56 F.2d 6 | 5th Cir. | 1932
This was an action on instruments purporting to be interest-bearing funding warrants, payable to bearer, of the city of Weslaco, a Texas municipal corporation, the appellant, issued pursuant to an ordinance of that city adopted July 20, 1926, authorizing the issue of funding warrants, payable to bearer, in the sum of $50,000 in lieu of the same amount of general indebtedness warrants issued by that city, dated July 15, 1926. The appellant denied that the instruments sued on were ever issued by it, or by officers authorized by law to issue such instruments; denied that the alleged ordinance purporting to authorize the issue of the instruments sued on was ever passed, ordered, or ordained by appellant, or by its city commission, as required by law, and denied that the alleged ordinance purporting to authorize the issuance of warrants dated July 15, 1926, was ever passed, ordered, or ordained by the appellant, or by its city commission, as required by law. Each of the instruments sued on contained the following: “And it is hereby certified and recited that all acts, conditions and things required to be done precedent to and in the issuance of this warrant, have been properly done, happened and performed, in regular and due time, form and manner, as required by law, and that the total indebtedness of said City, including this warrant, does not exceed the constitutional or statutory limitation.” The declaration as amended contained allegations to the effect that the warrants provided for by the ordinance of July 15, 1926, which were exchanged for the funding warrants, a part of which were sued on, were issued and delivered to one O. O. Nor-wood, in payment for services rendered by him in bringing about the funding of $225,000 of street improvement and waterworks warrants issued by appellant into bonds for the same principal amount,” but bearing a lower rate of interest and maturing later than the warrants for which the bonds were substituted.
In the trial there was evidence to the following effect: The entire issue of warrants purported to be provided for by the alleged ordinance of July 20, 1926, was sold by O. O. Norwood on July 27, 1926, to a corporation located at Wichita, Kan., for 90 cents on the dollar after that corporation had been furnished a certified copy of purported proceedings of the appellant in reference to such issue, and the opinion of a lawyer as to the legality and validity thereof. The certified copy so furnished included what purported to be a copy of minutes of a meeting of the commission of appellant held on July 20, 1926, at which was adopted an ordinance authorizing the issue of such warrants, that purported ordinance setting out the form of the authorized warrants, the instrument sued on being in that form. The purported copy of such minutes was by M. F. Armstrong, Jr., then clerk of appellant, certified to be “the full, true and correct copy of the minutes of the Board of Commissioners of said City, showing all proceedings had by said Board in connection with the passage of the ordinance therein mentioned as the same appears of record in Book 1, page 230, et seq., of the minutes of said Board, and that the copy of said ordinance as contained in said minutes is a true and correct, copy of the ordinance as passed by said Board of Commissioners.” An officer of the corporation which bought said warrants, who acted for it in making the purchase, stated that he believed to be true the recitals contained in the documents submitted, and relied upon the signatures on the certificates, the attestations, and recitals of officials of appellant appearing in and upon such papers and documents. That corporation sold the instruments sued on to the appellee J. H. Porter, on July 27, 1926, for 100
The passage or adoption of the purported ordinance of July 20, 1926, was not shown in the way prescribed by law. By statute the clerk of appellant was required to “keep accurate minutes of the' proceedings thereof in a book to be provided for that purpose, and engross and enroll all laws, resolutions and ordinances of the City” commission “ * * * take charge of and preserve and keep in order all the books, records, papers, documents and files of said” commission, etc. Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, 1925, arts. 1000, 1161. The language of the quoted statute indicates a purpose to require the adoption or passage of a municipal ordinance to be shown by formal entry in a book provided for that purpose, evidently it being contemplated that such book would be kept where the durable and outstanding evidence of municipal action furnished thereby would be conveniently accessible to members of the governing body of the municipality and to the public generally. That statute indicates that it was not contemplated by the lawmakers that an unbound unrecorded typewritten document, signed by the clerk of a municipality, purporting to set out proceedings of a meeting of the governing body thereof at which a purported ordinance copied therein was adopted, would be given effect as conclusive evidence of the adoption of such an ordinance. The enactment of that statute is hardly consistent with the existence of a legislative intention to permit such a document, kept as shown by the evidence, to be treated as conclusive proof of the legal existence of a municipal ordinance. The rule against admitting, in a collateral proceeding, parol evidence to vary or contradict a record, when regular and complete on its face, is not reasonably applicable to such a document, which cannot properly be regarded as the permanent authentic evidence of municipal action which is provided for by law. Jones Commentaries on Evidence (2d Ed.) § 1732.
