6 Dakota 332 | Supreme Court Of The Territory Of Dakota | 1889
This is an action to recover upon a bond and its interest coupons, alleged to have been issued by school district No. 64, Minnehaha county, Dak. The complaint, in substance, alleges that school district No. 64 was duly organized from portions of school districts Nos. 6 and 31 of said county; and that, as such corporation duly organized, it issued by its proper officers the bond in controversy, among others, to aid in the construction of a school-house for said school district No. 64, in accordance with the statute in such case made and provided; that plaintiff became and is now the owner and holder of such bond for value
The issues were submitted to a referee, and the court, upon the report of the referee, made findings of fact and conclusions of law sustaining the organization of district 64, and rendered judgment for the plaintiff. Exceptions were duly taken to the findings and conclusions of law, and from the judgment so entered the defendants appeal to this court.
An inspection of the bill of exceptions and the record of the case shows that long prior to the execution and issue of the bond in controversy defendants were duly-organized school districts of Minnehaha county, numbered 6 and 31, respectively ; that on the 12th day of March, 1SY9, the superintendent of schools of the county of Minnehaha claimed to have formed school district 64 from a part of said districts 6 and 31; that subsequently a number of the citizens of said school district 64 met together and elected officers, voted taxes, etc.; that subsequently the officers so elected executed and issued the bond in question, with others, for the purpose of erecting a school-house in said district 64; that said school-house was subsequently erected with the proceeds of such bonds, and that subsequently to the issue of said bond, upon an appeal from the action of the county superintendent of schools to the board of county commissioners, as provided by statute, the proceedings of the superintendent of schools creating such school district 64 were reversed, and the territory carved out of districts 6 and 31 was again restored to them. It does not appear from the record which district, upon the dissolution of district No. 64, obtained the house erected with the proceeds of the bonds, or what, if any, use was ever made of it by such district.
The statute then in force as to organization of new districts by the county superintendent of schools provides as follows: “ Districting the county. That it shall be the duty of the county superintendent of schools, in addition to other duties required of him, to divide his county into school districts, subdivide and re
The only evidence of the creation of school district No. 64 was an extract from a book kept by the county superintendent of schools, designated as the “ Book of Kecords of the Formation of School Districts,” which reads as follows: “ School District No. 64. 1879, March 12.— Formed of sections S. E. ¿ section 28, S. § of sections 26 & 27; all of sections 34 & 35; the east ¿ of section 33, township 101, range 48. Not in separate existence. Is now merged in districts 6 & 31.” The statute did not then require the keeping of such a record. There were also some entries in records of school districts 6 and 31, of similar character. No petition to the superintendent of schools, of citizens of the districts to be affected by the change, nor any written description of the boundaries of the districts filed in the register of deeds’ office, was offered in evidence, and no parol or other evidence was offered, except as above stated, to prove that district 64 was ever created or organized, except in so far .as the production of the bond and proof of its execution tended to do so, and the record of the district meeting at which the tax was voted and officers elected. On the other hand, after the plaintiff had rested its case, the defendants offered to prove that no such petition was ever in fact presented to the superintendent of schools, and this offer was rejected by the court and referee, but upon what ground the record does not disclose.
From an examination of section 10, supra, and other sections of the school law in force when the bond in controversy was
The question, as presented by the record, is, was this alleged school district 64, assuming to act through some of its citizens, without having performed'the requirements of the statute, a legal corporation ? The legislature may make and unmake municipal
The plaintiff replies to this by saying that if the incorporation of school district No. 64 was illegal and void, having held itself out as a corporation, and having sold and disposed of its bonds to an innocent purchaser, defendant will be estopped from asserting such incapacity to contract, and that these defendants, as its successors, are so far privies in law as to estop them also from making such defense.
