132 F. 514 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Iowa | 1904
The bonds sued upon are No. 17, for $500, issued by the Independent school district of Riverside, Eyon county, Iowa, October 11, 1873, and Nos. 43 and 46, issued by said district February 15, 1882. Bond No. 17, and all coupons thereon, were fully barred by the statute of limitations prior to the commencement of this suit. As there can be no recovery thereon for that reason, this bond need not be further considered.
Bonds Nos. 43 and 46 are a part of the issue of bonds of February 15, 1882. The defense thereto is that said bonds were fraudulently
The right of complainant to proceed in equity instead of at law was determined by overruling a demurrer to the bill at a former term of the court which presented that question. There is no reason to hold otherwise now, and that question need not be further considered.
The complainant alleges that he is a good-faith holder of the bonds, and that the defendants, by reason of the recitals therein, are estopped from denying as against him their validity. Each of the bonds is payable “to-or- at the office of the Treasurer of the District in Riverside, Iowa,” and contains this recital:
“This bond is executed and issued by the Board of Directors of said Independent School District, in pursuance of, and in accordance with, Chapter 132 Acts of the 18th General Assembly of Iowa, and in accordance with a resolution of said Board of Directors, passed in accordance with said chapter 132, at a meeting thereof, held the 15th day of February 1882.” ,
Under the facts found, it must be held that the bonds were procured by fraud upon the school district, and that at the time they were so issued other bonds of the district were outstanding against it, far in excess of the limit of indebtedness which said school corporation could lawfully incur under the Constitution and laws of Iowa. They were issued, however, as refunding-bonds, and recite that they were issued in pursuance of and in accordance with chapter 132, p. 127, Acts 18th Gen. Assem. Iowa, a copy of which act appears upon each of the bonds. They were issued under the same circumstances as were the bonds involved in Salmon v. School District (C. C.) 125 Fed. 235, and Fairfield v. School District (C. C.) Ill Fed. 454; Id., 54 C. C. A. 342, 116 Fed. 838. In fact, they are a part of the same issue as/bond No. 62 involved in the Salmon Case. The only difference between them and the bonds other than the bond No. 62 in the Salmon Case is that the recitals do not contain the words, “and in accordance with the Constitution of said state,” or “that the amount of this bond is within the constitutional limit of indebtedness fixed by section 3, article 11 of the state Constitution.” It is the settled rule that purchasers of school corporation bonds or securities are bound to take notice of the limit fixed by law upon the power of the corporation to create indebtedness and of the amount it may lawfully incur. It is equally well settled that such corporations may be estopped by the act of its drily appointed officer from denying, as against innocent holders of such securities, the validity thereof.
“Not only this, but if, as against the plaintiff, an innocent purchaser of these bonds, the district was estopped by the recitals therein from denying that they were exchanged for old bonds which evidenced a lawful debt of the district; then it is by the same mark estopped from denying that the issue of these bonds neither created nor increased the debt of the district, and the fact that its debt was far beyond its constitutional limit when they were issued and the recital in the bonds that they are within that limit * * * both become immaterial, and require no further consideration. * * * The board of directors of the district were authorized by chapter 132, p. 127, Acts of the Eighteenth General Assembly of the state of Iowa, to issue bonds for the sole purpose of funding the bonded debt of the district. They certified in the face of these bonds that they had issued them in pursuance of that chapter. The legal effect and the plain meaning of that certificate were that these were funding bonds, issued to fund the valid bonded debt of the district.”
“When they [the board of directors] certified upon the face of these negotiable instruments that they were issued in pursuance of, and in conformity with chapter 132, p. 127, and in strict compliance with the law of Iowa, and the plaintiff bought them in reliance upon that certificate, these facts conclusively estopped the district from denying (1) that the bonds for which they were exchanged were the just and valid obligations of the district; (2) that the refunding bonds neither created nor increased the indebtedness of the district. * * * They merely changed its form, and an innocent purchaser of municipal bonds which recite that they were issued to refund the debt of the municipality is not required to consider or inquire concerning the excessive Indebtedness, because that question does not arise.”
