The City of New Port Richey, having authority of law so to do, on June 1, 1930, signed by its officers and its corporate seal twenty-six bonds payable to bearer for $1,000 each with interest at 6% payable semi-annually June 1 and December 1 on presentation and surrender of annexed interest coupons, the bonds reciting they were issued to retire other legal bonded indebtedness. The bonds were duly vali *350 •dated, but they were never issued or agreed to be issued to anyone, but were deposited for safe-keeping in a lock box of the city in the vault of a bank. Bank robbers drilled into the vault and stole' the bonds. On October 24, 1935, thirteen of them were acquired, with all coupons attached, by Suwanee Life Insurance Company, and sold by it to Pierce-Biese Corporation, a •bond dealer, who sold them to F. M. Blount, Inc. These are each alleged to have taken the bonds in due course for value and without notice of any infirmity in the title. Pierce-Biese Corporation reacquired the bonds and attempted to resell them, but it was discovered that the city claimed they were stolen. Pierce-Biese Corporation (now named Clyde C. Pierce Corp.) had a policy of insurance against loss by stolen bonds, issued by -Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, and the latter, having indemnified its insured, acquired the bonds. The City of New Port Richey is now engaged in refunding its indebtedness and will not recognize these bonds. They cannot be sued on for they are not due till 1950. A declaratory judgment affirming the validity of bonds and coupons as obligations of the City was sought and on stipulated facts obtained. The City appeals.
The main questions presented are: Were the bonds ever negotiable instruments, since they had never been delivered ? Were they negotiated to a holder in due course so as to prevent enquiry thereabout? What effect had the presence of ten overdue coupons attached to each bond?
The Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law was enacted in Florida in 1897. Comp.Gen.Laws 1927, § 6760 and ff. Its purpose was to establish uniform rules in the States adopting it, with acceptance of its solutions where differences had previously existed. It ought to be construed according to the meaning of its words, not bending its provisions to the former decisions. Where it makes no provision, the former law of course stands. And decisions in a State’s courts since its enactment there are controlling in the federal courts as authoritative interpretations of a State statute.
It has been suggested that' public bonds differ from ordinary negotiable instruments; but such bonds, as the promissory notes of a municipality, are held in Florida to be negotiable instruments under the Act. City of Jacksonville v. Renfroe,
The appellant contends that section 6776 so construed takes its property without due process of law contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment, U.S.C.A.Const., and the Declaration of Rights of the Florida Constitution (section 12), and invades the province of the judiciary in that an irrational conclusive presumption is created without a logical basis. Heiner v. Donnan,
The case then turns on whether a holder in due course is here involved. Fidelity and Deposit Company is not such, for it took the bonds after full knowledge of the defense to them. But it acquired the rights of any former holder in due course, for such rights are transmitted and not destroyed by a transfer after notice to a third party. Cromwell v. Sac County,
It has been said that unsevered coupons add nothing to a bond which itself promises to pay interest, and they may be disregarded. This is hardly true in the present case, for each coupon is in form a complete promissory note payable to bearer, and the bond’s only promise as to interest is to pay “upon the presentation and surrender of the annexed interest coupons as the same respectively mature.” The coupons are the promise to pay interest, and their non-surrender at maturity shows the interest has not been paid. The present plaintiff is claiming to own the overdue coupons just as he claims the principal bonds. He has a decree that all the coupons are valid in his hands. It seems to us as to the coupons which were overdue in October, 1935, when the first negotiation happened, no taker could be a holder in due course, and the City’s defense would in any case be good against them.
The overdue coupons have also a bearing upon the negotiation of the bonds and immature coupons. They inform the taker that for some reason the' City has, from the beginning and during nearly five years, never paid a dime of interest. On thirteen bonds $3900 of interest was in default. We are pointed to no provision of the statute as to what effect on the negotiation of paper not due knowledge of default on related paper has. In Taylor v. Am. Natl. Bank,
We take the view last stated as the true one. It seems to explain best the decisions of the Supreme Court which, notwithstanding Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
We therefore hold that while overdue interest coupons do not as a matter of law defeat the claim of holder in due course of an unmatured bond, that bona fides in taking it is open to question as a matter of fact and that all the circumstances of the purchase, including the number of past due interest coupons, the price paid for the bond, and the reliability of the seller, are to be considered in determining the question. That fact question has not been determined in this case. The facts stipulated do not seem to include all that are material. The parties may desire to amend the stipulation, or to withdraw it and make proof. The judgment is set aside and a new trial awarded, to be in accordance with the opinions herein expressed.
Reversed.
