128 Mass. 503 | Mass. | 1880
By the St. of 1875, e. 209, entitled an act to regulate and limit municipal indebtedness, it is provided in § 2 that
The statute thus deprives cities and towns of the authority to contract debts for borrowed money, which they had previously possessed, whether derived from express grant, or held to exist as an implied power; and, instead of it, gives to these municipalities a limited power which can be lawfully exercised only in the mode specially pointed out. It contains a positive prohibition of all debts contracted for borrowed money in any other mode. The plain object of the law is to protect cities and towns from the creation of municipal debts without sufficient necessity and consideration, and without proper provision for payment, and to prevent improvident and reckless expenditures of public money, as a natural consequence of debts so contracted. All its provisions, reasonably interpreted, with reference to these salutary ends, must be regarded as prohibitory. They establish a plain limit to the exercise of the power to borrow money.
The towns of this Commonwealth are declared by statute to be bodies corporate, but they are public political corporations, with comparatively limited powers and duties. They are charged with the support of schools, the relief of the poor, the laying out and repair of highways, and are empowered to preserve the peace and good order, maintain internal police, and generally to direct and manage their prudential affairs in a manner not repugnant to the laws of the state. They may dispose of their corporate property, and make contracts necessary and convenient for the exercise of their corporate powers. Stetson v. Kempton, 13 Mass. 272, Parsons v. Goshen, 11 Pick. 396. Allens. Taunton, 19 Pick. 485.
The votes offered in evidence in this case did not authorize the treasurer to borrow money on the credit of the town. The proposed loans were not made payable by vote of the town from the taxes of that or the succeeding year, nor were the votes passed by two thirds of the legal voters present at the meeting. The notes given by the treasurer in the name of the town were therefore given without lawful authority. Lowell Savings Bank v. Winchester, 8 Allen, 109. Benoit v. Conway, 10 Allen, 528. Dickinson v. Conway, 12 Allen, 487. Without the authority of a legal vote, the town is not liable in any form for money borrowed.
The present case does not require a consideration of how far innocent holders of negotiable securities, issued by a municipal corporation in violation of conditions imposed by law, may recover upon such securities against the corporation; or what evidence of compliance with such conditions will be sufficient against the corporation by way of estoppel or otherwise. Those questions have been many times discussed in the Supreme Court of the United States in cases involving the validity of bonds issued in aid of railroad enterprises. Whatever difference of judicial opinion may exist in that or in other courts, it is settled that a municipal corporation may successfully defend against such bonds in the hands of any person whatever when its officers and agents have issued them without any power so to do; Aspinwall v. Daviess County, 22 How. 364; Marsh v. Fulton County, 10 Wall, 676 ; and may successfully defend against all except bona fide holders without notice, when provisions limiting the exercise of a granted power have been disregarded. In the recent case of Warren County v. Marcy, 97 U. S. 96, it was declared to be the doctrine of that court, that, when there was lawful power to issue bonds or other negotiable securities,
In the case at bar, the plaintiff is not a holder without notice. It took the notes in suit with certified copies of the illegal votes of the town in its possession, and with full notice of the treasurer’s want of authority.
But the plaintiff contends that it is entitled to recover upon the last count in the declaration for money had and received; and, at the trial, offered to show that the money paid or credited to the town treasurer upon the notes in suit was used by him in the payment of debts due from the town. This evidence was properly rejected. It fails to show that the money was received by the town in its corporate capacity, or that the act of the treasurer in applying it to the payment of its debts was ever authorized or ratified by the town. The difficulty is, that the money was paid to one who had no authority as treasurer or as agent of the town to receive it in the name of the town and apply it to the payment of town debts. If a town could be held in an action for money had and received, under such circumstances, then the purpose of the second and third sections of the statute would be wholly defeated. It makes no difference that the treasurer used this specific money in payment of the town debts. There is nothing to show any appropriation of such payments by the town to its own use, or any ratification of the act. The money in the hands of the treasurer did not belong to the town. For all that appears, funds may have been previously supplied by the corporation from other sources for the payment of these very debts. The relations of the treasurer to the town are not disclosed; he may then have been, and may now be, a defaulter to more than the amount of the alleged payments. The treasurer is an independent accounting officer. Hancock v. Hazzard, 12 Cush. 112. If he applies money unlawfully obtained to the payment of town debts, that fact alone creates no liability on the part of the town to refund the money to the party from whom it was obtained.
It is said that an action for money had and received may be maintained against a municipal corporation, when the money has been received under such circumstances that, independently of express contract, the obligation of repayment is imposed as a matter of right and justice. Thus, when it is received under a contract made without authority or in violation of law, the duty arises to refund the money to the party from whom it was ■ received, if, without affirming the illegal contract, the latter seeks only to recover his own money and prevent the defendant from unjustly retaining the benefit of its own illegal act. Morville v. American Tract Society, 123 Mass. 129. Dill v. Wareham, 7 Met. 438. White v. Franklin Bank, 22 Pick. 181. See also Thomas v. Richmond, 12 Wall. 349, 355. But in such cases it must appear that the money was actually and beneficially appropriated by the town or city in its corporate capacity. It cannot be treated as appropriated, merely because it has been applied by the unauthorized act of the town treasurer, or of any other person, to the payment of municipal debts, for the payment of which other provision had been made. It is sometimes said, indeed, with reference to money borrowed in disregard of positive prohibition, when both parties are in fault, that it cannot under any circumstances be recovered back, because that would be to defeat the
Exceptions overruled.