The conclusion, therefore, is that the bonds in suit, having been issued as refunding bonds, under chapter 132, p. 127, Acts of the Eighteenth General Assembly of the state of Iowa, and which recite upon their face that they are issued in pursuance of and in accordance with that act, bring them within the rule announced in the Fairfield and other cases, though they do not directly recite that they “are in accordance with the Constitution,” or that “the amount is within the limit of indebtedness fixed by the Constitution of the state.” A writ of certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court in the Fairfield Case, 187 U. S. 643, 23 Sup. Ct. 843, 47 L. Ed. 346. The questions thus determined are conclusive upon this court, and must be held to preclude the defendants upon each of the defenses interposed by them to these bonds, except those of the bona fides of the complainant’s purchase and the amount that he may recover.
The bonds are negotiable, though the name of the payee and the word “order” or “bearer” are left in blank. White v. V. & M. R. R. Co., 21 How. 575, 16 L. Ed. 221. In this case the Supreme Court said: s
“We think it quite clear, on looking into the agreed statement of facts, in connection with the bonds and the mortgage given to secure their payment, that it was the intention of the company, by issuing the bonds in blank, to make them negotiable, and payable to the holder, as bearer, and that the holder might fill up the blank with his own name, or make them payable to himself or bearer, or to order. In other words, the company intended by the blank to leave the holder his option as to the form or character of negotiability, without restriction. If the utmost latitude in this respect was not intended, why leave the payee in blank when issuing the bonds, or why not fix the limit of negotiability, or negative it altogether? To adopt any other conclusion would seem to us to be unjust to the company, for then the blank would be wholly unmeaning, or, if any, a meaning calculated, if not intended, to embarrass the title of the holder.”
Having been fraudulently issued, though they are negotiable, the burden is upon the complainant to show that he is a bona fide holder thereof for value before due, without notice of any infirmity therein, or that the person from whom he obtained them was such a holder. Smith v. Sac County, 11 Wall. 139, 20 L. Ed. 102; Collins v. Gilbert, 94 U. S. 758, 24 L. Ed. 170; Skinner v. Raynor, 95 Iowa, 536, 64 N. W. 601. Has he done so? He did not obtain either of them directly from the school district of Riverside. Bond No. 46 was obtained by him and his brother, John R. Gamble, as
Bond No. 43 was purchased by Mrs. Julia Spafford through her agent, Lewis B. Gregory, at Rockford, Ill. (where both resided), in 1883 or 1884, from E. E. Carpenter, who paid him therefore in cash its par value and the accrued interest, without notice of any infirmity therein or defense thereto. This bond is also of the issue of February 15, 1882, is for $1,000, and contains the same recitals as bond No. 46, and by itself is well within the limit of indebtedness which the district might lawfully incur upon the valuation of 1880 or 1881. This is the only bond of that issue that Mrs. Spafford ever held. But either at the same time that Mr. Gregory bought this bond, or later in the year 1883 or 1884, he also bought for her $5,000 in bonds of the issues of June 21 and of November 5, 1881, from Carpenter, making a total of $6,500 of the bonds of the Riverside district that he bought for Mrs. Spafford. From the testimony of Mr. Gregory it is uncertain whether he bought the entire lot of $6,500 of bonds at one time or $5,500 of them after he bought No. 43. He says: “I bought this bond 43, along with others, from E. E. Carpenter, who came to my house in Rockford, Illinois. Prior to the time of its purchase I knew nothing of other bonds outstanding against the district.” If he bought the $6,500 of bonds at one time, he would be charged with notice that this amount was in excess of the limit of indebtedness that the district might lawfully incur upon the valuation of 1880 or 1881. But this is not material, for outstanding bonds of the district to this amount or greater might be valid, though in excess of the constitutional limit; and purchasers of
What amount, then, may complainant recover thereon? He purchased this bond long after it was dishonored, and paid therefor only $50, a mere nominal consideration, and contends that by such purchase lie succeeds to the rights of Mrs. Spafford, and may recover thereon to the same extent that she could have recovered; and cites Cromwell v. Sac County, 96 U. S. 51, 24 L. Ed. 681; Scotland v. Hill, 132 U. S. 294, 10 Sup. Ct. 26, 33 L. Ed. 261, and some other cases in support o£ such contention. These authorities support the general proposition that an innocent holder of negotiable securities may transfer them after their maturity, and that the transferee for value will thereby succeed to the title and rights of such innocent holder. In Cromwell v. Sac County it is admitted that there are many decisions in conflict with the conclusion there reached. In each of these cases it appears that the holder so entitled to recover the full amount obtained the paper in the usual course of business for a valuable consideration, in many cases near to its full value, without notice of its infirmity other than that imparted by the fact that it was overdue. In no cause has the Supreme Court held that a purchaser of negotiable paper illegal or fraudulent in its inception, for a mere nominal consideration, and when the bar ©£ the statute of limitations is almost complete, with full notice of its illegal or fraudulent inception, can recover the full amount thereof, with accrued interest, from the maker; and it does not seem necessary to hold that he can in order to protect the rights of bona fide holders of negotiable paper, or to render its circulation more free and unrestricted. The rule announced in Cromwell v. Sac County and other cases upon this question is reviewed by the Supreme Court in Wade v. Chicago, etc, Ry. Co., 149 U. S. 327, 13 Sup. Ct. 892, 37 L. Ed. 755, and restated as follows:
“By the decisive weight of authority in this country, where negotiable paper has been put in circulation, and there is no infirmity or defense between the antecedent parties thereto, a purchaser of such securities is entitled to recover thereon, as against the maker, the whole amount, irrespective of what he may ¡have paid therefor.”
