Village of Heyburn v. Security Savings & Trust Co.

49 P.2d 258, 55 Idaho 732, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 117
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1935
DocketNo. 6161.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 49 P.2d 258 (Village of Heyburn v. Security Savings & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Village of Heyburn v. Security Savings & Trust Co., 49 P.2d 258, 55 Idaho 732, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 117 (Idaho 1935).

Opinions

AILSHIE, J.

The Village of Heyburn, respondent, commenced this action against Security Savings & Trust Company, appellant, the owner and holder for collection of nine funding bonds of $500 each, aggregating $4,500, which had been issued by respondent June 1, 1922. By such action the village sought to have the bonds canceled and adjudged and decreed void.

On June 1, 1922, the village officers adopted an ordinance (No. 31) providing for the issuance of these bonds “for the purpose of funding a like amount of the outstanding warrant indebtedness of said village.” In pursuance of this ordinance the bonds were subsequently issued and sold to five individual purchasers through the agency of a Portland brokerage firm. Some interest coupons were thereafter paid and finally the village refused to pay any further coupons, asserting the invalidity of the bond issue. The purchasers assigned the bonds, together with unpaid coupons, to the appellant herein and it instituted an action on June 26, 1928, against the village to recover the amounts then due on unpaid coupons. In that action the jury returned a general verdict for the village. Thereafter and prior to the entry of judgment, but after the entry of the verdict, the village instituted the present action, praying for a cancelation of the bonds, pleading the facts which it claimed rendered the bonds void and also the previous action against the village and the verdict rendered therein. After the entry of the judgment on the verdict and prior to the trial of the present ease the village filed a supplemental complaint, setting up the judgment which had been entered in the former case and alleging that:

“The said judgment has never been vacated, modified or appealed from and is now in full force and effect. That the same constituted an adjudication that the said bonds are illegal and unlawful and unenforceable .... and that the said defendant (appellant herein) is thereby estopped *736 from asserting or claiming any defense to the right of the plaintiff to have the said bonds, together with the coupons thereon canceled.”

The village also alleged that the bonds incurred an indebtedness exceeding the income and revenue of the village for the year in which they were issued; that they were issued without the assent of two-thirds of the qualified electors voting at an election held for that purpose; that the indebtedness represented by the bonds, with the other outstanding bonds of the village, exceeded in the aggregate ten per cent of the assessed full cash valuation of all the property within the village and that the bonds' were issued for the payment of illegal warrants and not for the purpose of paying any valid outstanding indebtedness of the village, and that the bonds were not in the hands of or owned by an innocent purchaser, and ‘ that the appellant was not a holder in due course.

The appellant herein answered the complaint and added a further answer “by way of affirmative defense” to plaintiff’s cause of action and thereupon set out the warrant and other indebtedness of the village as the same existed at the time of the issuance of these bonds and the claim of the village that the bond issue was unlawful and void because it exceeded the income and revenue of the village for the year in which the bonds were issued; and that they were issued without the assent of two-thirds of the qualified electors voting therefor and that they, together with other outstanding indebtedness, exceeded in the aggregate ten per cent of the full cash value of the real estate within the village; and further that they were issued for payment of illegal warrants, etc.

This present case was thereupon tried to the court and findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment were thereupon entered in favor of the village, from which the defendant prosecuted this appeal.

Appellant has assigned a large number of errors but in view of their nature and the statement made in opening argument of appellant’s brief, we do not think it will be *737 necessary to consider the assignments separately as we feel that the answer to one of the propositions advanced will dispose of the ease. The statement in appellant’s brief to ■which we have just referred is as follows:

“By its complaint the village grounded its right to decree canceling the bonds, relieving it from all obligation to make payment upon: (1) The assertion that the judgment entered in the action brought upon the coupons, wherein the parties hereto appeared in converse order, amounted to an adjudication of all questions involved; and (2) invalidity independently pleaded in that: (a) the bonds incurred an indebtedness exceeding the income and revenue for that year without the approval of the voters, (b) that the bonds increased the bonded debt to a total exceeding 10 per cent of the assessed valuation of property, and (c) that the bonds were issued for the payment of illegal and not for the payment of any valid warrants. The village alleged the bonds were not in the hands of a holder in due course.

‘1 Thus by the complaint and responsive answer the following issues were presented: 1. Whether the purchasers were holders in due course; 2. If not, whether the bonds were invalid for the reasons pleaded; and 3, the efficacy of the judgment in the former suit as an adjudication of the two questions just stated.”

When the trial court in this case came to make up his findings of fact and conclusions of law he reached the conclusion that all the issues involved in this action were involved in the former action and were judicially determined in the former action in favor of the respondent, the village, and against appellant; that the judgment made and entered in the former action constitutes res judicata of all the issues involved in this action and is, and constitutes, an estoppel by y judgment against the appellant to deny or refute any of the issues that were made or considered in the former action. The court likewise concluded that the judgment in the former action constituted an adjudication that the bonds of respondent were void and unenforceable and that the purchasers and holders thereof were not holders in due course.

*738 The state of this case renders it necessary for us to first determine whether or not the case prosecuted by the appellant against the respondent for collection of the amount due on the coupons is res judicata of all the matters and issues involved in this case. For the purpose of ascertaining the rule of res judicata or estoppel by judgment applicable to this case, we should be guided by the rule as announced in previous decisions of this court. In Elliott v. Porter, 6 Ida. 684, 59 Pac. 360, this court speaking through Chief Justice Huston, announced the rule as to estoppel by judgment, which has been continuously followed in this state for over a third of a century. It was stated as follows:

“All of the issues passed upon by the probate court were fairly within the pleadings. No appeal was ever taken from the judgment of the probate court. Its judgment settled every question involved in the ease before us. We think the law governing this case is properly and fully declared in Marsh v. Pier, 4 Rawle, 273, 26 Am. Dec.

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Bluebook (online)
49 P.2d 258, 55 Idaho 732, 1935 Ida. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-heyburn-v-security-savings-trust-co-idaho-1935.