23 F. 129 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1885
The plaintiff sues to recover the principal and interest of certain bonds bearing interest at 6 per centum per annum, payable semi-annually, issued in the year 1870 by the county of Brown, to pay the cost of improving a county road. The plaintiff also claims interest upon the unpaid installments of interest from their maturity.
The first defense admits the issuing of the bonds to the contractor who constructed and completed the road, and their transfer to the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the amount of the bonds, with interest at the rate of 6 per centum per annum. Defendants say that they have always been ready and willing to pay the plaintiff the amount so admitted to be due, upon presentation of the bonds and coupons, and the delivery of them for cancellation, which the plaintiff has always refused to do without receipt of interest upon the several installments from their maturity. Defendants further answer that they had no power to contract for a greater rate of interest than (5 por cent, per annum.
The second defense sets up the litigation whereby the assessments for the improvements of said road and their payment were enjoined
The third and last defense is that said coupons were never presented to the auditor, and warrants obtained from him for their payment by the treasurer. Defendants admit that about the twenty-seventh of May, 1881, said bonds and coupons were presented to the treasurer of Brown county by the plaintiff, and payment demanded, with a demand also for interest on the c.oupons, which was refused, but the treasurer offered to pay the bonds, with simple interest, on the surrender of the bonds and coupons, which was declined.
The plaintiff replies that it was understood by and between the county commissioners and the parties to whom the bonds were delivered, and at the time of their delivery, that the same should be paid by the treasurer of the county directly, without the warrant of the auditor, in accordance with the uniform custom in said county, and that in accordance with said custom the auditor at all times refused to issue warrants in such cases. He also denies the allegation of the answer that the treasurer, in May, 1881, offered to pay principal and simple interest, and avers that at that time the treasurer informed him that he had no funds wherewith to make payment, and denies that there ever was money in the treasury to pay the plaintiff’s demands. These are all the allegations of the reply necessary for the purposes of this decision.
The improvement of the road was ordered, and an assessment made by the county commissioners, in the year 1866, upon a petition under the act of April 5, 1866. 63 Ohio Laws, 114. The act authorizes the commissioners to issue the bonds of the county for the payment of the expense of the improvement, payable in installments, or at intervals, not extending in all beyond the period of five years, and bearing interest at 6 per centum per annum, and directs that the assessment shall be divided in such manner as to meet the payment of principal and interest of the bonds. This act was repealed twenty-ninth March, 1867, (64 Ohio Laws, 80,) and a new act substituted; but it was provided that the repeal should not affect or impair any right acquired or liability incurred under the repealed act. The county commissioners were authorized by the act of 1867 to issue bonds, payable in installments, or at intervals, not exceeding in all five years,
The bonds in this case were issued in 1870. No payments of principal or interest have been made. They are payable 48 months after dale, with interest at 6 per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually. Some of the bonds have interest coupons, and the interest is made payable “on presentation of proper coupon.” Others are without coupons, and provide upon their face for the semi-annual payment of interest.
- The validity of the proceedings, of the order for the improvement, and of the assessment under which the bonds sued upon were issued, was contested, and during tlie litigations, which continued until late in the year 1877, no assessments were collected. The first payment into the county treasury on account of assessments was in February, 1878, and until then there wore no funds available for the payment of principal or interost of bonds. Neither bonds nor coupons were in the mean time presented for payment. On the twenty-seventh of May, 1881, the plaintiff, by his attorney, presented Ms bonds and coupons and demanded payment, with interest upon the coupons from the date of their maturity. At the maturity of the coupons, and of the bonds, there were no funds in the county treasury for their payment. That was sufficient excuse for the failure to present them and demand payment. The stipulation for the payment of the interest on presentation of the proper coupon imported on the part of the commissioners
It is insisted, however, that the commissioners exceeded their authority in stipulating for the semi-annual payment of interest, for the reason that the law limited their authority to the issue of bonds “bearing interest at 6 per centum per annum.” It is urged that the contract to pay interest semi-annually was ultra vires and void, and that, therefore, only 6 per centum per annum, payable annually, is recoverable. There is no doubt that the commissioners were limited by the authority conferred by the statute. But the statute fixes only the rate of interest; it is silent as to the times of payment. The bonds bear but 6 per centum per annum interest, and that it is made payable 3 per centum in 6 months and 3 per centum in 12 months does not increase the yearly rate. The proposition that the stipulation to pay the lawful rate in semi-annual installments is usurious, is not sound; for the legal presumption is that parties to a contract intend performance according to its terms, and all that was necessary to avoid the payment of interest upon the coupons was prompt payment upon their maturity. Monnett v. Sturges, 25 Ohio St. 384, and Cook v. Courtright, 40 Ohio St. 248, are conclusive upon this point. In construing the statutes of a state, the United States courts adopt and follow the decisions of the courts of the state.
There is another consideration which, in view of the reasoning of the court in Cook v. Courtright, cited above, sheds light upon this branch of the case. The county commissioners were authorized to issue the bonds of the county, payable in installments, or at intervals, not extending in all beyond the period of five years. They could, if they saw fit, make them payable, some in one month, some in three months, some in six months, and others at any other intervals within five years,—all bearing interest at 6 per centum per annum,—and thus provide for the payment of interest monthly or quarterly or semiannually, and no objection could be successfully urged to their validity for that reason. How can there be any difference, in principle, between that mode of proceeding, and aggregating the sums of the short bonds in one long bond, and making the interest on that bond payable quarterly or semi-annually, or even monthly ? It is true that the bondholder might immediately, on payment, loan the interest paid him at a percentage, but who ever heard that that fact would taint the original transaction with usury?
Was it necessary to present the bonds and coupons to the auditor, and obtain his warrant upon the county treasurer ? The law in force when these bonds matured, relating to the redemption and cancellation of the securities for the funded debt of counties in this state, is
What are the facts of this case ? It is stipulated as an agreed fact that the auditor never drew any warrant for the payment of principal or interest of any of the bonds sued upon, or of any others of the same class, and that it has been the uniform custom in Brown county, ever since the passage of the law of 1867 authorizing the improvement of county roads by assessment, for the treasurer to pay the bonds and coupons issued for such improvement without such warrant upon presentation to him of the bonds or coupons, provided there v/as money in the treasury applicable to the payment of the same. It is enough to say of this custom that it is not worth the slightest consideration. It was at all tiroes the auditor’s duty to look to the statute. There was no such money in the Ireasury until February 28, 1878, when there was paid upon assessments the sum of $3,426.95. In August, 1878, wore paid §859.54, and subsequently there were payments from year to year until in February, 1884, the last payment, of $4,016.05, was made, the total being $61,097.98, ami the total amount of the principal of the bonds issued and outstanding, $56,000. It is proven, moreover, that the treasurer always refused to pay interest on the coupons and upon the overdue installments of Interest. Simple interest at 6 per centum per annum, or 6 per cent, “straight,” as he expresses it, -was all he would pay. It is beyond question that the
The objection to the jurisdiction of this court has been heretofore disposed of, and need not be further considered. It is not well taken.