delivered the opinion of the court.
■By an act of the legislature of Texas approved February 11th, 1881, the County Commissioners’ Court of every county that had no courthouse was. authorized and empowered to issue county bonds, with interest coupons attached, in such amount as might be necessary to erect a suitable building for a courthouse —such bonds to run not exceeding fifteen years, redeemable, at the pleasure of the county, and bearing interest at a rate not exceeding eight per cent per,annum. The act provided that the bonds should be signed by the County Judge, countersigned by the County Clerk and registered by the County Treasurer before being delivered. It also provided that the cоunty should not issue a larger number of bonds than a tax of one-fourth of one.,per cent annually would liquidate in ten years, and that the boñds should be sold only at par value. General Laws, Texas, 1881, p. 5.
This act was amended in 1884, at a called session of the eighteenth legislature' of Texas, so as to authorize the Commissioners’ Court to issue county bonds (running, not exceeding fifteen years) with interest coupons attached in such amount as might be, necessary to erect a suitable courthouse building or jail, or both. General Laws, Texas, 1884, p: 28.
By another act passed March 27th, 1885, the power given by the act of Í884 to issue bonds for courthouse and jail purposes, or both in such amount as might be necessary, was rеcognized, and in addition county bonds theretofore issued for jail purposes under the act of 1881, as amended by the act of 1884, were validated. General Laws, Texas, 1885, p.- 56.
The present action was brought July 26th, 1904, by the Noel-Young Bond & Stock Company, a Missouri corporation, ar *64 holder, owner and bearer, to recover the amount of certain bonds — numbered 90, 91, • 92, 94, 95 and 96, respectively— with interest coupons attached.
Each of the bonds sued on is in the name of the county, is for $1,000 and payable to bearer fifteen years after date, at 8 per cent per annum interest, on the tenth of April, at the State Treasury.. It recites that it was “issued by virtue of an act of the Legislature of the State of Texas, entitled ‘An ¿cito authorize the County Commissioners’ Court of the several counties of the State to issue bonds for the erection of a courthouse. and to levy a tax to pay for the same/ approved February 11,1881, and by virtue of the provisions of chapter 17, laws of.called session of the Eighteenth Legislature, which said chapter has since been validated by the act of March 27, 1885, authorizing .the County Commissioners’ Court of the several counties of the State to issue bonds for the erection of a county jail, and by order of the County Commissioners’ Court of said County of Presidio, on,, the 9th day of February, 1886, and is redeemable before maturity at the pleasure of the county.”
To each bond was affixed the seal of the County Commissioners’ Court and was signed by the County Judge, countersigned by the Clerk of the County Court and by the County Treasurer, the latter certifying that it had been registered.
• At the trial the court instructed the jury that the suit on the coupons was barred by the Texas statute of limitations, but it directed a verdict for the amount of the bonds with interest from December 6, 1900. That judgment was affirmed in the Circuit Court of Appeals, but without any opinion..
The county, insists thаt although the bonds purport to have been issued by order of the County Commissioners’ Court in virtue of certain legislative enactments referred to on the face. of the bonds, and which authorizes that court to issue bonds for the ejection of- a courthouse or jail, or both, and although each bond is attested by the seal of the Commissioners’ Court and the signatures of the. officers who alone could attest and sign bonds issued for courthouse and jail purposes, the cpurt *65 exceeded its powers in issuing the present bonds in that by its order of February 9th, 1886 bonds to the extent of only $86,000 were authorized — $60,000 for а courthouse and $26,000 for a jail; whereas, that amount of bonds for such purposes had in fact been issued before the bonds in suit. This contention means that the bonds in suit are to be deemed void if they were in fact in excess of the amount authorized by the order of February 9th, 1886. But that view cannot be maintained consistently with a long line of decisions.
