The constitutionality of the statute under which the instruments in question, called bonds, were issued, must be deemed settled by recent decisions. (The Bank of Rome v. The Village of Rome, 18 N. Y. R. 38. Clarke v. The City of Rochester, 24 Barb. 446. Benson v. Mayor &c. of Albany, Id. 248. Grant v. Courier, Id. 232.)
The plaintiffs are bona fide purchasers of the so called bonds, for a valuable consideration, and if the statute authorized instruments of such a nature, and they are negotiable, like bills
The utmost that purchasers of the bonds were required to ascertain was, that such a rail road company had been organized, and the assent and affidavit provided for by the statute, filed; that there was apparent authority to execute the bonds; and those things only were necessary to such apparent authority. Full compliance with those conditions to the existence of the power, before the making of the bonds, appears by the complaint.
The bonds express an acknowledgment that in pursuance of the statute, and for the purpose of aiding in the construction of the rail road specified in the bonds, the towns owe, and a promise by them to pay, to____or bearer $1000, with interest at the rate of seven per cent, payable as therein mentioned. They are without seal, and are in terms negotiable ; and they contain every requisite to negotiability in the case of an ordinary instrument for the payment of money. They are a written promise by one to another for the payment of money absolutely. The statute does not prescribe the form of the bonds, nor expressly provide whether they may or shall not be negotiable ; but I think there is in its language the purpose for which the bonds were to be used, and the general
The question remains, whether the bonds are in conformity to the act in respect to the securities authorized. The statute specifies “ a bond or bonds ” as the instruments which it shall be lawful for the towns to execute. In strictness, the term bond imports a sealed obligation ; and the securities in question are not bonds, for the want of a seal. But it is not probable that the legislature used the word, in this statute, in that confined sense, or as signifying more than an instrument substantially in the form of a bond, without regard to a seal. The principal object in view in regard to- the security was, that it should be a promise by the town to pay, which would be acceptable to the lenders. It is not perceived that a seal would be of any benefit to the towns ; it would benefit only the lenders. A technical bond would be a higher security than an unsealed promise to pay, and more valuable, in some respects, to a creditor, and to the same extent less desirable to a debtor. Specifying bonds instead of notes, must therefore have been with a view to the interests of the creditors only; and if they were willing to waive the proposed benefit and accept unsealed obligations, it does not seem to be just that the towns should be permitted to object that those obligations were not authorized. This view of the intention of the legislature in the use of the term bond is confirmed by the well known fact, of which we may take notice as part of the history of the state, that towns do not ordinarily have occasion for or possess a corporate seal, their corporate capacity being very lim- ■ ited. Construing the statute according to its spirit, its obvious substantial meaning, I cannot believe that the omission of a seal is a fatal objection to the bonds, as being instruments not warranted by the law.
I think, therefore, that the so called bonds are valid securities against the towns, in the hands of the plaintiffs as bona fide holders, and for that reason that the judgments at special
T. R. Strong, E. Darwin Smith and Johnson, Justices.]