114 Mich. 41 | Mich. | 1897
The bill filed in this cause was held sufficient in 107 Mich. 409, on demurrer. The cause has since been heard on pleadings and proofs, and is again before us upon appeal by the defendant from a decree in favor of the complainant. The nature of the complainant’s claim will be understood by a perusal of the statement of facts and opinion cited, and it is unnecessary to repeat in detail the facts alleged. In brief, a statement of complainant’s claim may be said to be that, in 1869, the township of Grant, as then constituted, issued some plank-road aid bonds, which, though void under the law, as interpreted by this court, were valid in the hands of innocent holders for value, under the rule recognized by the federal courts; that subsequently the township of Reno was organized from territory detached from the township of Grant, and that, although the township boards met, and it was agreed that Reno should pay its proportion of these bonds, it neglected and refused to reimburse Grant for the payment of such proportion, after judgment rendered against Grant in favor of one Haugan.
The bonds upon which the judgment against the township of Grant, to which Reno is asked to contribute, was based, are admitted to have been void in the hands of the payee. To entitle Haugan to a judgment against the township of Grant, it was necessary that he should show that he or some former owner of the bonds was a purchaser in good faith before maturity, for a valuable consideration, and without notice of the invalidity of the bonds, as the law imposes the burden of such showing upon the plaintiff where the defendant shows that the bond or note was illegal or void in the hands of the payee. Paton v. Coit, 5 Mich. 505 (72 Am. Dec. 58); Bottomley v. Goldsmith, 36 Mich. 27; Conley v. Winsor, 41 Mich. 253; Mace v. Kennedy, 68 Mich. 389; Manistee Nat. Bank v. Seymour, 64 Mich. 59; Lytle v.
“It appears that the respective counsel made certain admissions for the purposes of the hearing; that complainant’s counsel, for defendant’s benefit, admitted that Haugan became the owner of the bonds some time about the year 1873 (after the decision in the Salem Case, [May 26, 1870] 20 Mich. 452), through George W. Todd, who, on January 22, 1870, purchased them from Alvin Wilkins. This admission was accepted in silence as a fact in the case, and in our statement of facts we have treated it as such.”
It will be noticed that there is no showing that these bonds were ever purchased by one who had no notice of