The law which permits suits to be brought against all the successors of a corporation, where no provision is made for existing liabilities in the act or j udgment of dissolution, is one of necessity, arising out of the provision of our constitution, which forbids leg-’ islatures from passing any law impairing the obligation of contracts ; and the harshness of the rule is made evident in this case, where it is admitted that, while one only of these districts by virtue of the dissolution of district 64 becomes the owner of the house or property for which the proceeds of the bond were expended, the other one, in proportion to the extent of its territory, must equally, under the rule contended for, bear its proportion of the indebtedness incurred without its sanction, and perhaps without its knowledge. The doctrine by which privies who succeed to the benefits must also assume the consequent liabilities does not obtain here, nor is there any contract upon which such privity can be founded. None of the essential principles of estoppel apply to these defendants. They have not willfully or fraudulently done or omitted to do any act, relying upon which this plaintiff or its grantor has acted to its injury. Nor does the record disclose that they have ever counseled or become party to such act or omission; but for aught that appears in the record these districts ■defendant have continuously opposed the unwarranted and unlawful acts of the superintendent of schools, and a few self-constituted officers of this pseudo corporation; or, for aught that appears of record, they may have been wholly ignorant of the unlawful or fraudulent acts of such pretended officers. In either case, they would not have so held out the incorporation, or failed to deny
The general rule is that the defendant may always show that the contract was ultra vires; and, while the rule is subject to many exceptions and modifications as applied to the facts of given cases, yet, as applied to public and quasi public corporations, in which the party contracting has equal opportunities with the other to know its powers, it will be found that the exceptions are infrequent, and come clearly within the rules above given. It was thought for some time that the supreme court of the United States, by the rigid manner in which it upheld the contracts of municipalities in issuing bonds in aid of railroads and other works of internal improvement, had broken down the defense of ult/ra vires as applied to public corporations; but the later decisions of that court explain the former cases, and limit the former language of the court to the facts of the case in which it was used, and the points therein determined. That court has now recently held that “ the facts which a municipal corporation issuing bonds * * * is not permitted to deny against a bona fide holder in face of the
Measured by this rule, estoppel could not create the power to execute the bond in question; no power but that given by the legislature could execute it. This same court has held over and over again that, “ where there is a total want of authority to issue municipal bonds, there can be no bona fide holding of them.” Oakland v. Skinner, 94 U. S. 255; Ottawa v. Carey, 108 id. 110,2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 361; Lewis v. Shreveport, 108 U. S. 282, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 634. Says the supreme court of Indiana, which is cited by respondent as holding that where a corporation has received the full benefit of a contract it is estopped from setting up that it is ultra vires: “ There is a broad difference between a private corporation organized for a private purpose, though subserving a public interest, and a public corporation, like a county or city, organized for public purposes only, and whose obligations must be paid from public funds, raised for public purposes only. The latter class of corporations may always defend on the ground that the supposed contract was outside of authority conferred on it by law.” Turnpike Co. v. Board, 72 Ind. 226. And the same doctrine is laid down by Dillon on Municipal Corporations, § 381. See, also, Mayor v. Ray, 19 Wall. 468.
Where a private individual signs a paper or contract he may often be well estopped to say that he had no power so to do; whereas, if an agent or person assuming so to act had done so for him, he might well deny his authority. The government must always act through agents; and to say that the government or municipality shall not be permitted to deny the authority of some
Any other rule would open wide the door to fraud, and an adoption of the rule contended for by respondent in this case would put it in the power of corrupt and designing men ,-to involve in debt, if not to bankrupt, whole classes of people. Three or more persons sufficient to fill the offices of a school district could conspire together, and elect officers of a proposed school district, and issue its bonds, and dispose of them to an innocent purchaser; and in case of suit brought, the district, its successors, or the tax payers thereof, though for the first time apprised of such indebtedness, would be estopped to deny the existence of such a corporation, because these self-constituted, but unauthorized persons have said by then’ acts it is a corporation. ' While the courts are disposed to protect the rights of innocent purchasers and to uphold commercial paper, the rights of a people will be much better protected, and the principles of commercial law sufficiently extended
Again, while it is true that the rule has been somewhat modified which formerly required the pleader to allege and prove the incorporation of the defendant as well as that of the plaintiff, and that now in many of the states the general denial will not place such incorporation in issue, as is the case in our own territory by express enactment, yet, where the incorporation is made an express issue, as in the present case, the defendant should not be denied the privilege of maintaining its defense, unless in the opinion of the court some great wrong or injustice would be done the plaintiff thereby, especially where the defendant is a public corporation, and has in’ no manner, by pleading or otherwise, been apprised of such intention’ on the part of the plaintiff previous to the trial itself.
The plea of estoppel is largely in the discretion of the court, to be determined upon the facts of each case. It would hardly be urged to the court that the minor ought not to be heard to assert his minority, or the drunken man his intoxicated condition, simply because he contracted as an adult or as a sober man would contract. The law makes such contracts, when proven, voidable; the law makes such contracts as this absolutely void. Certainly what would not be tolerated in case of voidable contracts ought not to be urged with much force in case of void contracts.
Upon an examination of the cases in which the doctrine of estoppel is sought to be applied to public corporations, it will be found that in many of them the issue was sought to be raised collaterally, as in case of collection of taxes, and in resisting the acts of an officer by showing the illegality of his appointment, etc. The conclusions arrived at in such cases, or the reasons given therefor, are not applicable here, where, as we have seen, the issue is made directly by the answer itself.
A careful examination of the whole case satisfies us that this is not a proper one for the enforcement of the principles of estoppel, and that the court erred in not permitting the defendants to prove the failure of the citizens to present a petition of a majority of the citizens of the districts to be affected by the organization of