the enemy of the United States, with which no legal intercourse can be had, in the hands of an alien enemy there, is quite sufficient to warrant a recovery without the production of them in a proper case, and whether the holder is an auditor or not an auditor, or whatever he is, “quocunque nomine gaudet,” and whether in law they may be deemed lost or not lost, it is plain that they are within the familiar principle of law, applicable to securities lost or -wrongfully withheld, and which authorizes a recovery without the production of them. It is equally clear that if their locus there is shown, they are not lost within the rule of the Code — one of evidence merely — that before a recovery can be had on securities as lost, they must be advertised, &e. They are there, and they are beyond the power of the plaintiff, without his fault, and that is all that is necessary to warrant a recovery without the production of them in a case proper in other respects.

The bonds . and not the coupons are the basis of the right to recover, the coupons being each a mere memorandum of the interest due from time to time on each bond, and of the time when such amount by the terms of the bond becomes due. The bonds are not intended to be surrendered when the interest Is paid, but the coupons, if within the power of the owner, are ordinarily surrendered when the sums due on them are paid; and in this manner the coupons in the hands of the debtor become vouchers of the fact of payment, as they had previously, in the hands of the creditor, been evidence of the debt, and also that the amount stated was due, not to the holder of the bond (unless the same person held both bond and coupon), but to the holder of the coupon itself. In this manner they are made to answer probably three purposes; they make each separate half year’s interest on each bond negotiable by itself, separately from the rest of the bond, and answer the purposes of evidence in the hands of the creditor and of the debtor in turn, as above stated, in the one evidence of debt and in the other evidence of payment. The bonds claimed to the amount of $252,000 and the coupons attached, beyond all question, are the property of plaintiff, and are relieved from all right of possession in the present custodian, and so indeed, I think I may add, are all the rest of the half million in his hands. He is a mere wrongdoer as to all, and has no right to any part of them; I think, even if he were in law and in fact the auditor of the state, it would make no difference. A fugitive from the state and the securities with him, he would have no right to retain them I think as against the bank, in his flight and away from his post of duty. It would be abundantly easier to hold that he might rightfully withhold them, a fugitive in the land of the Dey of Algiers, that distinguished potentate being at peace with this country, than to hold that he had a right out of the territory held by this government. and within the territory of an enemy where no citizen of this country could have access, to retain them there. But he is not auditor of the state in law or in fact, and would have no right to retain them anywhere —not even in the state, and at a.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 550, 5 Am. Law Reg. (N.S.) 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-bank-v-new-orleans-usprovctla-1866.