147 A. 62 | Pa. | 1929
Argued May 20, 1929. In 1925, Venango Township was a township of the second class in Crawford County, of which F. M. Tuttle, Chas. L. Luellen and C. H. Holden, were the township supervisors. As such they bought an Acme Motor Truck of R. L. Spencer, of Meadville, for which they gave him a township obligation as follows:
"Township of Venango, County of Crawford, State of Penna., will, on or before the 1st day of July, 1926, at the First National Bank of Cambridge Springs, Pa., pay to the order of R. L. Spencer, of Meadville, Pennsylvania, the sum of twenty-seven hundred dollars, with exchange, for Acme Motor Truck, value received, waiving valuation and appraisement laws of the state of Pa., *361 with interest thereon at the rate of six percent. per annum, until due, and highest rate of interest from then until paid. We declare, for the purpose of enabling the payee or holder of this note to negotiate and sell same, that we have no offset nor defense of any kind or nature against it, and that same will be paid when due:
"Name Official Title Address "F. M. Tuttle, Pres. Board, Cambridge Springs, Pa. "Chas. L. Luellen, Sec. Board, Cambridge Springs, Pa. "C. H. Holden, Supervisor, Venango, Pa."
This, before maturity, Spencer by endorsement assigned to J. H. Falkinburg, the plaintiff, for value and without notice, as the evidence tended to show. Default thereon having been made, Falkinburg brought this suit against the township. It was set up in defense that the contract for purchase of the truck including the execution of the obligation was the separate action of the supervisors done without any joint meeting or consultation and further that the contract for purchase of the truck was never at any time submitted to the township commissioner of the State Highway Department nor approved nor signed by him as required by statute. The evidence offered in support of this defense was excluded by the trial judge, who held that the obligation above quoted was a negotiable promissory note, not subject to any defense in the hands of an innocent holder for value and instructed the jury that if they determined plaintiff was such to find in his favor, which was done. Judgment having been entered thereon, defendant brought this appeal.
The ruling of the trial judge cannot be sustained. Townships, being quasi municipal corporations, can only issue commercial paper when authorized by statute expressly or by necessary implication. No such statute has been called to our attention and we know of none. The mere authority to buy road machinery does not confer upon township supervisors the power to issue commercial paper therefor. Dillon's Municipal Corporations *362
(5th ed.), volume 1, page 529, section 284, states: "That quasi corporations, such as counties, have no implied power to issue commercial paper unless by virtue of express legislation or by very strong implication therefrom, and although the county may have power to erect a courthouse and other necessary public buildings, this does not authorize the issue of commercial paper for that purpose": citing Claiborne Co. v. Brooks,
Supervisors as public officers are presumed to have properly performed their duties and to have taken the steps necessary to give validity to their official acts. See Georges Twp. v. Union Trust Co.,
The note is in fulfillment of the contract and stands on no higher ground. It is idle to say that the supervisors can give a valid obligation for an implement which, for failure to comply with the statute, they lacked authority to purchase. The statute cannot be circumvented in that manner. If the supervisors lacked authority to give the note they also lacked authority to add the certificate of no defense.
Furthermore, the purchase of this truck was a matter requiring deliberation and judgment; if, as a matter of fact, the supervisors never met together and consulted as a board with reference thereto, the contract was invalid: P. R. R. v. Montgomery Co. Pass. Ry.,
The judgment is reversed and a new trial is granted.
See Foresman v. Gregg Twp., infra, 369.