98 N.Y. 599 | NY | 1885
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *602 This case has in it several peculiar and exceptional elements, strong enough to exercise a determining influence upon its result. The action is in equity, and seeks the cancellation of certain municipal bonds in the hands of innocent holders, after the town, for more than ten years, had steadily paid the accruing interest without question or protest, and so had given to the securities credit, and disarmed suspicion, and created confidence on the part of investors. The action is not brought by the town, but by two of its tax payers, founding their right to be heard upon the act of 1872 (Chap. 161), re-enacted in the Code (§ 1925), which authorizes the tax payer to maintain an action against any officer or agent of a town to prevent waste of its corporate property; and is prosecuted upon an appeal to which the railroad commissioner of the town, originally joined as a defendant, is not a party. It is brought after the railroad sought to be aided has been constructed and put in operation upon the line originally stipulated, and when the town and its residents have received the precise and full and agreed compensation for which the bonds were issued. It sets up defects, most of which are available at law, and aims to justify a resort to equity upon the ground that the bonds operated as a mortgage upon the tax payer's property, and clouded his title. And it is sought to be maintained against innocent holders of the securities in the face of an express provision of the act constituting the statutory authority, which declared (§ 7) that "all bonds issued by the commissioner of *604 the several towns aforesaid shall be valid and binding upon the towns represented by such commissioners in the hands of bonafide holders or owners thereof, and in case of any error, fraud or willful violation of duty on the part of any commissioner in the issue of such bonds, the town which he represents shall have redress upon his official bond to the extent provided therein; but no commissioner shall be held personally liable where he shall act in good faith in the discharge of his official duties."
Many interesting questions were argued at the bar which we do not consider because we rest our conclusion mainly upon the force and effect of the section just quoted in its connection with the other provisions defining the authority of the commissioner to issue the bonds of the town.
While this court has never given to such securities, completely and without reserve, the characteristics of commercial paper, and has especially denied to them that element which furnishes protection to the bona fide holder where authority is apparent but not real, (Gould v. Town of Sterling,
The authority to issue the bonds of the town of Salina provided, (Laws of 1868, chap. 571), that upon the application of twelve freeholders and residents of the town, "the board of town officers" should appoint a commissioner to subscribe in the corporate name of the town to the capital stock of a specified railroad company, and issue bonds for the payment thereof. It made the power to issue such bonds depend upon the consent in writing of a majority of the tax payers in number and amount appearing upon the assessment-roll of such town for the year 1867. It required that consent to be proved or acknowledged in the same manner as signatures to conveyances of real estate, and to be filed and recorded in the clerk's office of the county; and that the "fact that a majority of the tax payers have so consented shall be proved by the affidavit of one of the assessors of such town, indorsed upon or annexed to such consent in writing, and filed and recorded with such consent in the office of the county clerk of the county where such assessor resides; and the original consent and affidavit, or a copy thereof certified by the clerk of the county in whose office it is required to be filed, shall be legal evidence of the facts contained therein, and shall be admitted as such in any court of this State, and before any judge or justice thereof." The statute adds, that whenever "the consent in writing aforesaid shall have been filed in the proper county the commissioner shall make the subscription and issue the bonds."
In the present case a written application of twelve freeholders was made to the town board, and thereupon a commissioner was *606 appointed. That he was duly and lawfully appointed and authorized to act as such under the provisions of the law is beyond any reasonable doubt. The form of the application is in no respect dictated by the statute, and that adopted in this case was sufficient to set in motion the machinery provided by the law. That it might have been more specific and more ample in its details detracts nothing from its sufficiency. It was addressed to the board of town officers of the town of Salina; it was signed by twelve freeholders and residents who declared themselves to be such, the truth of their statements remaining unchallenged; and it requested the appointment of a commissioner to carry into effect for the town the provisions of the statute, identifying it by its title and the date of its passage. Nothing more was requisite to its designated office, that of setting in motion the appointing tribunal. Such tribunal is denominated in the act "the board of town officers." It is now said that the designation was ambiguous, and for that reason the efficacy of the law must fail. But there is no difficulty in identifying the tribunal. Under the provisions of law certain officers of the town, occupying different positions and having no common designation, meet together and act together as a board, representing the town in auditing claims against it, and are hence commonly denominated "the town board." It is suggested that assessors meet together and act in combination, but if they had been intended, the natural language would have been "the board of town assessors." It would be a misnomer to speak of them as "the board of town officers." That phrase plainly refers to a known assemblage of persons holding different offices in the town, but, under the law, meeting as one body to perform official duties; and to that body the written application was presented, and by such board of town officers the appointment was made. So far, the criticism upon even the regularity of the proceedings has no adequate foundation.
But the next step in the process is of much greater importance. At this point we have a sufficient enabling statute, a commissioner duly appointed and authorized to act under it, but are confronted with a condition precedent, the existence of *607
which lies at the basis of his authority, and in the absence of which he is in fact powerless to issue the bonds of the town. That condition is that a majority of the tax payers in number and amount shall have consented to the issue of the bonds for the purposes authorized, and we here meet the inquiry whether as against these defendants the existence of that essential condition was established. The proof shows that there appeared upon the records of the proper clerk's office what purported to be the written consent of a majority in number of the tax payers represented upon the assessment-roll of 1867 as owning a majority in amount of the taxable property of the town. The signatures appended were proved by the affidavits of subscribing witnesses annexed to the consents, who swore that they were such and signed as such, and verified the signatures of the tax payers. This written consent, thus verified, upon its face appeared to answer the requirements of the statute and to constitute a performance of the condition precedent required by the act. But there were two things about it which are pressed upon our consideration, both of which would become of vital importance if this was an action at law by the bond-holder against the town, and if the provision of section 7 for the protection of innocent owners was absent. While the consents filed asserted their own sufficiency, the absence of the tax-roll of 1867 from the record made comparison with it impossible, except by one going outside of the record and pursuing an inquiry into the extrinsic facts; and it is claimed that upon such inquiry the actual truth will prove to be that the needed majority did not consent. It is further said that the consents were ineffectual because of the words attached to some, as follows, viz.: "It is understood that this consent shall be inoperative unless the railroad proposed to be constructed shall be laid through said town;" and because of the same words attached to others, with the additional phrase "and corporate limits of the village of Liverpool." Upon the one point we are referred to the case of Cagwin v. Town of Hancock
(supra), and upon the other to Craig v. Town of Andes,
(
When to this necessary construction of the act it is added *610 that the plaintiffs are applying to a court of equity where inexcusable laches is always a reason in its discretion for withholding its aid, after they have slept upon their rights for ten years, after failing to prevent or enjoin the issue of the bonds, after twenty-one interest coupons have been paid without murmur or dissent, and after the proceeds have been fairly expended upon the very road intended and the expected benefits have been realized, it becomes very clear that the case is not one in which a court of equity should exert its extraordinary power to cancel the bonds issued by the town in the hands of innocent holders whom the statute professed and intended to sedulously protect.
The constitutionality of such bonding acts as that before us is not an open question in this court.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.