Though the passage of a municipal ordinance is not evidenced in the manner provided for by law, parol evidence is admissible to show that that action was actually taken where a statute does not purport to make the validity of the action of the municipality’s governing body dependent upon it being recorded. Denver & R. G. R. R. v. Ariz. & Col. R. R., 233 U. S. 601, 34 S. Ct. 691, 58 L. Ed. 1111; 19 R. C. L. 903. An alleged unrecorded municipal ordinance eannot properly be held established without clear evidence thereof. Chippewa Bridge Co. v. Durand, 122 Wis. 85, 103, 99 N. W. 603, 106 Am. St. Rep. 931. The passage of the alleged ordinance of July 20, 1926, was not conclusively established by the certified copy which was introduced in evidence. A Texas statute provides that: “Copies of the records and filed papers of all public officers and custodians of records of minutes of boards, etc., * * * certified under the hand, and the seal if there be one, of the lawful possessor of such records, shall be admitted as evidence in all cases where the records themselves would be admissible.” Revised Civil Statute of Texas, 1925, art. 3720. That statute does not purport to make a certified copy provided for conclusive evidence of the existence of the paper or record certified to. It indicates that existence of a power to make a certified copy is dependent upon the existence of a genuine original. Such a certificate has accorded to it the sanctity of a deposition, being prima facie evidence of the existence of the paper or record certified to. It is not conclusive evidence. United States v. Wiggins, 14 Pet. 334, 346; 10 L. Ed. 481; United States v. Acosta, 1 How. 24, 11 L. Ed. 33; Campbell v. Laclede Gaslight Co., 119 U. S. 445, 7 S. Ct. 278, 30 L. Ed. 459; United States v. Brelin (C. C. A.) 166 F. 104. The certificate relied on was not a higher grade of evidence than the testimony of a competent witness. Smithers v. Lowrance, 100 Tex. 77, 82, 93 S. W. 1064; 2 Wigmore on Evidence (2d Ed.), § 1273. Admittedly the certificate was false in so far as it referred to a book record which did not exist. The record indicates that the above-mentioned ruling was a result of the 'court according conclusive effect to the documentary evidence of the adoption óf the alleged ordinance of July 20, 1926. In view
The rule that a municipality may be bound by recitals or representations made pursuant to authority conferred by its governing body does not have such effect as to enable its executive official or officials to bind it by recitals or representations the making of which its governing body did not authorize or ratify. The appellant was not estopped to controvert its liability under the instruments sued on if its governing body did not authorize or ratify the issue or execution of those instruments or the making of the recitals or representations contained therein. Peck v. City of Hempstead, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 80, 65 S. W. 653; Brown v. Bon Homme County, 1 S. D. 216, 46 N. W. 173. In the absence of appellant’s mayor being authorized to do So by appellant’s governing body, shown by minutes of a meeting of it, that official could not bind the appellant by signing and issuing the instruments sued on. City of Antonio v. French, 80 Tex. 575, 16 S. W. 440, 26 Am. St. Rep. 763; Wagner v. Porter (Tex. Civ. App.) 56 S. W. 560. Purchasers of the instruments sued on took the risk of the genuineness thereof, and those instruments imposed no liability on appellant if the officials who signed and issued them were not duly authorized by the appellant to do so. The instruments were not genuine if they were signed and issued without lawful authority. Anthony v. County of Jasper, 101 U. S. 693, 698, 699, 25 L. Ed. 1005. There being competent evidence tending to prove that appellant’s mayor and its clerk in signing and issuing the instruments sued on acted fraudulently and without authority of appellant’s governing body, that what the last-mentioned official certified to be a copy of recorded minutes of proceedings of a meeting of appellant’s governing body was a counterfeit, and that appellant’s governing body, instead of ratifying such unauthorized acts, denied liability thereunder with reasonable promptness after being informed thereof, the conclusions that under the evidence appellant could not controvert its liability under the instruments sued on, and that the evidence required a verdict in favor of the appellee, were not warranted.
We conclude that the above-mentioned ruling was erroneous. Because of that -error the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with direction that a new trial be granted.
Reversed.