Whether the Commissioners’ Court, which had statutory authority to issue such bonds as were necessary for courthouse and jail purposes, had previously made the requisite order therefor was a matter peculiarly within the knowledge of its officers. They knew whethеr they had or had not directed bonds to be issued for such purposes. They knew, or ought to have known, whether the bonds, ordered to be issued, were in excess of the amount authorized by the legislature. They had authority to determine whether the precedent conditions had been fully performed. When, therefore, the county, acting by the Commissioners’ Court, did issue bonds, attested by the seal of the court and the signatures of its officers, and reciting that they were issued under the order of the court, in virtue of the statute named, and were registered — such recitals fairly importing a compliance, in all substantial respects, with the statute giving authority to issue bonds — a bona fide purchaser was entitled to accept the recitals as stating the truth, and the county cannot, as against such purchaser, allege the contrary. It will not be heard to say that the bonds were in excess of the amount authorized, or that they were not issued for the purposes contemplated by the statutes referred to. These principles have become firmly established, as will be seen by an examination oi . the adjudged cases, some of which are cited in the margin. 1
*66
The , county, however,-insists that an examination - of the order of the Commissioners’ Court of February 9th, .1886, referred to in the bonds, would have informed any purchaser (1) that that court on that day ordered only $86,000 in bonds to be issued — $60,000 for a courthouse and $26,000 for a jail; (2.) that the particular bonds now in suit, dated December 6th, ' 1886, and numbered 91 to 96 inclusive, were not covered by that order and therefore were in excess of the amount so ordered for courthouse and jail buildings. Assuming for. the moment, but only for the moment, that, the purchaser,'was bound to ascertain what the order of February 9th, 1-886 contained, we observe that the statutes recited in the bonds did not . name a specific amount beyond which the Commissioners’ Court could not go in issuing bonds for courthouse and jail purposes. They were authorized to issue for those purposes such an amount in bonds as was necessary up to the point that no more be issued than could be liquidated in ten years by a tax of one-fourth of one per cent for any one year. It was for the Commissioners’ Court in the, first instance to determine what amount of bonds on that basis was required. We observe, also, as did the Civil Court of Appeals of Texas in a case to be presently referred to (
Apart from this view, it is. pertinent to inquire whether the purchaser was bound to examine the order of February 9th, 1886, and, at his peril, to know what that order contained? Was he not entitled without special, or further inquiry to accept’ as true what the recitals in the bonds plainly imported, namely, that the bonds were issued for' courthouse or jail purposes by order of the County Commissioners’ Court, in conformity With specified acts of the legislature? Was he not entitled to act on the belief that the bonds. issued under date of December 6th, 1886, were within the limit authorized by the legislature? . ~
These questions find an answer in
Evansville
v.
Dennett,
In the same case the court expressed its approval of the de
*69
cisión in
Van Hostrup
v.
Madison City,
In
Waite
v.
Santa Cruz,
In the more recent case of
Stanly County
v.
Coler,
Our conclusion on this branch of the case is that the county of Presidio is estopped by the recitals in its bonds to deny, as against a legal holder of the bonds, that they were issued conformably, in all respects, with the acts of legislation referred to.
It is, however, contended that this principle only affords protection to
bona fide
purchasers for value. But clearly the plaintiff is to be taken, upon the present record, as belonging to that class; for; there was no evidence that it had knowledge or notice of any facts impeaching the validity of the bonds, or that were inconsistent with their recitals, nor was there any evidence showing that the plaintiff was not a
bona fide
purchaser for value of these bonds. In the absence of such proof the presumption was . that the plaintiff obtained the bonds underdue, or before maturity, in good faith, for a valuable consideration, without notice of any circumstances impeaching their validity. The production of a negotiable instrument sued on, with proof of its genuineness, if its genuineness be not denied, makes a
prima facie
casé for the holder. In other words; the possession of the bonds in this case, their genuineness not being disputed, made a
prima facie fiase
for the plaintiff. These views are in accordance with accepted doctrines of the law relating to negotiable securities’,
Swift
v.