This is the extent to which the Supreme Court goes in its latest utterances upon this question. The facts thus stated, which condition the right of such holder to so recover the full amount of the security, are wholly absent in this case; for here the bonds were fraudulently procured from the maker. They created no liability on the part of the district to the original holder thereof; in fact were illegal and fraudulent, as between the original parties; and the district is estopped from denying the recitals of the bonds only as against a purchaser for value, before due, in the ordinary course of business, who has relied upon such recitals in making the purchase. In other words, recovery upon them is permitted upon the grounds of estoppel, rather than the negotiable character of the
“The bona fide holder of It for value, and without notice, is undoubtedly entitled to be protected against a loss which would befall him if the party defrauded were permitted to set up the defense of fraud on the part of the payee against him, as we have already seen. But it does not, therefore (as has been considered), follow that he may recover of such party the whole amount when he has paid a less sum. For his protection and security against loss it is only necessary that he should be paid back the amount which he was induced to give for the instrument by its appearance of validity, and therefore such amount is the limit of his recovery against the drawer or maker who was defrauded into the execution of the instrument.”
In any event, the rule contended for can have no application in the face of a statute such as section 3070 of Code of Iowa (1897). That section is as follows:
“The want or failure, in whole or in part, of the consideration of a written contract may be shown as a defense, total or partial, except to negotiable paper transferred in good faith and for a valuable consideration before maturity, "but if such paper has been procured by fraud upon the malcer, no holder thereof shall recover thereon of the malcer a greater sum than he paid therefor, with interest and costs,”
The original of this section is section 2114, Code Iowa 1873. In 1886 it was amended by adding thereto the words in italics. Chapter 90, p. 129, Acts 22d Gen. Assem. Iowa.
In Williams v. Haines, 27 Iowa, 251, 1 Am. Rep. 268, the Supreme Court of Iowa construed this section (before the amendment) as one pertaining to the remedy only. Whether the amendment would apply to or affect a contract for the purchase of such paper before it was enacted need not be determined. This bond is an Iowa contract, made and 'payable in that state, and suit to enforce its payment must necessarily be brought there. When it was made the law of that state permitted fraud in its inception to be shown to defeat a recovery thereon by the original holder, or by one having notice of such fraud. By the amendment such defense may be shown against any holder who acquired it subsequent thereto for the purpose of determining the amount he may recover thereon. Richards v. Monroe, 85 Iowa, 359, 52 N. W. 339, 39 Am. St. Rep. 301; Wray v. Warner, 111 Iowa, 64, 82 N. W. 455. Complainant’s right to recover upon this instrument at all depends upon his contract of purchase thereof from Mrs. Mason. That contract was made subsequent to the enactment of this amendment, and in the light thereof. The bond was evidently regarded, at the time of its purchase, as of little value, and complainant very frankly admits that he purchased it for a mere nominal consideration, so
The conclusion, therefore, is that complainant is entitled to recover the principal of bond No. 46, with interest thereon according to its terms from the date of its maturity, and the coupon thereon due February 15, 1892, with 6 per cent, interest from that date, and the $50 paid by him for bond No. 43, with 6 per cent, interest from November 1,1901, the date of his purchase of the same. The clerk will make computation of the amount accordingly, and judgment will be entered in favor of complainant against the Rural Independent school district of Allison for two-thirds of such amount, and against the Rural Independent school district of Jackson for one-third thereof. Costs will be taxed against the defendants in the same proportion.
It is ordered accordingly.