Tyson,
But there is another defense by the county , which must be noticed. ' It is, that the validity of these bonds', has been- adjudicated by the courts of Texas, and that that adjudication concludes the plaintiff in the present action. The facts,upon which that defense is based are these: On the twenty-eighth of March, 1§93, Ball, Hutchings & Co. sued'Presidio County on certain coupons of bonds, numbered from 90 to 96, inclusive, and dated December 6th, 1886 — the same bonds here sued on, except bond numbered 93, which is not involved in-¿his suit. The county, among other defenses, alleged that the bonds were issued and delivered to contractors for the purpose of obtaining furniture for the courthouse; that the contractors therefore had • notice of the purpose for which the bonds were issued; that their issue for the purpose of supplying' the courthouse with furniture was illegal, fraudulent and void; and, therefore, no judgment could be rendered fór the amount of the coupons sued oñ. The srate court rendered a judgment for the county. From that judgment an appeal was prosecuted to the Civil Court of Appeals of Texas,' which reversed the judgment and ordered one against the county. 27 S. W.' Rep. 702, 707. That court, •among other things, held that there was nothing in the order of February 9th, 1886 indicating that the bonds numbered 90 to 96 were not of the bonds therein ordered to be issued for courthouse and jail purposes; that no question-was made that the amount of all the bonds issued for building a courthouse-and jail and for furniture and waterworks was not within the' county’s statutory limit for the issuing of bonds for the building of a courthouse and jail; and that it was nоt inconsistent with their being part of the bonds ordered for courthouse and jail purposes that they were numbered from 90 to 96. That court further said: “These bonds purport on their face to have been issued by virtue of the acts authorizing bonds for the erection of a courthouse and jail, and, by virtue of a certain order of the proper court,, which was, upon its face, authority *72 for the issuance of a bonded debt for said purpose, in the sum of $86,000; and there is nothing in the order to indicate to the mind that there had been an overissue, or that these particular bonds were not a part оf the $86,000. ... In fact, these bonds would seem to have been prepared and issued in a manner that concealed their true character, and to mislead investors in that class of securities; and we are of opinión, on the whole case, that the county is estopped to deny its liability to. the purchasers.”
This last observation of the Texas Civil Court of Appeals had, no doubt, reference to the fact (which evidence in this suit tended to establish), that. although the particular, bonds in suit were issued pursuant to an order of the Commissioners’ Court made December 4th, 1886 to pay for courthouse furniture thеy contained recitals fairly implying that they were issued under the order of February 9th, 1886 and the statutes for the purpose of building a courthouse and jail.
That 'case was taken to the Supreme Court of Texas, which reversed the judgment of the Civil Court of Appeals and affirmed the judgment of the court óf original jurisdiction.
Ball, Hutchings & Co.
v.
Presidio County,
It is apparent that the Supreme Court of Texas proceeded .in part upon grounds inconsistent with the decisions of this court in cases involving the rights of the holders of commercial paper. We allude here particularly to that part of its opinion holding that whatever the import of the recitals in the bonds a purchaser was bound to ascertain what were the provisions of the order of February 9th, 1886, under and by virtue of which the bonds purport to have been issued. In that view we do not concur, as what has been said in this opinion sufficiently indicates. Since the decision in
Swift
v.
Tyson,
In determining that question certain facts may be taken as *74 established by the proof introduced by the county and which it deemed materiаl, namely: 1. That the suit in the state court was upon interest coupons, and not upon the bonds, to which they were attached. 2. That on December 10th, 1886, after the bonds were issued, F. M. Ball- purchased those hére in suit from the contractor to whom they were delivered on account of furniture supplied for the courthouse, and on the same day one League purchased from Ball, four of the bonds.. 3. Both Ball and League purchased, in good faith, at .par and interest, without notice of any facts impeaching the validity of the bonds. 4. That their purchases were before the action in' the statе court, which was not commenced until August 15th, 1902. 5. That when that suit was begun, the bonds, so far as appears from the record, belonged to Ball and Léague, and remained under their control during the pendency of that suit and were not produced in court. 6. Ball, Hutchings & Co., the plaintiffs in that suit, were only the agents for the collection of the in* terest coupons. 7. It does not appear from the present record when the Noel-Young Bond & Stock Co., the present plaintiff, became the holder and owner of the bonds, whether during the pendency of the suit in the state court or after the final judgment on March 4th, 1895 in the Supreme Court of Texas.
The argument in support of the conclusiveness of the judgment necessarily rests on.the ground that the suit on the coupons created a
lis pendens
that prevented any one from purchasing the bonds except subject to such judgment as might be rendered on that suit. But, clearly, the negotiability of the bonds was not destroyed by the mere bringing, or pendency of the suit on the coupons, although the issue in that suit as to the validity of the coupons may have incidentally involved an inquiry as to the validity of the bonds to which they were attached. It may be that the holder of negotiable coupons sued on, being also, at the time, the holder and owner of the bonds, may be concluded,
as between him and the county,
in a subsequent suit on the bonds, by a previous judgment on the coupons in the suit, in which the coupons were held invalid be-.
*75
cause attached to invalid bonds. But one who became a
bona fide
purchaser for value of the bonds, after the institution of the suit on the coupons; not being himself a party to or having notice of that suit, will not be concluded by the judgment as to the coupons. A suit on coupons and a suit on the bonds are based on different causes of action. , The coupons and bonds were capable of separate ownership and of. separatе suits. Judgment might be rendered on coupons without producing the bonds to which they were originally'attached. In
Nesbit
v.
Riverside Independent District,
*76 An instructive case on this subject is County of Warren v. Marcy, 97 U. S. 96. That was an action on coupons attached to negotiable bonds issued by a county. The facts on which the defense was based were these: A taxpayer brought a suit against a county on behalf of himseif and all other taxpayers for an injunction to prevent the county from making a subscription to the stock of a certain railroad company. A temporary injunction was granted, which was afterwards dissolved, and the bill was dismissed. The plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court of the State, which reversed the judgment and a decree was ordered to be entered, and was entered, enjoining the county from making the proposеd subscription. Pending the suit and after the dissolution of the temporary injunction, and. while the case was pending on appeal, the county made the subscription sought to be enjoined, arid issued and delivered to the railroad company the bonds to which the coupons there in suit were attached. Marcy purchased some of the bonds for value before maturity, and without any actual notice of their alleged invalidity, or of any suit in relation thereto. The question in the case was whether the pendency of the equity suit to prevent the subscription and an issue of bonds was constructivе notice to all persons of the invalidity of' the bonds issued in payment for the subscription.
This court,, speaking by Mr. Justice Bradley, held the bonds to ^foe valid in the hands of a
bona fide
purchaser for value upon these grounds, saying: “That if a municipal body has lawful power to issue bonds or other negotiable securities, dependent only upon the adoption of certain preliminary proceedings, such as a popular election of the constituent body, the holder in good faith has a right to assume that such preliminary proceedings have taken place, if the fact be certified on thе face of the bonds themselves, by the authorities whose ¡primary duty it is to ascertain it.” On the question of
lis ;pendens
the court said: “It is a general rule that all-persons dealing with property are bound to take notice of a suit pending with regard to the'title thereto, and will, on their peril,
*77
purchase the same from any of the parties to the suit. But this rule is not of universal application. It does not apply to negotiable securities purchased before maturity, nor to articles of ordinary commerce sold in the usual way. This exception was suggested by Chancellor Kent, in one of the leading cаses on the subject in this country, and has been confirmed by many subsequent decisions” — citing
Murray
v. Ballou, 1 Johns. (N. Y.) Ch. 566;
Murray
v.
Lylburn,
We hold that upon the present record The plaintiff company is to be taken as having purchased the bonds here in suit before maturity and for value, without notice- of any circumstances indicating that their validity was or could be-impeached; consequently, the judgment in favor of the county in the suit brought in the state-court by Ball, Hutchings & Co. on some of the coupons of the bonds now in suit — in which suit the .present plaintiff company was not a party and of which it is not shown to have had notice — does not preclude a judgment in its favor against the county on the bonds.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Circuit Court of the United States must be affirmed.
It is so ordered.
Notes
Town of Coloma
v.
Eaves,
